1. Abe-Kim, J., Takeuchi, D. T., Hong, S., Zane, N., Sue, S., Spencer, M. S., … Alegría, M. (2007). Use of mental health–related services among immigrant and US-born Asian Americans: results from the National Latino and Asian American study. American Journal of Public Health, 97(1), 91–98.
2. Abouguendia, M., & Noels, K. A. (2001). General and acculturation-related daily hassles and psychological adjustment in first-and second-generation South Asian immigrants to Canada. International Journal of Psychology, 36(3), 163–173.
3. Akinsulure-Smith, A. (2007). The use of interpreters with survivors of war, torture & refugee trauma. In Smith, Keller and Lhewa (Eds.) “… Like a Refugee Camp on First Avenue”: Insights and Experiences from the Bellevue/NYU Program for Survivors of Torture (pp. 83-105). New York, NY: The Jacob and Valeria Langeloth Foundation.
4. Alcántara, C., & Lewis-Fernández, R. (2016). Latinas’ and Latinos’ risk for PTSD after trauma exposure: A review of sociocultural explanations. In D. E. Hinton & B. J. Good (Eds.), The ethnography of political violence. Culture and PTSD: Trauma in global and historical perspective (p. 275–306). University of Pennsylvania Press.
https://doi.org/10.9783/9780812291469-009
5. Alegría, M., Canino, G., Shrout, P. E., Woo, M., Duan, N., Vila, D., & Meng, X.-L. (2008). Prevalence of mental illness in immigrant and non-immigrant U. S. Latino groups. American Journal of Psychiatry, 165(3), 356–369. PMC2712949.