Mental Health of Refugees and Torture Survivors: A Critical Review of Prevalence, Predictors, and Integrated Care
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“any act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person for such purposes as obtaining from him or a third person information or a confession, punishing him for an act he or a third person has committed or is suspected of having committed, or intimidating or coercing him or a third person, or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind.”(United Nations Convention against Torture and Other Cruel UNCAT article)
2. Method
3. Results
3.1. Demographics and Characteristics of Survivors of Torture
3.2. Prevalence of Mental Health Conditions in Refugees and Torture Survivors:
3.3. Predictors of Risk and Resilience
3.4. Integrated Care
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Sample | Age (Mean) | Gender (Male) | Status (Married) | Education | Religion |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shannon et al. (2016) [16] | 179 Karen refugees | 35.27 | 51.4% | 62.6% | 35.8% completed primary school | - |
Odenat (2012) [17] | 326 adult refugee torture survivors | 38.55 | 57% | 65% | 40% completed primary school | - |
Ibrahim and Hassan (2017) [18] | 91 Syrian Kurdish refugees | 29.91 | 55% | 60.4% | 5.5% had no formal education | - |
Leaman and Gee (2012) [19] | 131 African torture survivors | 34.12 | 42% | 47.3% | 77.1% completed at least high school | Christians 92.4% Muslims 4.6% |
McColl et al. (2010) [20] | 306 torture survivors from Gaza, Egypt, Mexico, Honduras, South Africa | 37.7 | 56% | 42% | 30% completed secondary education. | Christians 55% Muslims 38% |
Luitel et al. (2013) [21] | 720 torture survivors | 29.2% ≥ 45 years | 51.0% | 74.9% | 79.2% literate | - |
Schubert and Punamäki (2011) [22] | 78 torture survivors from Middle East (ME), Central Africa (CA), South Asia (SA), Southeast Europe (SE) | 37.60 | 62.8% | ME: 58.1% CA: 47.8% SA: 69.2% SE: 81.8% | Majority completed secondary school | ME: 58.1% Muslims CA: 91.3% Christians SA: 76.9% Muslims SE: 100% Muslims |
Le et al. (2018) [23] | 108 refugees in Switzerland | 43.2 | 78.7% | 62.1% | 41.6% completed secondary | - |
Morina et al. (2016) [24] | 134 refugees in Switzerland | 42 | 78.4% | 58.2% | 36.6% completed ≥12 years of education | - |
Tinghög et al. (2017) [25] | 1215 Syrian refugees resettled in Sweden | 32.9% between 30 and 39 years | 62.8% | 63.5% | 40.2% completed 0–9 years | - |
NCTTP (2015) [26] | 9025 torture survivors | 40.18 | 53% | 53% | Mean: 11.8 years of education | Christians 48.0% Muslims 38.5% Buddhist 7.5% |
Song et al. (2018) [27] | 278 torture survivors mainly from Iraq, Iran, Eritrea | 40.31 | 45.3% | - | 36.5% completed ≥13 years | Christians 37.4% Muslims 36% Buddhist 8.6% |
Willard et al. (2014) [8] | 497 Iraqi refugees in the United States | 57.95% between 19 and 64 years | 55.5% | - | - | - |
Robertson et al. (2016) [28] | 449 Somali and Oromo refugee trauma survivors | 37.1 | 52% | 32% | 50% completed secondary school | - |
Asgary et al. (2013) [29] | 30 asylee in the United States | 31.2 | 70% | 68% | 40 % had at least college education | - |
Chu et al. (2013) [30] | 875 survivors of political violence | 34.37 | 64% | 63% | 59% completed high school or more | Muslims 38% Christians 31% Buddhist 28% |
Raghavan et al. (2013) [31] | 172 refugees in the United States | 36.9 | 66.9% | 64.5% | - | Muslims 37.2% Christians 33.1% Buddhist 24.4% |
Hoffman et al. (2017) [32] | 111 Karen refugees | 33.7 | 52% | 57% | - | - |
