International Centre for Evidence in Disability, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Relief International, Istanbul, Turkey.
PLoS One. 2021 Nov 1;16(11):e0259249. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0259249. eCollection 2021.
To estimate the prevalence of disability among Syrian refugees living in Sultanbeyli district, Istanbul and compare people with and without disabilities in terms of demographic and socio-economic characteristics.
Using the municipality refugee database as the sampling frame, 80 clusters of 50 people (aged 2+ years) were selected using probability proportionate to size sampling of clusters and random selection of households within clusters. Disability assessment included: i) self-reported difficulties in functioning (using the Washington Group Short Set-Enhanced tool and Child Functioning Modules), ii) Rapid Assessment of Musculoskeletal Impairment and iii) screening for symptoms of common mental disorders for children aged 8-17.
The overall prevalence of disability was 24.7% (95% CI 22.1-27.4), when including people self-reporting a lot of difficulty/cannot do in at least functional domain (15%, 95% CI 13.1-17.2), moderate/severe MSI (8.7%, 95% CI 7.6-9.9), and/or symptomatic anxiety, depression and PTSD among children 8-17 (21.0%, 95% CI 18.2-23.9). Men with disabilities were significantly less likely to be in paid work compared to their peers without disabilities (aOR 0.3 95% CI 0.2-0.5). Overall 60% of households included at least one person with a disability. Households with at least one person with a disability had a significantly higher dependency ratio, lower proportion of working-age adults in paid work, and were more likely to be female headed and in receipt of social protection schemes (p<0.05).
Disability is common among Syrian refugees in Sultanbeyli. People with disabilities in this setting experience greater vulnerability to poverty and exclusion from work, highlighting an urgent need for inclusive services, programmes and policies that are developed and implemented in partnership with people with disabilities.
估计居住在伊斯坦布尔苏丹贝伊利区的叙利亚难民的残疾患病率,并比较残疾人和非残疾人在人口统计学和社会经济特征方面的差异。
利用市议会难民数据库作为抽样框架,采用集群概率比例规模抽样和集群内家庭随机选择的方法,选择 80 个 50 人(2 岁及以上)的集群。残疾评估包括:i)自我报告的功能障碍(使用华盛顿小组短期强化工具和儿童功能模块),ii)快速评估肌肉骨骼损伤,iii)对 8-17 岁儿童进行常见精神障碍症状筛查。
当包括自我报告在至少一个功能领域有很多困难/无法完成的人(15%,95%CI 13.1-17.2)、中度/重度 MSI(8.7%,95%CI 7.6-9.9)和/或 8-17 岁儿童有症状的焦虑、抑郁和 PTSD 的人时,总体残疾患病率为 24.7%(95%CI 22.1-27.4)。与无残疾的同龄人相比,有残疾的男性从事有薪工作的可能性显著降低(aOR 0.3,95%CI 0.2-0.5)。总体而言,60%的家庭至少有一名残疾人。至少有一名残疾人的家庭依赖率显著较高,有薪工作的劳动年龄成年人比例较低,更有可能是女性户主,并获得社会保护计划(p<0.05)。
在苏丹贝伊利的叙利亚难民中,残疾很常见。在这种情况下,残疾人更容易陷入贫困和被排除在工作之外,这突显了迫切需要与残疾人合作制定和实施包容性服务、方案和政策。