Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Physicians for Human Rights, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 Mar 23;16(3):e0247033. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0247033. eCollection 2021.
The U.S. immigration system mandates that persons seeking asylum prove their persecution claim is credible and their fear of returning home is well-founded. However, this population represents a highly trauma-exposed group, with neuropsychiatric symptoms consequent to prior torture or maltreatment that may interfere with cognitive function and their ability to recall their trauma. These memory lapses may be incorrectly perceived by asylum adjudicators as indicators of dishonesty and jeopardize the person's credibility and asylum claim. Our retrospective mixed methods study seeks to present associations between trauma and memory loss in a sample of persons seeking asylum to the U.S. and describe how memory impairments manifest in this trauma-exposed population.
We randomly selected 200 medico-legal affidavits from 1346 affidavits collected in the past 30 years, as part of the Physicians for Human Rights Asylum Network connecting clinicians with legal providers for medical and/or psychiatric affidavits of U.S. asylum seekers and persons seeking other forms of humanitarian relief (hereafter, "asylum seekers"). Data was extracted from these affidavits using a coding manual informed by the Istanbul Protocol, the global standard for torture documentation. Seven affidavits were excluded due to missing age. We used multiple logistic regression to assess the association of memory loss with neuropsychiatric diagnoses: head trauma, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and depression. We supplemented these findings with a qualitative content analysis of the affidavits documenting memory loss. Memory loss presented among the asylum seekers' affidavits in several ways: memory gaps of the traumatic event; challenges with presenting a clear chronology of the trauma, avoidance of traumatic memories, and persistent short-term memory loss interfering with daily activity.
A majority of the sample received a neuropsychiatric diagnosis: 69% (n = 132) of asylum-seekers received a diagnosis of PTSD and 55% (n = 106) of depression. Head trauma was reported among 30% (n = 58) of affidavits. Further, 68% (n = 131) reported being subject to physical violence and 20% (n = 39) were documented as being at risk of suicide. Memory loss was documented among 21% (n = 40) asylum-seekers. In adjusted models, both PTSD and depression, but not head trauma, were associated with memory loss (p<0.05).
Stakeholders in the asylum process, spanning the medical, legal and immigration enforcement sectors, must be aware of the interplay of trauma and memory loss and how they might impact immigration proceedings for this vulnerable population.
美国移民法规定,寻求庇护者必须证明其迫害申诉可信,且返回原籍国的恐惧有充分依据。然而,这些人代表着一个高度创伤暴露的群体,他们可能因先前的酷刑或虐待而出现神经精神症状,从而影响认知功能和对创伤经历的回忆能力。这些记忆缺失可能会被庇护裁决者错误地视为不诚实的迹象,从而危及个人的可信度和庇护申请。我们的回顾性混合方法研究旨在展示寻求庇护到美国的人群中创伤与记忆丧失之间的关联,并描述这种创伤暴露人群中记忆障碍的表现形式。
我们从过去 30 年收集的 1346 份医学法律宣誓书中随机选择了 200 份,作为人权医生组织庇护网络的一部分,该网络将临床医生与法律提供者联系起来,为寻求庇护的美国人和寻求其他形式人道主义救济的人(以下简称“寻求庇护者”)提供医疗和/或精神病学宣誓书。我们使用编码手册从这些宣誓书中提取数据,该手册的编写依据是伊斯坦布尔议定书,该议定书是全球酷刑记录标准。由于年龄缺失,有 7 份宣誓书被排除在外。我们使用多项逻辑回归来评估记忆丧失与神经精神诊断(头部创伤、创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)和抑郁症)之间的关联。我们使用宣誓书中记录记忆丧失的定性内容分析来补充这些发现。记忆缺失在庇护寻求者的宣誓书中以多种方式呈现:创伤事件的记忆空白;呈现创伤事件清晰时间顺序的挑战、对创伤记忆的回避以及持续的短期记忆丧失干扰日常生活活动。
大多数样本接受了神经精神诊断:69%(n=132)的庇护寻求者被诊断为 PTSD,55%(n=106)的庇护寻求者被诊断为抑郁症。30%(n=58)的宣誓书中报告了头部创伤。此外,68%(n=131)的人报告遭受过身体暴力,20%(n=39)的人有自杀风险。21%(n=40)的庇护寻求者有记忆缺失的记录。在调整后的模型中,PTSD 和抑郁症,而不是头部创伤,与记忆缺失相关(p<0.05)。
庇护程序中的利益相关者,涵盖医疗、法律和移民执法部门,必须意识到创伤和记忆丧失之间的相互作用,以及它们如何影响这一弱势群体的移民程序。