The Columbus Dispatch

New American youths’ mental health in focus

Columbus event looks at cultural stigmas, more

- Peter Gill

When Merafe Endalew, a secondyear Ohio State University sociology student, started seeing a therapist a few years ago, she said her mother opposed her openly talking about mental health because of the associated stigma in their Ethiopian American community.

“We’re so separated from the topic of mental health that we don’t even have words for certain things,” said Endalew, who moved with her family from a refugee camp in Kenya to Ohio when she was 7.

Nisha Dhaurali, a senior at Cristo Rey Columbus High School, said they had similar experience­s trying to talk about mental health with their parents — who came to the U.S. as Bhutanese Nepali refugees.

“I was like, ‘(My parents are) probably not feeling the same thing I’m feeling because they don’t talk about it,’” Dhaurali said. “It was only in high

school that we had … counselors that I could go to talk to.”

The unique mental health challenges young people from immigrant and refugee communitie­s face — as well as solutions — were the focus of an event held last weekend in Greater Columbus.

Panelists and speakers at the “Resilient Minds” conference Saturday in Reynoldsbu­rg discussed how the quest for identity, familial responsibi­lities, intergener­ational trauma and cultural stigma can place extra stresses on new American youth. Around 100 students, parents and health profession­als from Asian, African and Latin American background­s attended the event. A team of young volunteers organized the event, which the National Alliance on Mental Illness; Alcohol, Drug and Mental Health Board of Franklin County; and several local nonprofits sponsored.

“Growing up in families where resilience is a way of life can come with an extra set of challenges, expectatio­ns and responsibi­lities … and that requires an extra set of mental resilience,” said Dr. Taru Saigal, an Indian American physician who leads the language-concordant care program at the Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center.

Franklin County’s foreign-born population has grown from around 9% in 2005 to nearly 13% in 2021 — a figure that does not include children born in the U.S. Large Somali and Bhutanese Nepali refugee communitie­s call Greater Columbus home, as well as significan­t population­s from Latin America, South Asia, East and West Africa.

Mental health is often a taboo subject among these communitie­s but has real-world consequenc­es, according to

the conference’s speakers. One study from 2013 found the suicide rate among the U.S. Bhutanese Nepali refugee community was roughly double the national average.

Unique challenges

Youth from all background­s face pressures related to academics, body image, social media, gun violence and gender expression. New American youth often face all of these stressors — and more, according to conference participan­ts.

“Many students are tackling the role of finding their place in this new community, while also finding an identity of their own — and that can definitely be a struggle,” said Shreejana Bastola, a second-year OSU neuroscien­ce major from Reynoldsbu­rg’s Bhutanese Nepali community.

Regina Loayza, 21, whose family immigrated to Columbus from Peru, said that from a young age, she was responsibl­e for translatin­g documents for her parents, acting as a cultural broker between them and American society.

“Feeling like I have to be the best in school because I’m not only representi­ng myself but my family, and I have to make their efforts to come here worth it — that … gave me a lot of performanc­e anxiety,” she said.

Refugee parents can also unintentio­nally transfer trauma from conflict, war or the resettleme­nt process to their children, Saigal said.

“It can impact how you interact with your children. It can impact the emotional bonding you have with them,” she said.

Overcoming stigma to seek help

Youth participan­ts said that talking with their parents about mental health

can be difficult.

“Mental illness is a very mystified subject” among the older Ethiopian generation, Endalew said. “They see it as more of a mystic thing, as something taking over you.”

Dr. Nipen Katel, a Bhutanese-nepali physician with Mount Carmel Medical Group in New Albany, said his older refugee patients often have difficulty describing their emotions. Instead, their anxiety or depression manifests as physical symptoms like burning sensations in the feet or hands, or stomach pain, he said.

“We must advocate for increased access to mental health services tailored to the needs of the community. This includes offering services in Nepali or the native language, and ensuring that our health care providers are culturally competent,” said Katel.

Lila Chamlagai, a doctorate student in public health at Brown University, emphasized the importance of getting more community members involved in spreading mental-health awareness.

Saigal agreed that reducing stigma around mental health is essential.

“The most heartwarmi­ng part of my clinical practice is when I see youth coming to my clinic, sometimes with their parents, and sometimes just by themselves, to talk about their health,” she said.

If you or someone you know is experienci­ng a behavioral health crisis, you can reach Ohio’s 24/7 Crisis Text Line by texting 4HOPE to 741741 or call the Franklin County Suicide Prevention Hotline at 614-221-5445 or the Teen Suicide Prevention Hotline at 614-294-3300. The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline can be reached by calling or texting 988 or chat at 988lifelin­e.org .

Peter Gill covers immigratio­n and new American communitie­s for The Dispatch in partnershi­p with Report for America. You can support work like his with a tax-deductible donation to Report for America here: bit.ly/3fnsgaz .

 ?? PHOTOS BY PETER GILL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? From left to right, Regina Loayza, who was born in Peru; Merafe Endalew, a first-generation immigrant from Kenya with Ethiopian roots; Nisha Deurali, whose family is Bhutanese Nepali; and Dilasha Adhikari, who is also Bhutanese Nepali, all spoke on a panel about mental health in immigrant and refugee communitie­s at a conference in Reynoldsbu­rg on Saturday.
PHOTOS BY PETER GILL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH From left to right, Regina Loayza, who was born in Peru; Merafe Endalew, a first-generation immigrant from Kenya with Ethiopian roots; Nisha Deurali, whose family is Bhutanese Nepali; and Dilasha Adhikari, who is also Bhutanese Nepali, all spoke on a panel about mental health in immigrant and refugee communitie­s at a conference in Reynoldsbu­rg on Saturday.
 ?? ?? A note on a table at Saturday’s conference, “Resilient Minds,” focused on youth mental health among new Americans.
A note on a table at Saturday’s conference, “Resilient Minds,” focused on youth mental health among new Americans.
 ?? PETER GILL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH ?? Dr. Nipen Katel, the keynote speaker at Saturday’s “Resilient Minds” conference, practices osteopathi­c medicine with Mount Carmel Medical Group in New Albany.
PETER GILL/COLUMBUS DISPATCH Dr. Nipen Katel, the keynote speaker at Saturday’s “Resilient Minds” conference, practices osteopathi­c medicine with Mount Carmel Medical Group in New Albany.

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