Impact of new country, discrimination, and acculturation-related factors on depression and anxiety among ex-Soviet Jewish migrants: data from a population-based cross-national comparison study

Beata Trilesnik, Thomas Stompe, Sophie D. Walsh, Thomas Fydrich, Iris Tatjana Graef-Calliess

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Migration, displacement, and flight are major worldwide phenomena and typically pose challenges to mental health. Therefore, migrants’ mental health, and the factors which may predict it, have become an important research subject. The present population-based cross-national comparison study explores symptoms of depression, anxiety, and somatization, as well as quality-of-life in samples of ex-Soviet Jewish migrants settling in three new countries: Germany, Austria and Israel, as well as in a sample of non-migrant ex-Soviet Jews in their country of origin, Russia. In the current study, we investigate the relationship of perceived xenophobiа and antisemitism, acculturation attitudes, ethnic and national identity, as well as affiliation with Jewish religion and culture to the psychological well-being of these migrants. Furthermore, we consider xenophobic and antisemitic attitudes as well as the acculturation orientation of the new countries’ societies, assessed in the native control samples. Our data suggest that attitudes of the new country’s society matter for the mental health of this migrant group. We conclude that the level of distress among ex-Soviet Jewish migrants seems to depend, among other factors, on the characteristics of the new country and/or specific interactions of the migrant population with the society they are settling in.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)289-301
Number of pages13
JournalInternational Review of Psychiatry
Volume35
Issue number3-4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.

Funding

The first author was supported by a PhD scholarship from the Ernst Ludwig Ehrlich Studienwerk. The authors gratefully thank Andreas Pähler for editing the manuscript.

FundersFunder number
Ernst Ludwig Ehrlich Studienwerk

    Keywords

    • Mental health
    • discrimination
    • immigrants
    • new country effect

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