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Care for the seafarers: A review of mental health in A ustronesia
Author(s) -
Guerrero Anthony P.S.,
Fung Daniel,
SuaaliiSauni Tamasailau,
Wiguna Tjhin
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
asia‐pacific psychiatry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.654
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 1758-5872
pISSN - 1758-5864
DOI - 10.1111/appy.12031
Subject(s) - mental health , mental illness , socioeconomic status , poverty , workforce , geography , health care , indigenous , medicine , psychology , environmental health , economic growth , psychiatry , population , ecology , economics , biology
Continent‐based regional reviews of mental health may not fully describe the status of ethnocultural groups that are widely dispersed across multiple continents or traditional world regions. Our aim was to describe the A ustronesians, an ethno‐linguistic group living primarily in islands and coastal areas in the P acific and Indian O ceans and S outheast A sia. Methods Consulting lay databases, we created matrices to describe the demographic, political, and socioeconomic profiles of nations with majority and minority indigenous A ustronesian language‐speaking populations. We then accessed the scientific literature to describe examples of mental health disparities and/or challenges in mental health care delivery. Results Many A ustronesian‐speaking people have experienced recent or current foreign occupation, lack of recognized sovereignty, poverty and low socioeconomic status, and low availability of psychiatric resources and providers. An analysis of the biological, psychological/psychocultural, and social and environmental impacts (risk or protective) on either the prevalence/presentation of mental illness, help‐seeking behavior or access to mental health care, or management of mental illness suggested that there may be relatively unique stressors (e.g. loss of homeland from either global warming or nuclear contamination) affecting people in this region and certain biological profiles (e.g. susceptibility to obesity and metabolic syndrome) that may impact psychiatric treatment. Discussion Solutions to mental health challenges in this world region may include culturally relevant and integrative mental healthcare delivery models; resource preserving, prevention‐focused universal mental healthcare; and technology to improve connectivity and increase access to either direct services or workforce‐building education and training.