Addressing the Disparity in Refugee Mental Health Services: a Pilot Study of a Traumatic Stress Intervention Utilizing a Language-Free mHealth Application

After resettlement, an overwhelming number of refugees struggle with chronic traumatic stress (CTS), the persistence of traumatic events (e.g., re-experiencing past trauma; news of on-going war) coupled with daily post-migration stressors (e.g., poverty, lack of transportation). CTS significantly in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of technology in behavioral science 2021-12, Vol.6 (4), p.599-608
Hauptverfasser: Mazzulla, Emily C., Fondacaro, Karen M., Weldon, Holly, Dibble, Marguerite, Price, Matthew
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:After resettlement, an overwhelming number of refugees struggle with chronic traumatic stress (CTS), the persistence of traumatic events (e.g., re-experiencing past trauma; news of on-going war) coupled with daily post-migration stressors (e.g., poverty, lack of transportation). CTS significantly increases the burden of mental health challenges experienced by refugees. Evidence-based mental health treatments often rely on worksheets, mobile applications, websites, or telephone calls to facilitate the management of distress outside of treatment sessions. Language barriers prevent these strategies from being incorporated into mental health treatment for refugees, which results in a significant disparity in care. Treatments delivered via mobile devices can address this barrier through the use of intuitive images that eliminate the need for text or language-based instruction. A 6-week pilot study assessing the effectiveness of group intervention utilizing a language free, culturally relevant mobile health (mHealth) application was conducted in a sample of Somali-Bantu and Nepali-Bhutanese adult refugee men and women ( N  = 18). Paired-samples t -tests were conducted to compare pre- and post-intervention levels of psychosocial distress, anxiety, depression, and traumatic stress, on the Refugee Health Screener (RHS-15) and an investigator generated coping measure. Results indicated significant reduction ( p  
ISSN:2366-5963
2366-5963
DOI:10.1007/s41347-021-00213-7