Eruyar Seyda, Huemer Julia, Vostanis Panos
Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK.
Department of Psychiatry, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Child Adolesc Ment Health. 2018 Nov;23(4):303-312. doi: 10.1111/camh.12252. Epub 2017 Nov 7.
Child mental health services and related agencies are faced with an increasing challenge in responding to the influx of refugee children around the world. There is strong evidence on the prevalence and complexity of these children's mental health problems and broader needs.
To review the research literature on risk and protective factors, and associated mental health interventions for refugee children.
Peer-reviewed studies were included for the period 2004-2017; if they included refugee, asylum-seeking or internally displaced children under 18 years; and adopted a quantitative design. Vulnerability and protective factors for refugee children were considered in this context, followed by the respective types of interventions at pre-, peri- and postmigration stage, and across high- and low-/middle-income countries. Eighty-two peer-reviewed studies fulfilled the selection criteria.
The existing body of literature is largely based on identifying risk factors among children with mental health problems and predominantly designing trauma-focused interventions to reduce their symptomatic distress. Recent research and services have gradually shifted to a broader and dynamic resilience-building approach based on ecological theory, that is at child, family, school, community and societal level. There is increasing evidence for the implementation and effectiveness of multimodal interventions targeting all these levels, despite the methodological constraints in their evaluation.
In high-income countries, child mental health services need to collaborate with all agencies in contact with refugee children, establish joint care pathways, and integrate trauma-focused interventions with family and community approaches. In low- and middle-income countries, where specialist resources are sparse, resilience-building should aim at maximising and upskilling existing capacity. A six-dimensional psychosocial model that applies to other children who experience complex trauma is proposed.
儿童心理健康服务机构及相关部门在应对全球难民儿童涌入问题上面临着日益严峻的挑战。有充分证据表明这些儿童心理健康问题的普遍性和复杂性以及更广泛的需求。
回顾关于难民儿童风险和保护因素以及相关心理健康干预措施的研究文献。
纳入2004年至2017年期间经过同行评审的研究;研究对象包括18岁以下的难民、寻求庇护儿童或境内流离失所儿童;并采用定量设计。在此背景下考虑了难民儿童的脆弱性和保护因素,随后是迁移前、迁移期间和迁移后阶段以及高收入和低收入/中等收入国家各自的干预类型。82项经过同行评审的研究符合入选标准。
现有文献主要基于识别有心理健康问题儿童的风险因素,并主要设计以创伤为重点的干预措施以减轻其症状困扰。最近的研究和服务已逐渐转向基于生态理论的更广泛、更具动态性的复原力建设方法,即在儿童、家庭、学校、社区和社会层面。尽管在评估中存在方法上的限制,但针对所有这些层面的多模式干预措施的实施和有效性的证据越来越多。
在高收入国家,儿童心理健康服务机构需要与所有接触难民儿童的机构合作,建立联合护理途径,并将以创伤为重点的干预措施与家庭和社区方法相结合。在低收入和中等收入国家,专业资源稀缺,复原力建设应旨在最大限度地提高现有能力并提升其技能。提出了一个适用于其他经历复杂创伤儿童的六维社会心理模型。