Process / pipelineacculturation-stress

Societal Attitudinal Familial Ethnic Acculturative Stress Scale

The Societal Attitudinal Familial Ethnic (SAFE) Acculturative Stress Scale is a self-report instrument designed to measure the psychological stress and strain experienced by individuals during the acculturation process—the adaptation of cultural attitudes, behaviors, and identities when navigating between heritage and dominant cultures. Developed by Chavez, Cervantes, and Busch-Rossnagel in 1997, the SAFE Scale assesses stress across multiple domains: pressure to acculturate from society, family discord related to cultural differences, and experiences of discrimination. The instrument is widely used in clinical, educational, and research settings to evaluate acculturative stress among immigrant and ethnic minority populations and to understand its effects on mental health and well-being.

Open in MethodMindSoonVideoSoon

Read the full method

Members only

Sign in with a free account to read this section.

Sign in

Sources

  1. Chavez, R. A., Cervantes, R. C., & Busch-Rossnagel, N. A. (1997). Assessing acculturation in Mexican American adolescents. Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 19(1), 80–93. DOI: 10.1177/07399863970191006

Related methods

Referenced by

ScholarGateSocietal Attitudinal Familial Ethnic Acculturative Stress Scale (Societal Attitudinal Familial Ethnic Acculturative Stress Scale (SAFE Scale)). Retrieved 2026-06-04 from https://scholargate.app/en/transcultural-nursing/acculturative-stress-scale