Department of Health Sciences, The Swedish Red Cross University College, Huddinge, Sweden.
Division for Forced Migration and Refugee Health, Norwegian Centre for Violence and Traumatic Stress Studies, Oslo, Norway.
Front Public Health. 2021 Sep 9;9:717353. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2021.717353. eCollection 2021.
A number of post-migration stressors have been shown to adversely affect mental health in refugees resettled in high-income countries, including poor social integration, financial difficulties and discrimination, and recent evidence suggests that these effects are gender specific. Social support has been found to buffer against post-migration stress in some studies on refugee populations, though the evidence on this is mixed. The present study used cross-sectional survey data from a nationwide, randomly sampled group of adult refugees from Syria resettled in Sweden between 2008 and 2013 ( = 4,000, = 1,215, response rate 30.4%) to investigate gender-specific associations between post-migration stressors and subjective well-being (SWB) and whether these associations were modified by social support. SWB was measured with the WHO-5 Well-being Index (scaled 0-100), dichotomized into high (≥50) and low (<50) SWB. Main analyses were stratified by gender, and regressed SWB on four domains of post-migration stress (financial strain, social strain, competency strain and discrimination) using logistic regression, adjusting for sociodemographic variables and traumatic experiences. Social support was tested as an effect modifier. In fully adjusted models, main risk factors for low SWB were high financial strain, especially in males (OR = 10.30 [4.91-21.6], < 0.001 vs. OR= 3.84 [1.68-8.79], = 0.002), and high social strain, in males (OR = 9.21 [3.96-21.4], < 0.001 vs. OR = 1.03 [0.40-2.64], = ns). There was some evidence that social support buffered the adverse association of financial strain with SWB. In conclusion, the present study found clear support of gender-specific effects of post-migration stressors on SWB. Mitigation strategies and interventions should be aware of and sensitive to these potential gendered effects, and future research exploring mental health in the context of resettlement stress should have a heightened focus on the important role of gender.
许多研究表明,在高收入国家重新安置的难民中,许多移民后压力源会对心理健康产生不利影响,包括社会融合不良、经济困难和歧视等,最近的证据表明这些影响具有性别特异性。一些针对难民群体的研究发现,社会支持可以缓解移民后的压力,但这方面的证据并不一致。本研究使用了 2008 年至 2013 年期间在瑞典重新安置的叙利亚成年难民的全国性随机抽样小组的横断面调查数据(= 4000,= 1215,应答率为 30.4%),调查了移民后压力源与主观幸福感(SWB)之间的性别特异性关联,以及社会支持是否会改变这些关联。SWB 采用世界卫生组织 5 项幸福感指数(范围 0-100)进行衡量,分为高(≥50)和低(<50)SWB。主要分析按性别分层,并使用逻辑回归将 SWB 回归到四个移民后压力源领域(经济压力、社会压力、能力压力和歧视),调整社会人口统计学变量和创伤经历。测试了社会支持作为效应修饰剂。在完全调整的模型中,低 SWB 的主要危险因素是高经济压力,尤其是男性(OR = 10.30 [4.91-21.6],< 0.001 与 OR = 3.84 [1.68-8.79],= 0.002),高社会压力,男性(OR = 9.21 [3.96-21.4],< 0.001 与 OR = 1.03 [0.40-2.64],= ns)。有一些证据表明,社会支持缓冲了经济压力与 SWB 之间的不利关联。总之,本研究明确支持移民后压力源对 SWB 的性别特异性影响。缓解策略和干预措施应意识到并对这些潜在的性别影响敏感,未来探索重新安置压力背景下的心理健康的研究应更加关注性别所起的重要作用。