Abstract

Acculturation stress is prevalent among migrant populations. The current study examines whether acculturation stress influences migrant children’s mental health through the mediators of the satisfaction and frustration of basic psychological needs for autonomy, relatedness, and competence. A sample of 484 migrant children is obtained in Kunming, China using a multi-stage cluster random sampling. Data are analyzed through structural equation modeling in Mplus 8.0. Results indicate that acculturation stress has a direct impact on children’s depression but no significant direct effect on children’s happiness. Acculturation stress also has indirect effects on depression and happiness via the mediators of need satisfaction and frustration. Acculturation stress is negatively associated with need satisfaction and positively associated with need frustration, which is further significantly predictive of children’s happiness and depression. Overall, this study validates the basic psychological needs theory in the context of China’s internal migration. Findings contribute to the understanding of the mechanisms that underlie the relationship between acculturation stress and psychological outcomes and provide practical implications for future interventions.

Highlights

  • Results indicate that acculturation stress has a direct impact on children’s depression but no significant direct effect on children’s happiness

  • The current study validates the negative impact of acculturation stress on the mental health of Chinese migrant children and supports the mediating effects of basic psychological need satisfaction and frustration in such association

  • Based on the empirical findings, relevant practical implications are proposed for protecting the mental health of migrant children

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Summary

Introduction

Results indicate that acculturation stress has a direct impact on children’s depression but no significant direct effect on children’s happiness. Acculturation stress has indirect effects on depression and happiness via the mediators of need satisfaction and frustration. The All-China Women’s Federation (2013) reported that the total amount of Chinese migrant children was 35.81 million, which increased by 41.37% from 2005 to 2013 [2]. Are incapable of obtaining the same rights, such as education and medical care, as their local counterparts [4] Under such an unfair institutional arrangement, migrant children are vulnerable and may experience migration-related stress [5,6,7]. On account of the massive number of migrant children and their poor psychological health status, exploring the underlying mechanisms in the association between acculturation stress and the mental health of Chinese migrant children is essential

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