Chiumento Anna, Rutayisire Theoneste, Sarabwe Emmanuel, Hasan M Tasdik, Kasujja Rosco, Nabirinde Rachel, Mugarura Joseph, Kagabo Daniel M, Bangirana Paul, Jansen Stefan, Ventevogel Peter, Robinson Jude, White Ross G
Department of Primary Care and Mental Health, University of Liverpool, Liverpool, England.
Mental Health and Behaviour Research Group, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Rwanda, Kigali, Rwanda.
Confl Health. 2020 Nov 16;14(1):77. doi: 10.1186/s13031-020-00323-8.
Refugees fleeing conflict often experience poor mental health due to experiences in their country of origin, during displacement, and in new host environments. Conditions in refugee camps and settlements, and the wider socio-political and economic context of refugees' lives, create structural conditions that compound the effects of previous adversity. Mental health and psychosocial support services must address the daily stressors and adversities refugees face by being grounded in the lived reality of refugee's lives and addressing issues relevant to them.
We undertook a rapid qualitative study between March and May 2019 to understand the local prioritisation of problems facing Congolese refugees living in two refugee settings in Uganda and Rwanda. Thirty free list interviews were conducted in each setting, followed by 11 key informant interviews in Uganda and 12 in Rwanda.
Results from all interviews were thematically analysed following a deductive process by the in-country research teams. Free list interview findings highlight priority problems of basic needs such as food, shelter, and healthcare access; alongside contextual social problems including discrimination/inequity and a lack of gender equality. Priority problems relating to mental and psychosocial health explored in key informant interviews include discrimination and inequity; alcohol and substance abuse; and violence and gender-based violence.
Our findings strongly resonate with models of mental health and psychosocial wellbeing that emphasise their socially determined and contextually embedded nature. Specifically, findings foreground the structural conditions of refugees' lives such as the physical organisation of camp spaces or refugee policies that are stigmatising through restricting the right to work or pursue education. This structural environment can lead to disruptions in social relationships at the familial and community levels, giving rise to discrimination/inequity and gender-based violence. Therefore, our findings foreground that one consequence of living in situations of pervasive adversity caused by experiences of discrimination, inequity, and violence is poor mental health and psychosocial wellbeing. This understanding reinforces the relevance of feasible and acceptable intervention approaches that aim to strengthening familial and community-level social relationships, building upon existing community resources to promote positive mental health and psychosocial wellbeing among Congolese refugees in these settings.
逃离冲突的难民由于在原籍国、流离失所期间以及新的收容环境中的经历,往往心理健康状况不佳。难民营和定居点的条件,以及难民生活的更广泛社会政治和经济背景,造成了一些结构性状况,使先前逆境的影响更加复杂。心理健康和社会心理支持服务必须立足于难民的生活现实,解决难民面临的日常压力源和逆境,并处理与他们相关的问题。
2019年3月至5月,我们开展了一项快速定性研究,以了解乌干达和卢旺达两个难民安置点的刚果难民所面临问题的当地优先次序。在每个安置点进行了30次自由列举访谈,随后在乌干达进行了11次关键信息提供者访谈,在卢旺达进行了12次。
国内研究团队采用演绎法对所有访谈结果进行了主题分析。自由列举访谈结果突出了基本需求方面的优先问题,如食物、住所和医疗保健;以及背景性社会问题,包括歧视/不平等和缺乏性别平等。关键信息提供者访谈中探讨的与心理健康和社会心理健康相关的优先问题包括歧视和不平等;酒精和药物滥用;以及暴力和基于性别的暴力。
我们的研究结果与强调心理健康和社会心理福祉具有社会决定性和情境嵌入性的模型高度契合。具体而言,研究结果突出了难民生活的结构性状况,如营地空间的物理布局或通过限制工作权或受教育权而具有污名化作用的难民政策。这种结构性环境可能导致家庭和社区层面的社会关系破裂,引发歧视/不平等和基于性别的暴力。因此,我们的研究结果突出表明,生活在由歧视、不平等和暴力经历造成的普遍逆境中会导致心理健康状况不佳和社会心理福祉受损。这一认识强化了可行且可接受的干预方法的相关性,这些方法旨在加强家庭和社区层面的社会关系,利用现有的社区资源促进这些安置点的刚果难民的积极心理健康和社会心理福祉。