Interpersonal Risk and Resilience in Latine Immigrants

July 29 @ 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm

The aim of this presentation is to outline interpersonal factors that exacerbate and mitigate risk for mental health problems among Latine immigrants, particularly asylum seekers from Central America. Data from across the lifespan, including children, adolescents, young adults, and adults, will be presented centered on how interpersonal processes shape risk and resilience for immigrants. At the conclusion of the webinar participants will be able to:

  • Identify major sources of trauma exposure in Latine asylum seekers
  • Understand significant health disparity in the area of posttraumatic stress facing Latine asylum seekers of all ages 
  • Elaborate several interpersonal factors including attachment, familismo, and belonging that shape mental health risk 
  • Leverage interpersonal factors in clinical practice with trauma exposed asylum seekers 

 Resource: Amanda Venta, Ph.D 

 

Dr. Amanda Venta, Ph.D  is an Associate Professor of Psychology, a licensed clinical psychologist, and Director of the Youth and Family Studies Lab at the University of Houston (UH). She earned a B.A. at Rice University and an M.A. and Ph.D. at UH, and taught at Sam Houston State University for five years. Her pre-doctoral internship and practica were with several Houston-area schools, Texas Children’s Hospital, and DePelchin Children’s Center through Baylor’s Menninger Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, where she remains Adjunct Faculty. Her research encompasses psychopathology in youth, attachment security, emotion dysregulation, and social cognition, with a recent focus on the psychology of recently immigrated adolescents from Central America. She has received researchfunding from the National Institutes of Mental Health, among others. She serves on the editorial boards of Attachment and Human Development, Child Psychiatry and Human Development, and the Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, and has published 135+ scientific papers, chapters, and books. 

 

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