Silove Derrick, Ventevogel Peter, Rees Susan
School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, and Psychiatry Research and Teaching Unit, Academic Mental Health Centre, Southwestern Sydney Local Health District, Sydney, Australia.
Public Health Section, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, Geneva, Switzerland.
World Psychiatry. 2017 Jun;16(2):130-139. doi: 10.1002/wps.20438.
There has been an unprecedented upsurge in the number of refugees worldwide, the majority being located in low-income countries with limited resources in mental health care. This paper considers contemporary issues in the refugee mental health field, including developments in research, conceptual models, social and psychological interventions, and policy. Prevalence data yielded by cross-sectional epidemiological studies do not allow a clear distinction to be made between situational forms of distress and frank mental disorder, a shortcoming that may be addressed by longitudinal studies. An evolving ecological model of research focuses on the dynamic inter-relationship of past traumatic experiences, ongoing daily stressors and the background disruptions of core psychosocial systems, the scope extending beyond the individual to the conjugal couple and the family. Although brief, structured psychotherapies administered by lay counsellors have been shown to be effective in the short term for a range of traumatic stress responses, questions remain whether these interventions can be sustained in low-resource settings and whether they meet the needs of complex cases. In the ideal circumstance, a comprehensive array of programs should be provided, including social and psychotherapeutic interventions, generic mental health services, rehabilitation, and special programs for vulnerable groups. Sustainability of services, ensuring best practice, evidence-based approaches, and promoting equity of access must remain the goals of future developments, a daunting challenge given that most refugees reside in settings where skills and resources in mental health care are in shortest supply.
全球难民数量出现了前所未有的激增,其中大多数位于心理健康护理资源有限的低收入国家。本文探讨了难民心理健康领域的当代问题,包括研究进展、概念模型、社会和心理干预以及政策。横断面流行病学研究得出的患病率数据无法明确区分情境性困扰形式和明显的精神障碍,纵向研究可能会解决这一缺点。一种不断发展的生态学研究模型关注过去创伤经历、日常持续压力源以及核心心理社会系统背景干扰之间的动态相互关系,其范围从个体扩展到夫妻和家庭。尽管由非专业咨询师实施的简短、结构化心理治疗已被证明在短期内对一系列创伤应激反应有效,但这些干预措施在资源匮乏环境中能否持续以及是否满足复杂病例的需求仍存在疑问。在理想情况下,应提供一系列全面的项目,包括社会和心理治疗干预、一般心理健康服务、康复以及针对弱势群体的特殊项目。服务的可持续性、确保最佳实践、基于证据的方法以及促进公平获取必须仍然是未来发展的目标,鉴于大多数难民居住在心理健康护理技能和资源供应最短缺的环境中,这是一项艰巨的挑战。