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Featured researches published by Luis H. Zayas.


Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences | 2006

Evaluating an Abbreviated Version of the Hispanic Stress Inventory for Immigrants

Patricia A. Cavazos-Rehg; Luis H. Zayas; Mark S. Walker; Edwin B. Fisher

This study evaluates an abbreviated version of the Hispanic Stress Inventory-Immigrant version (HSI-I) with a nonclinical sample of 143 adult Hispanic immigrants residing in a large midwestern city. The HSI-I consists of 73 items and 5 distinct subscales that assess psychosocial experiences on five dimensions, namely, occupational/economic, parental, marital, immigration, and familial/cultural. Five items with the greatest loading in each of the five sub-scales were aggregated to compose the abbreviated HSI-I. Exploratory factor analysis supports a two-factor structure that combines factors identified in previous research. Internal consistencies are acceptable across all subscales, ranging from .68 to .83. Convergent validity of the abbreviated HSI-I revised is supported with moderately positive relations through self-report measures of depression, anxiety, and anger mood levels. These findings provide initial support for the reliability and validity of the abbreviated HSI-I in Hispanic adults.


Transcultural Psychiatry | 2012

Are suicide attempts by young Latinas a cultural idiom of distress

Luis H. Zayas; Lauren E. Gulbas

The high rates of suicide attempts among adolescent Hispanic females in the United States have been well established by epidemiological and clinical studies. In this paper, we review the research history of Latina suicide attempts and their characteristics. Then we apply multi-faceted conceptual and empirical criteria found in the anthropological and psychiatric literature about cultural idioms of distress to the suicide attempts of young Latinas. We contrast the suicide-attempt phenomenon to the well-known ataque de nervios and propose that the phenomenon may reflect a developmental or cultural variant of the ataque. The attempt-as-idiom proposition is intended to invite discussion that can deepen our understanding of the cultural roots of the suicide attempts and their possible designation as cultural idiom. Establishing the meaning of suicide attempts within a cultural perspective can assist psychological and psychiatric research and clinical interventions.


Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies | 2017

Integration of unaccompanied migrant youth in the United States: a call for research

Jodi Berger Cardoso; Kalina M. Brabeck; Dennis Stinchcomb; Lauren Heidbrink; Olga Acosta Price; Óscar F. Gil-García; Thomas M. Crea; Luis H. Zayas

ABSTRACT Between October 2013 and July 2016, over 156,000 children travelling without their guardians were apprehended at the U.S.–Mexico border and transferred to the care of the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). During that same period, ORR placed over 123,000 unaccompanied migrant youth – predominantly from Central America – with a parent or other adult sponsor residing in the U.S. Following placement, local communities are tasked with integrating migrant youth, many of whom experience pre- and in-transit migration traumas, family separation, limited/interrupted schooling, and unauthorised legal status, placing them at heightened risk for psychological distress, academic disengagement, maltreatment, and human trafficking. Nonetheless, fewer than 10% of young people receive formal post-release services (PRS). This paper addresses the paucity of research on the experiences of the 90% of children and youth without access to PRS. To bridge this gap, this article: (a) describes the post-release experiences of unaccompanied youth, focusing on legal, family, health, and educational contexts; (b) identifies methodological and ethical challenges and solutions in conducting research with this population of young people and their families; and (c) proposes research to identify structural challenges to the provision of services and to inform best practices in support of unaccompanied youth. [196 words]


Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences | 2013

Aspirations of Latina Adolescent Suicide Attempters

Carolina Hausmann-Stabile; Lauren E. Gulbas; Luis H. Zayas

Parents’ aspirations and expectations are communicated to their offspring. Children internalize their parents’ aspirations and accept some of the expectations while rejecting others, all part of the developmental process and identity-consolidation. When the aspirations and expectations of youth and parents are incongruent, the outcomes in youths’ behavior can be deleterious, such as when adolescents manifest suicidal behaviors. We examined aspirations expressed by 12 Latina adolescent suicide attempters and their parents and compared them to 12 nonsuicidal Latinas and parents. Qualitative analyses revealed that incongruence of aspirations between girls and their parents were greater among suicidal teens. Suicidal and nonsuicidal Latinas presented contrasting aspirations: the former on gaining independence and the latter on completing their education and pursuing careers. Findings may inform developmental research and ways in which clinicians and policymakers can help Latinas achieve their own and their parents’ aspirations.


