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Browsing by Autor "Catalina Correa-Salazar"

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    Exploring the Association Between Detention Conditions, Detention-Related Abuse, and Mental Health Among Deported Mexican Migrants
    (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2023) Leah Bakely; Catalina Correa-Salazar; Gudelia Rangel; Jesús Eduardo González-Fagoaga; Ahmed Ali Asadi González; Emilio A. Parrado; Fernando Riosmena; Ana P. Martínez-Donate
    Migration, detention, and deportation are often rife with violence. This study sought to examine associations between pre-migration experiences, detention conditions, and mental health among Mexicans deported from the U.S. to Mexico between 2020 and 2021. Data from the Migrante Project (N=306, weighted N=14,841) were analyzed using descriptive statistics and unadjusted and adjusted multivariate regression models. The prevalence of a lifetime mental health diagnosis was 18.5%. Exposure to adverse conditions in detention (adjusted odds ratio [AOR]=17.56, p<.001) and having been detained in both immigration and non-immigration facilities (AOR=9.70, p=.042) were significantly associated with increased odds of experiencing abuse during migrants' most recent detention. Experiencing abuse during migrants' most recent detention was, in turn, associated with increased odds of a lifetime mental health diagnosis (AOR=4.72, p<.005). Targeted, trauma-informed mental health services are needed for deported Mexican migrants.
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    ‘I feel safer in the streets than at home’: Rethinking harm reduction <i>for</i> women in the urban margins
    (Taylor & Francis, 2020) Amy E. Ritterbusch; Eliana Lizeth Pinzon Niño; Ricardo Antonio Reyes Páez; Julie Pardo Triana; Daniela Jaime Peña; Catalina Correa-Salazar
    Through qualitative data collected with women affected by drug use and drug-related violence in Bogotá, this article explores the convergence of harm reduction rationales and violence prevention programming in the urban margins to advocate for women's health empowerment and health rights as victims of intergenerational trauma and violence. We propose a methodological shift of public health praxis from street-based outreach models to intimate spaces of intervention for health outcomes embodiment <sup>1</sup> as we continue to develop our community health model to work with marginalised communities in the urban global South. Through this work committed to social justice in marginalised urban communities, we seek to support women's health needs through harm reduction in historically marginalised communities in urban settings. Our results expose how multi-level gender-based violence affects women's health in their living spaces in the urban margins. Drawing from women's voices and narratives of urban violence, we call for a feminist alternative to traditionally masculinist and public-space oriented harm reduction practice for health empowerment in the urban margins.
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    Impacts to Mental and Brain Health on Irregular and Deported Colombian Migrants: Implications for Policy and Practice
    (RELX Group (Netherlands), 2025) Catalina Correa-Salazar; Gudelia Rangel; John Alexander Blandón-Castaño; Emily N. Agudelo-Avellaneda; Deborah Saray Torres-Benítez; Eva Chaux-Rettberg; Natalia Quintero-Medina; Valeria Saray-Jaimes; María Loreto Restrepo-Mantilla; Ana P. Martínez-Donate
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    Mental Health Risk Factors and Protection Mechanisms for Children and Adolescents Impacted by the Venezuela-Colombia Humanitarian Crisis
    (RELX Group (Netherlands), 2024) Catalina Correa-Salazar; Joseph J Amon; Kathleen R. Page; Allison K. Groves; Emily N. Agudelo-Avellaneda; Deborah Saray Torres-Benítez; Ana P. Martínez-Donate

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