Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, 6752Brown University School of Public Health, Providence, RI, USA.
Research Program on Children and Adversity, 6019Boston College School of Social Work, Chestnut Hill, MA, USA.
Transcult Psychiatry. 2023 Feb;60(1):142-155. doi: 10.1177/13634615221111627. Epub 2022 Aug 22.
Transnational migration of refugees is associated with poor mental health, particularly among children. We conducted a pilot trial of the Family Strengthening Intervention for Refugees (FSI-R), using a community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach to deliver a home-based intervention "for refugees by refugees" to improve family functioning and child mental health. = 80 refugee families in the Greater Boston area participated in the study ( = 40 Somali Bantu families; = 40 Bhutanese families) with = 41 families randomized to care-as-usual. Of the 39 families who received FSI-R, = 36 caregivers and children completed qualitative exit interviews. We present findings from these interviews to identify the mechanisms through which a family-strengthening intervention for refugees can be acceptable, feasible, and effective at improving family functioning and children's mental health outcomes. Authors applied Grounded Theory to code interview transcripts and detailed field notes and used an iterative process to arrive at final codes, themes, and a theoretical framework. The greatest contributors to acceptability and feasibility included flexibility in scheduling intervention sessions, the interventionist being a community member, and improvements to family communication and time spent together. All of these factors were made possible by the CBPR approach. Our findings suggest that given the socio-political context within the U.S. and the economic challenges faced by refugee families, the successful implementation of such interventions hinges on culturally-grounding the intervention design process, drawing heavily on community input, and prioritizing community members as interventionists.
难民的跨国迁移与心理健康不良有关,尤其是儿童。我们采用社区参与式研究 (CBPR) 方法,对难民家庭强化干预 (FSI-R) 进行了试点试验,为改善家庭功能和儿童心理健康,实施了一项“难民帮难民”的家庭干预措施。在大波士顿地区,共有 80 个难民家庭( = 40 个索马里班图家庭; = 40 个不丹家庭)参与了这项研究,其中 = 41 个家庭随机分配接受常规护理。在接受 FSI-R 的 39 个家庭中,有 = 36 名照顾者和儿童完成了定性退出访谈。我们从这些访谈中得出结论,以确定难民家庭强化干预措施如何能够被接受、可行且有效地改善家庭功能和儿童心理健康结果。作者采用扎根理论对访谈记录和详细的实地笔记进行编码,并通过迭代过程得出最终代码、主题和理论框架。可接受性和可行性的最大贡献因素包括干预会议安排的灵活性、干预者是社区成员,以及家庭沟通和共度时间的改善。所有这些因素都是通过 CBPR 方法实现的。我们的研究结果表明,鉴于美国的社会政治背景和难民家庭面临的经济挑战,此类干预措施的成功实施取决于将干预设计过程文化本土化,大量借鉴社区意见,并优先考虑社区成员作为干预者。