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Apply the latest research to strengthen mental wellbeing and prevent stress-related disorders in your communities.
Chief Editor: Nadine Wilches, LCSW
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The Paradox of Risk: A Systemic Evaluation of AANHPI Mental Wellbeing, Stress Resiliency, and Vulnerability in San Diego County with Miramar College
This applied research report, offers a comprehensive examination of the psychological landscape characterizing the Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) population in San Diego County. Commissioned to contextualize the findings of recent evaluations at San Diego Miramar College and to support the strategic objectives of the San Diego Foundation, this document investigates a critical public health anomaly: the "Paradox of Risk."
Our central thesis posits that the AANHPI population exhibits a distinctive divergence between functional markers of success and internal markers of distress. While often perceived as the "model minority", characterized by high academic achievement, strong family cohesion, and self-reported wellness, this demographic is simultaneously experiencing a silent epidemic of high internalization, suicidal ideation, and a pervasive sense of external control.
Drawing upon the MindArch Health "5-Elements of Systemic Wellbeing" framework, recent social determinants of health data, and survey results from the Miramar College AANHPI Student Achievement Program, we identify the complex profile of this population (considering culture, economic, and community differences) through more precise data analysis to support differentiation. This report analyzes the 56% spike in youth suicide rates, the disproportionate burden on Southeast Asian students, and the specific protective factors that must be bolstered to avert crisis. It serves as a blueprint for moving from reactive clinical models to proactive, culturally responsive systemic wellbeing.
Preventing Teen Dating Violence: A Comprehensive Proactive Population Health Framework
The traditional landscape of public health and behavioral health has long been defined by its responsiveness to crisis. When an adolescent experiences physical or sexual harm within a dating relationship, the machinery of the social service and healthcare sectors activates to provide triage, treatment, and recovery. While these services are indispensable for those already harmed, they represent the final stage of a systemic failure to intervene before the onset of violence. Teen dating violence (TDV), a significant public health issue affecting millions of young people annually, is an adverse childhood experience (ACE) with lifelong implications for health, economic opportunity, and overall wellbeing (Basile et al., 2020). To address this challenge, a fundamental shift is required: emphasizing resources not just on reactive, deficit-based models but on proactive, preventive, and systemic approaches grounded in population health informatics and the principles of positive psychology (Wilches, 2022).
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