School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, SydneyNSW2052, Australia.
Settlement Services International, Sydney, NSWAustralia.
Psychol Med. 2020 Apr;50(5):781-792. doi: 10.1017/S0033291719000606. Epub 2019 Apr 11.
Refugees report elevated rates of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but are relatively unlikely to seek help for their symptoms. Mental health stigma is a key barrier to help-seeking amongst refugees. We evaluated the efficacy of an online intervention in reducing self-stigma and increasing help-seeking in refugee men.
Participants were 103 refugee men with PTSD symptoms from Arabic, Farsi or Tamil-speaking backgrounds who were randomly assigned to either receive an 11-module online stigma reduction intervention specifically designed for refugees ('Tell Your Story', TYS) or to a wait-list control (WLC) group. Participants completed online assessments of self-stigma for PTSD and help-seeking, and help-seeking intentions and behaviors at baseline, post-intervention, and at a 1 month follow-up.
Intent-to-treat analyses indicated that, compared to the WLC, TYS resulted in significantly smaller increases in self-stigma for seeking help from post-treatment to follow-up (d = 0.42, p = 0.008). Further, participants in the TYS conditions showed greater help-seeking behavior from new sources at follow-up (B = 0.69, 95% CI 0.19-1.18, p = 0.007) than those in the WLC. The WLC showed significantly greater increases in help-seeking intentions from post-intervention to follow-up (d = 0.27, p = 0.027), relative to the TYS group.
This is the first investigation of a mental health stigma reduction program specifically designed for refugees. Findings suggest that evidence-based stigma reduction strategies are beneficial in targeting self-stigma related to help-seeking and increasing help-seeking amongst refugees. These results indicate that online interventions focusing on social contact may be a promising avenue for removing barriers to accessing help for mental health symptoms in traumatized refugees.
难民报告创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的发生率较高,但他们寻求治疗症状的可能性相对较低。心理健康污名是难民寻求帮助的一个关键障碍。我们评估了一种在线干预措施在减少难民男性的自我污名和增加寻求帮助方面的效果。
参与者是 103 名来自阿拉伯语、波斯语或泰米尔语背景的有 PTSD 症状的难民男性,他们被随机分配到接受专门为难民设计的 11 个模块的在线耻辱感减少干预(“Tell Your Story”,TYS)组或等待名单对照组(WLC)组。参与者在基线、干预后和 1 个月随访时完成了 PTSD 自我污名和寻求帮助、寻求帮助的意图和行为的在线评估。
意向治疗分析表明,与 WLC 相比,TYS 导致从治疗后到随访时自我寻求帮助的耻辱感显著增加较小(d = 0.42,p = 0.008)。此外,TYS 组在随访时从新来源寻求帮助的行为明显多于 WLC 组(B = 0.69,95%CI 0.19-1.18,p = 0.007)。WLC 从干预后到随访时寻求帮助的意图显著增加(d = 0.27,p = 0.027),相对于 TYS 组。
这是首次对专门为难民设计的心理健康耻辱感减少计划进行的调查。研究结果表明,基于证据的耻辱感减少策略有利于针对与寻求帮助相关的自我耻辱感,并增加难民寻求帮助。这些结果表明,专注于社会接触的在线干预可能是为创伤后难民获取心理健康症状帮助消除障碍的一个有前途的途径。