Immigrant Patients Adapt to the Culture of Admission and Experience Less Safety in Forensic Psychiatric Care

Patients with an immigrant background are overrepresented in forensic psychiatric hospitals. As a result, daily work is impeded by language barriers and cultural differences. Furthermore, general therapy processes have not yet been adapted to this special patient population, and little reliable know...

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Main Authors: Larissa Titze, Julia Gros, Michael Büsselmann, Maximilian Lutz, Judith Streb, Manuela Dudeck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.701544/full
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spelling doaj-b7a7f65531bc4e7ab5eb17ba844083122021-07-26T07:32:56ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-07-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.701544701544Immigrant Patients Adapt to the Culture of Admission and Experience Less Safety in Forensic Psychiatric CareLarissa TitzeJulia GrosMichael BüsselmannMaximilian LutzJudith StrebManuela DudeckPatients with an immigrant background are overrepresented in forensic psychiatric hospitals. As a result, daily work is impeded by language barriers and cultural differences. Furthermore, general therapy processes have not yet been adapted to this special patient population, and little reliable knowledge is available. All immigrants go through an acculturation process, which is related to their mental well-being. Four acculturation strategies exist: integration, separation, assimilation, and marginalization. The strategy chosen depends on the extent of someone’s orientation toward their country of origin and the country of admission. The current study aimed to expand knowledge of forensic patients with a migration background in Germany by evaluating their self-reported acculturation processes and associated individual and social factors, e.g., the ward climate. Therefore, we studied forensic patients with a migration background from 11 forensic hospitals in Bavaria, Germany. Besides completing the Frankfurter Acculturation Scale (FRACC) and Essen Climate Evaluation Schema (EssenCES), the participants provided information on their clinical and biographical history. We recruited 235 patients with a migration background and found that the participants oriented themselves more toward the culture of admission and less toward the country of origin than the reference sample did. Moreover, the patients experienced significantly less safety on the ward than the forensic reference sample did. A possible explanation for the patients’ orientation is the lack of possibilities to adhere to their cultural traditions. Patients may feel less safe because of their limited knowledge of German and cultural misunderstandings.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.701544/fullacculturationmigration backgroundforensic psychiatryward climateintegrationexperienced safety
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Larissa Titze
Julia Gros
Michael Büsselmann
Maximilian Lutz
Judith Streb
Manuela Dudeck
spellingShingle Larissa Titze
Julia Gros
Michael Büsselmann
Maximilian Lutz
Judith Streb
Manuela Dudeck
Immigrant Patients Adapt to the Culture of Admission and Experience Less Safety in Forensic Psychiatric Care
Frontiers in Psychology
acculturation
migration background
forensic psychiatry
ward climate
integration
experienced safety
author_facet Larissa Titze
Julia Gros
Michael Büsselmann
Maximilian Lutz
Judith Streb
Manuela Dudeck
author_sort Larissa Titze
title Immigrant Patients Adapt to the Culture of Admission and Experience Less Safety in Forensic Psychiatric Care
title_short Immigrant Patients Adapt to the Culture of Admission and Experience Less Safety in Forensic Psychiatric Care
title_full Immigrant Patients Adapt to the Culture of Admission and Experience Less Safety in Forensic Psychiatric Care
title_fullStr Immigrant Patients Adapt to the Culture of Admission and Experience Less Safety in Forensic Psychiatric Care
title_full_unstemmed Immigrant Patients Adapt to the Culture of Admission and Experience Less Safety in Forensic Psychiatric Care
title_sort immigrant patients adapt to the culture of admission and experience less safety in forensic psychiatric care
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Patients with an immigrant background are overrepresented in forensic psychiatric hospitals. As a result, daily work is impeded by language barriers and cultural differences. Furthermore, general therapy processes have not yet been adapted to this special patient population, and little reliable knowledge is available. All immigrants go through an acculturation process, which is related to their mental well-being. Four acculturation strategies exist: integration, separation, assimilation, and marginalization. The strategy chosen depends on the extent of someone’s orientation toward their country of origin and the country of admission. The current study aimed to expand knowledge of forensic patients with a migration background in Germany by evaluating their self-reported acculturation processes and associated individual and social factors, e.g., the ward climate. Therefore, we studied forensic patients with a migration background from 11 forensic hospitals in Bavaria, Germany. Besides completing the Frankfurter Acculturation Scale (FRACC) and Essen Climate Evaluation Schema (EssenCES), the participants provided information on their clinical and biographical history. We recruited 235 patients with a migration background and found that the participants oriented themselves more toward the culture of admission and less toward the country of origin than the reference sample did. Moreover, the patients experienced significantly less safety on the ward than the forensic reference sample did. A possible explanation for the patients’ orientation is the lack of possibilities to adhere to their cultural traditions. Patients may feel less safe because of their limited knowledge of German and cultural misunderstandings.
topic acculturation
migration background
forensic psychiatry
ward climate
integration
experienced safety
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.701544/full
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