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Morton Beiser

Researcher at Ryerson University

Publications -  127
Citations -  9543

Morton Beiser is an academic researcher from Ryerson University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mental health & Refugee. The author has an hindex of 48, co-authored 127 publications receiving 9093 citations. Previous affiliations of Morton Beiser include University of Toronto & National Research Council.

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Perceived racial discrimination, depression, and coping: a study of Southeast Asian refugees in Canada.

TL;DR: Findings support the effectiveness of forbearance in diminishing the strength of the association between discrimination and depression and the moderating effect of forbearances was conditioned by the level of ethnic identity.
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The health of immigrants and refugees in Canada.

TL;DR: This article argues that an interaction model that takes into account both predisposition and socio-environmental factors, provides the best explanatory framework for extant findings, and the best guide for future research, and argues that forging stronger links between research, policy and the delivery of services will help make resettlement a more humane process.
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Language acquisition, unemployment and depressive disorder among Southeast Asian refugees: a 10-year study.

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the mental health salience of risk and protective factors changes according to the phase of resettlement, particularly among refugee women and among people who did not become engaged in the labor market during the earliest years of resettlement.
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Poverty, Family Process, and the Mental Health of Immigrant Children in Canada

TL;DR: Poverty may represent a transient and inevitable part of the resettlement process for new immigrant families, but for long-stay immigrant and receiving-society families, poverty probably is not part of an unfolding process; instead, it is the nadir of a cycle of disadvantage.
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Establishing the onset of psychotic illness.

TL;DR: A method for dating the first appearance of prodromal signs of psychotic illness, the emergence of an acute episode, and the initiation of treatment seeking is described.