Knowledge of the Stress–Health Link as a Source of Resilience Among Mexicans in the Arizona Borderlands

Author:

Crocker Rebecca M.1ORCID,Duenas Karina R.12,Castro Idolina3,Ingram Maia12,Torres Emma3,Carvajal Scott C.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Promotion Sciences, Zuckerman College of Public Health, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA

2. Arizona Prevention Research Center, Department of Health Promotion Sciences, Zuckerman College of Public Health, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA

3. Campesinos Sin Fronteras, Somerton, AZ, USA

Abstract

Mexicans who migrate to the United States endure significant stressors related to the migration process and social and environmental conditions of life in the United States. Given that chronic stress exposure has been linked to the onset of health conditions, these ecological factors may expose them to increased risk for poor health. However, Mexicans have many positive health outcomes compared to those monitored nationally, making it crucial to understand possible sources of resilience in this population. Here, we investigate Mexicans’ lay health knowledge in response to stress as a possible source of health-related resilience. Health knowledge is considered a central facet of practical and traditional knowledge as well as adaptive modes of intelligence and has a tangible impact on health. Using an ethnographically grounded community-based participatory research design informed by the theory of embodiment, our hybrid team of bilingual university and community-based researchers interviewed Mexican-origin residents ( N = 30) living in rural southwestern Arizona about how they experienced and responded to stress and incorporated it into their etiological frameworks. Thematic analysis revealed that participants paid close attention to how stress presented itself in their bodies, which informed their understanding of its potentially harmful health impacts and motivated them to employ multiple stress reduction strategies. Our results highlight the breadth of Mexicans’ lay health knowledge, thereby challenging dominant narratives about low rates of health literacy in this population. Findings can be harnessed to optimize potential health protective effects in home and community settings as well as to inform preventive and clinical interventions.

Funder

National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference79 articles.

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