Journal of Child and Family Studies | 2017

Processes of Belonging for Citizen-Children of Undocumented Mexican Immigrants

Luis H. Zayas; Lauren E. Gulbas

In this article, we focus on the developmental contexts of middle childhood and early adolescence to explore the lives of citizen-children living with undocumented Mexican parents. We draw on the concept of belonging to highlight the distinct situation of citizen-children and the ways in which they come to understand their place in a world. To capture the experiences of citizen-children born to undocumented Mexican immigrant parents and their sense of belonging to place and community, we conducted in-depth interviews with 83 citizen-children in late childhood and early adolescence in three groups. One group of citizen-children lived in Mexico after their parents’ deportation. Another group remained in the U.S. after parents were detained or deported. The third group did not have a parent in deportation proceedings. Qualitative analyses of children’s recorded interviews revealed their experiences of discovery of parents’ undocumented status; political, social and material exclusion; and rupture of family ties. Children were keenly aware that birthright citizenship afforded them numerous privileges unavailable to their parents, but that it did not extend to the very privilege, they valued most: an intact family. The loss of parents through detention or deportation forced some children to consider existential questions about who they were and where they belonged, sometimes pitting family members against one another. Our findings suggest that belonging is intimately tied to broader forces of legal persecution that go beyond individualized notions of illegality and have deep, possibly lasting psychological effects.


Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences | 2017

Charting Directions for Research on Immigrant Children Affected by Undocumented Status

Luis H. Zayas; Kalina M. Brabeck; Laurie Cook Heffron; Joanna Dreby; Esther J. Calzada; J. Rubén Parra-Cardona; Alan J. Dettlaff; Lauren Heidbrink; Krista M. Perreira; Hirokazu Yoshikawa

Three groups of children from Mexico and Central America are vulnerable to effects of U.S. immigration policies: (1) foreign-born children who entered the United States with undocumented immigrant parents; (2) unaccompanied children who entered the United States alone; and (3) U.S.-born citizen-children of undocumented immigrant parents. Despite the recent demographic growth of these youth, scholarship on their strengths and challenges is under-theorized and isolated within specific disciplines. Hence, service providers, researchers, and policymakers have insufficient research to inform their efforts to support the children’s well-being. A group of scholars and service providers with expertise in immigrant children convened to establish consensus areas and identify gaps in knowledge of undocumented, unaccompanied, and citizen-children of undocumented immigrant parents. The primary goal was to establish a research agenda that increases interdisciplinary collaborations, informs clinical practice, and influences policies. This report summarizes key issues and recommendations that emerged from the meeting.


Archive | 2014

Perinatal Depression Treatments for US Latinas: A Review of Research Findings

Luis H. Zayas; McClain Sampson

The Hispanic-heritage population of the United States has grown considerably in the past 2 decades. While the growth in the Hispanic-origin population has been profoundly influenced by spikes in immigration from large countries (e.g., Mexico) and small countries from Central and South America, and the Caribbean, it has also been part of the growth of second and later generation Hispanics.


Journal of The National Medical Association | 2007

Legal status, emotional well-being and subjective health status of Latino immigrants.

Patricia A. Cavazos-Rehg; Luis H. Zayas; Edward L. Spitznagel


Journal of Child and Family Studies | 2015

The Distress of Citizen-Children with Detained and Deported Parents.

Luis H. Zayas; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; Hyunwoo Yoon; Guillermina Natera Rey


Social Work | 2014

Exiling Children, Creating Orphans: When Immigration Policies Hurt Citizens

Luis H. Zayas; Mollie H. Bradlee

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Lauren E. Gulbas

University of Texas at Austin

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Lauren Heidbrink

California State University

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Patricia A. Cavazos-Rehg

Washington University in St. Louis

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Allyson P. Nolle

Washington University in St. Louis

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Edward L. Spitznagel

Washington University in St. Louis

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