PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Poor rural youth in Haiti are rich in family ties, rooted in their own culture

2013-10-16
(Press-News.org) URBANA, Ill. – Haitian teens, especially those who live in the country's rural areas, are among the poorest persons in the Western Hemisphere, but they are rich in their family relationships and strongly rooted in their own culture, a University of Illinois study finds.

"It's true that rural Haitian teens didn't directly suffer the major trauma of the 2012 earthquake, but they deal daily with the effects of poverty—not enough food, no money to go to school, a lack of electricity much of the time, little access to clinics or hospitals," said Gail M. Ferguson, a U of I professor of human development and family studies who studies the cultural identity and well-being of adolescents in the Caribbean, including the effects of exposure to U.S. culture.

In the course of a lifetime, chronic exposure to poverty can have the same impact as an earthquake-sized trauma, she said.

"However, these teens report having a strong sense of family obligation and an attachment to Haitian culture, which probably protects them and contributes to their resilience," she said.

In the study, the researchers used a survey to measure strength of family obligations and cultural orientation among 105 early adolescents (10 to 14 years) in rural Haiti. Among other findings, she learned that teens, especially boys, believe very strongly that they should respect and obey their parents and assist them when they need help without being paid for it.

"Can you imagine how helpful that would be for a family with few resources? That attitude in itself contributes to a close parent-child relationship, which is a positive factor in adolescent development," she said.

Affinity for the teens' own culture, which has been found to be a protective factor in other populations, was nearly three times as high as American orientation among survey participants.

"Haitian culture is known for its creativity and its close community bonds. The arts, particularly visual arts and a love of story, provide an emotional outlet for Haitian youth, helping to channel their emotions, desires, and needs," she said.

This connection to Haitian culture is strong despite the influence of U.S. culture through migration, trade, and technology. The U.S. is the primary destination for Haitian emigrants who continue to communicate with relatives and friends back on the island. Before the earthquake, American tourists comprised more than 69 percent of visitors to Haiti; since then, U.S. aid workers have been a significant presence on the island, the researcher said.

Although some scholars decry what they see as a global homogenization due to the spread of American cultural elements overseas, Ferguson finds that rural Haitian youth are not oriented toward American persons, products, media, or sports. They may be mostly uninterested in U.S. culture, have little access to it, or both, she said.

"If anything, rural Haitian teens may be more oriented toward the rich and hip lifestyles within urban Haitian culture," she noted.

However, rural teen boys who interacted more frequently with U.S. tourists and aid workers had a slightly higher orientation toward American culture. She anticipates that Haitian youth will "add rather than swap" as they become exposed to other cultures, holding on to what is valuable in their own culture while adding identification with parts of other cultures that are appealing to them.

###

"Ayiti Cheri": Cultural Orientation of Early Adolescents in Rural Haiti is available pre-publication online in the Journal of Early Adolescence. The U of I's Ferguson, Charlene Desir of Nova Southeastern University, and Marc H. Bornstein of the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) co-authored the study. Funding was provided by the Mellon Foundation and the National Institutes of Health (NIH/NICHD).


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Keep your friends close, but…

2013-10-16
Counterintuitive findings from a new USC study show that the part of the brain that is associated with empathizing with the pain of others is activated more strongly by watching the suffering of hateful people as opposed to likable people. While one might assume that we would empathize more with people we like, the study may indicate that the human brain focuses more greatly on the need to monitor enemies closely, especially when they are suffering. "When you watch an action movie and the bad guy appears to be defeated, the moment of his demise draws our focus intensely," ...

Iraqi death toll from 2003-2011 war and subsequent conflict estimated at half a million

2013-10-16
A scientific study calculating Iraqi deaths for almost the complete period of the US-led war and subsequent occupation published in PLOS Medicine this week reports that close to half a million Iraqi deaths are directly or indirectly attributable to the conflict. A team of researchers from Iraq and the US led by Amy Hagopian, of the University of Washington, conducted a survey in 2000 households across Iraq and used the data to estimate death rates for the two year-period before the war began in March 2003 and the subsequent years until mid-2011. Estimates that extrapolate ...

Expert panel diagnosis for diagnostic test poorly described, experts not blinded to test under study

2013-10-16
Evaluation of diagnostic studies is often a challenge in diseases that are not defined by a specific test. Assessment of the accuracy of diagnostic tests is essential because they may be used to define who is considered to have a disease and receive treatment for it. However, measuring the accuracy of a diagnostic test requires an accurate gold standard, which defines which patients truly have and do not have the disease. Studies of diseases not defined by a specific test often rely on expert panels to establish the gold standard. In a systematic review and analysis of ...

Protective pathway identified to counter toxicity associated with Alzheimer's disease

2013-10-16
New research led by Marco Prado, PhD, of Western University has identified a pathway used by the brain to try to protect itself from toxicity that occurs with Alzheimer's disease (AD). Prado and his colleagues at the Robarts Research Institute and at the A.C. Camargo Cancer Center in Brazil have done extensive work on the role of prion protein. They found that toxicity of amyloid-β peptides, one of the major culprits in AD, can be decreased by preventing it from interacting with the prion protein. When a protein called stress-inducible phosphoprotein 1 (STI1) interacts ...