Carlsson et al. (2010) [33] | 45 (66% Iraqi) refugees | 39.2 | 66.7% | 82.2% | - | - |
Hooberman et al. (2010) [34] | 75 torture survivors in the United States | - | 58.7% | 54.7% | 30.6% completed less than high school | Muslims 42.7% Christians 23.9% Buddhist 14.7% |
Kroo and Nagy (2011) [35] | 53 Somali refugees | 83.0% between 18 and 29 years | 83.0% | 35.8% | 45.3% completed 1–4 elementary educations | - |
Berthold et al. (2014) [14] | 136 Cambodian refugees | 56.5 | 39% | 58.8% | 47.8% completed 1–5 years of education | - |
Keatley et al. (2015) [36] | 85 torture survivors with Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI) | 34.18 | 69.4% | - | 49.41% completed post-secondary education | Christians 41.17% Muslims 36.47% Buddhist 15.29% |
Study | Sample | Trauma (%) | Primary Torture (%) | Secondary Torture (%) | Torture Methods (%) | Demographics |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Shannon et al. (2016) [16] | 179 Karen refugees | - | 27.4 | 51.4 | - | - |
Odenat (2012) [17] | 326 adult refugee torture survivors | - | - | - | Witnessing (59.5); physical (56.4); sexual (36.5); loss of control of basic life routine (45.4); aggressive environmental control (31.6); formal accusation (30.4) | - |
Ibrahim and Hassan (2017) [18] | 91 Syrian Kurdish refugees | Three or more events during or after migration (79); forced to flee home country (86.8); witnessed destruction (64.8); confinement due to violence (61.5); exposure to elements (72.6); food/water deprivation (27.5) | - | - | - | - |
Leaman and Gee (2012) [19] | 131 African torture survivors | - | - | - | Sexual (45); beatings (89); threats to family (48); threats of death (44); verbal abuse (58); food/water deprivation (61) | 64% of those who experienced sexual torture were women |
McColl et al. (2010) [20] | 306 torture survivors from Gaza, Egypt, Mexico, Honduras, South Africa | Ten or more events (10) | 76 | - | Higher exposure to trauma in men than women | |
Luitel et al. (2013) [21] | 720 torture survivors | Witnessed murders (73); witnessed injury (70); witnessed harassment (68); witnessed destruction of property (60) | - | - | - | - |
Schubert and Punamäki (2011) [22] | 78 torture survivors from Middle East (ME), Central Africa (CA), South Asia (SA), Southeast Europe (SE) | - | - | - | Death threats and terrorization; witnessing injury/killings; sexual molestations | Sexual torture more common in women; detainment more common in men |
Le et al. (2018) [23] | 108 refugees in Switzerland | - | - | - | Physical (97.2); forced stress positions (94.4); psychological manipulation (93.5); humiliating treatment (93.5); deprivation of basic needs (91.7); exposure to sensory discomfort (86.1); sexual torture (82.4) | - |
Morina et al. (2016) [24] | 134 refugees in Switzerland | - | 85 | Isolation (76.9); imprisonment (76.9); physical assault (75.4); combat (75.4); murder of friend or family member (64.9) forced separation from family (60.4); brainwashing (47.8); disappearing or kidnapping (47) | - | |
Tinghög et al. (2017) [25] | 1215 Syrian refugees resettled in Sweden | Forced separation from friends or family (67.9); loss of significant other (64); witnessed violence or assault (63); sexual violence (7) | 31 | - | - | |
NCTTP (2015) [26] | 9025 torture survivors | - | - | - | Beating (67.3); threats (67.2); rape (31.1—females; 8.1—male) | Women exposed to rape more than men; age at first torture was 25–44 years |
