Acculturation: nutritional and health implications
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Veiga, Óscar Luis
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Merton, Jack
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Nova Science Publishers
Abstract
Acculturation has been viewed as a collective experience; however it can also be highly individualized, this is particularly evident among health professionals who are part of the health care globalisation phenomenon. This chapter outlines, highlights and discusses the acculturation process and how this impacts both individuals, cultural groups and how it continues to shape migrant health care professionals, particularly in the West. A succinct analysis and discussion highlights that acculturation facilitates trust, cooperation and connections between migrant and local health care professionals while the community remains central to meet the needs of the individual. It also outlines the acculturation process is dependent upon the experiences which an individual encounters in the host community, their shift in behaviour, the acculturative stress and psychopathology they experience which leads to ultimate adaptation.
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Bibliographic reference
Esteban Gonzalo, L., & Veiga, O. L. (2014). Acculturation: nutritional and health implications. In Jack Merton (ed.). Acculturation: Psychology, processes and global perspectives (pp. 137-152). New York: Nova Science Publishers.





