Promoting Mental Health and Wellbeing in Multicultural Australia: A Collaborative Regional Approach

Migrant communities are often under-served by mental health services. Lack of community engagement results in missed opportunities for mental health promotion and early intervention, delayed care, and high rates of untreated psychological distress. Bilingual clinicians and others who work with these...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of environmental research and public health 2022-02, Vol.19 (5), p.2723
Hauptverfasser: Blignault, Ilse, Saab, Hend, Woodland, Lisa, Giourgas, Klara, Baddah, Heba
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 2723
container_title International journal of environmental research and public health
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creator Blignault, Ilse
Saab, Hend
Woodland, Lisa
Giourgas, Klara
Baddah, Heba
description Migrant communities are often under-served by mental health services. Lack of community engagement results in missed opportunities for mental health promotion and early intervention, delayed care, and high rates of untreated psychological distress. Bilingual clinicians and others who work with these communities lack linguistically and culturally appropriate resources. This article reports on the implementation and evaluation of a community-based group mindfulness program delivered to Arabic and Bangla-speaking communities in Sydney, Australia, including modifications made to the content and format in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. The program was positioned within a stepped-care model for primary mental health care and adopted a collaborative regional approach. In addition to improved mental health outcomes for face-to-face and online program participants, we have documented numerous referrals to specialist services and extensive diffusion of mindfulness skills, mostly to family members, within each community. Community partnerships were critical to community engagement. Training workshops to build the skills of the bilingual health and community workforce increased the program's reach. In immigrant nations such as Australia, mainstream mental health promotion must be complemented by activities that target specific population groups. Scaled up, and with appropriate adaptation, the group mindfulness program offers a low-intensity in-language intervention for under-served communities.
doi_str_mv 10.3390/ijerph19052723
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subjects Australia
Bilingualism
Collaboration
Community involvement
Community participation
COVID-19
Health care
Health care networks
Health education
Health literacy
Health promotion
Health services
Humans
Language
Mental disorders
Mental Health
Mental health care
Mindfulness
Multiculturalism & pluralism
Pandemics
Population
Prevention
Psychological stress
Refugees
SARS-CoV-2
Self help
Skills
Social networks
Stress
title Promoting Mental Health and Wellbeing in Multicultural Australia: A Collaborative Regional Approach
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