Penn researchers take first step toward a macular dystrophy gene therapy

2013-10-16
Vitelliform macular dystrophy, also known as Best disease, is one of a group of vision-robbing conditions called bestrophinopathies that affect children and young adults. Caused by inherited mutations in the BEST1 gene, these diseases cause severe declines in central vision as patients age. With a new study, University of Pennsylvania researchers report "encouraging" findings that mark the first clear step in developing a gene therapy that could prevent vision loss or event restore vision in individuals suffering from these conditions. The research, conducted in dogs, ...

Study finds high variability among primary care physicians in rate of PSA screening of older men

2013-10-16
"No organization recommends prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening in men older than 75 years. Nevertheless, testing rates remain high," write Elizabeth Jaramillo, M.D., of the University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, and colleagues in a Research Letter appearing in the October 16 issue of JAMA. The authors examined whether PSA screening rates would vary substantially among primary care physicians (PCPs) and if the variance would depend on which PCP patients used. Using complete Medicare Part A and B data for Texas, the researchers selected PCPs whose patient ...

For patients with diabetes, angioplasty and bypass surgery lead to similar long-term benefits for quality of life

2013-10-16
For patients with diabetes and coronary artery disease in more than one artery, treatment with coronary artery bypass graft surgery provided slightly better health status and quality of life between 6 months and 2 years than procedures using drug-eluting stents, although beyond 2 years the difference disappeared, according to a study in the October 16 issue of JAMA. Although previous studies have demonstrated that coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery is generally preferred over percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI; procedures such as balloon angioplasty or ...

Medication taken for nausea during pregnancy not associated with increased risk of major malformations

2013-10-16
In an analysis that included more than 40,000 women exposed to the nausea medication metoclopramide in pregnancy, use of this drug was not associated with significantly increased risk of major congenital malformations overall, spontaneous abortion, and stillbirth, according to a study in the October 16 issue of JAMA. More than 50 percent of pregnant women experience nausea and vomiting, typically early in their pregnancy. The care of most women is managed conservatively, but 10 percent to 15 percent of those with nausea and vomiting will eventually receive drug treatment. ...

Researchers estimate 1 in 2,000 people in the UK carry variant CJD proteins

2013-10-16
The survey provides the most robust prevalence measure to date - and identifies abnormal prion protein across a wider age group than found previously and in all genotypes. An accompanying editorial says that although the disease remains rare, "infection" may be relatively common and doctors need to understand the public health measures that are in place to protect patients. Variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (vCJD) is a degenerative brain disease – often called the human form of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE) or "mad cow disease." It emerged after widespread ...

New estimates give updated count of Iraq war deaths between 2003 and 2011

2013-10-16
During the U.S.-led invasion and occupation of Iraq from 2003 to 2011, for every three people killed by violence, two died as a result of the collapse of the infrustructure that supports health care, clean water, nutrition, and transportation, according to new estimates in a study from the University of Washington Department of Global Health published Oct. 15 in the open access journal PLOS Medicine. All told, the researchers estimate nearly a half million people died from causes that could be attributed to the war. Researchers from Johns Hopkins University, Simon Fraser ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Adverse childhood experiences in firstborns associated with poor mental health of siblings

Montana State scientists publish new research on ancient life found in Yellowstone hot springs

Generative AI bias poses risk to democratic values

Study examines how African farmers are adapting to mountain climate change

Exposure to air pollution associated with more hospital admissions for lower respiratory infections

Microscopy approach offers new way to study cancer therapeutics at single-cell level

How flooding soybeans in early reproductive stages impacts yield, seed composition

Gene therapy may be “one shot stop” for rare bone disease

Protection for small-scale producers and the environment?

Researchers solve a fluid mechanics mystery

New grant funds first-of-its-kind gene therapy to treat aggressive brain cancer

HHS external communications pause prevents critical updates on current public health threats

New ACP guideline on migraine prevention shows no clinically important advantages for newer, expensive medications

Revolutionary lubricant prevents friction at high temperatures

Do women talk more than men? It might depend on their age

The right kind of fusion neutrons

The cost of preventing extinction of Australia’s priority species

JMIR Publications announces new CEO

NCSA awards 17 students Fiddler Innovation Fellowships

How prenatal alcohol exposure affects behavior into adulthood

Does the neuron know the electrode is there?

Vilcek Foundation celebrates immigrant scientists with $250,000 in prizes

Age and sex differences in efficacy of treatments for type 2 diabetes

Octopuses have some of the oldest known sex chromosomes

High-yield rice breed emits up to 70% less methane

Long COVID prevalence and associated activity limitation in US children

Intersection of race and rurality with health care–associated infections and subsequent outcomes

Risk of attempted and completed suicide in persons diagnosed with headache

Adolescent smartphone use during school hours

Alarming rise in rates of advanced prostate cancer in California

[Press-News.org] Poor rural youth in Haiti are rich in family ties, rooted in their own culture