Song et al. (2018) [27] | 278 torture survivors mainly from Iraq, Iran, Eritrea | - | - | - | Beating (45.6); wound/maim (8.4); rape/sexual (8.8); forced posture—stretched or hung (11.7); deprivation (17.9); sensory stress (12.4); threats and psychological (56); witnessing (30.8) | Political beliefs (36.3%), family background (38.2%), religious beliefs (30.9%), ethnicity/race (12.3%), and group membership (17.6%) were reasons for torture |
Willard et al. (2014) [8] | 497 Iraqi refugees in the United States | - | 56 | Beatings, kidnapping and interrogation, electric shock, rape, witness torture of family member | 57.6% of adults; 52.9% of children | |
Robertson et al. (2016) [28] | 449 Somali and Oromo refugee trauma survivors | - | - | - | Physical (71); witness (74); sexual (21) | - |
Asgary et al. (2013) [29] | 30 asylee in the United States | - | - | - | Blunt force trauma (93) | Political beliefs (63%) and group membership were reasons for torture |
Study | Sample | Measures | PTSD | Depression | Anxiety |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ibrahim and Hassan (2017) [18] | 91 Syrian Kurdish refugees | HTQ 1 (cut-off 2.5) | 35.16% (16 items) 38.46% (45 items) | - | - |
Song et al. (2018) [27] | 278 torture survivors mainly from Iraq, Iran, Eritrea | PCL 2 (45–50 points) HSCL-25 3 (cut-off 1.75) | 56.9% | 83.8% | 81.3% |
Odenat (2012) [17] | 326 adult refugee torture survivors | Clinician Administered PTSD Scale | 23% | - | - |
Leaman and Gee (2012) [19] | 131 African torture survivors | Part 4 HTQ (cut-off 2.5) HSCL-25 (cut-off 1.75) | 57.3% | 94.7% | - |
Asgary et al. (2013) [29] | 30 asylee in the United States | DSM IV-TR | 69% | 69% | - |
Luitel et al. (2013) [21] | 720 torture survivors | PCL-C (more than 50 score) BDI 4 (more than 20) BAI 5 (more than 17) | 9.6% | 27.5% | 22.9% |
Hooberman et al. (2010) [34] | 75 torture survivors in the United States | HTQ (cut-off 2.5) | 40.0% | - | - |
Tufan et al. (2013) [37] | 57 refugees | DSM-IV-TR | 55.2% | 55.2% | - |
Bandeira et al. (2010) [13] | 55 refugees torture survivors | HTQ (cut-off 2.5) HADS 6 (more than 11) | 69% | 74% | 91% |
Schubert and Punamäki (2011) [22] | 78 torture survivors | IES-R 7 HSCL-25 | 88.3% | 78.2% | 78.2% |
Tinghög et al. (2017) [25] | 1215 Syrian refugees resettled in Sweden | HTQ (mean item score of 2.06) HSCL-25 (1.80 depression, 1.75 anxiety) | 29.9% | 40.2% | 31.8% |
Tamblyn et al. (2011) [15] | 61 torture survivors | DSM-IV TR | 48% | 45% | 31% |
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Abu Suhaiban, H.; Grasser, L.R.; Javanbakht, A. Mental Health of Refugees and Torture Survivors: A Critical Review of Prevalence, Predictors, and Integrated Care. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 2309. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16132309
Abu Suhaiban H, Grasser LR, Javanbakht A. Mental Health of Refugees and Torture Survivors: A Critical Review of Prevalence, Predictors, and Integrated Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(13):2309. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16132309
Chicago/Turabian StyleAbu Suhaiban, Hiba, Lana Ruvolo Grasser, and Arash Javanbakht. 2019. "Mental Health of Refugees and Torture Survivors: A Critical Review of Prevalence, Predictors, and Integrated Care" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 13: 2309. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16132309
APA StyleAbu Suhaiban, H., Grasser, L. R., & Javanbakht, A. (2019). Mental Health of Refugees and Torture Survivors: A Critical Review of Prevalence, Predictors, and Integrated Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(13), 2309. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16132309