Salameh Taghreed N, Sakarya Sibel, Acarturk Ceren, Hall Lynne A, Al-Modallal Hanan, Jakalat Suad S
Koç University School of Nursing, İstanbul, Türkiye.
Department of Public Health, Koç University School of Medicine, İstanbul, Türkiye.
J Adv Nurs. 2025 Apr;81(4):1992-2002. doi: 10.1111/jan.16407. Epub 2024 Aug 22.
To describe Syrian refugee women's experiences of the barriers to access mental health services for postpartum depression (PPD).
A descriptive qualitative study was conducted.
Fifteen purposefully selected Syrian refugee women who scored ≥10 on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale participated in the semi-structured telephone interviews. Transcripts were coded verbatim and analysed thematically according to the dimensions of Levesque's model of patient-centred access to healthcare. Data were collected between August 2022 and February 2023.
Five themes with 14 subthemes were identified: (1) approachability covered lack of knowledge and misconceptions related to PPD and its treatment, lack of awareness of available psychosocial services and perceived need of mental health treatment; (2) acceptability comprised being a refugee, stigma of mental illness, cultural preferences of healthcare provider and language barrier; (3) availability and accommodation encompassed transportation barrier and location of the centre, no support for childcare and lack of time; (4) affordability included financial difficulties and health insurance coverage; (5) appropriateness comprised no screening for PPD and intermittent services with limited focus on mental health.
The findings of this study reveal that Syrian refugee women experienced multi-faceted complex barriers to access mental health services for PPD. It is important for health professionals, including nurses, and policymakers to address the cultural mental health needs of this population and establish strategies to protect their legal and health rights.
Our study has important practice and policy implications for establishing strategies designed specifically for refugee mothers to mitigate their perceived barriers to PPD treatment and ultimately improve their mental health.
The Consolidated Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research was used.
No patient or public contribution. Participants were Syrian refugee women with PPD symptoms and contributed only to the interviews and member checking.
描述叙利亚难民妇女在获得产后抑郁症(PPD)心理健康服务方面所面临的障碍经历。
进行了一项描述性定性研究。
15名在爱丁堡产后抑郁量表上得分≥10分的叙利亚难民妇女参与了半结构化电话访谈。访谈记录逐字编码,并根据Levesque以患者为中心的医疗服务获取模型的维度进行主题分析。数据收集于2022年8月至2023年2月期间。
确定了5个主题,包含14个子主题:(1)可及性包括对PPD及其治疗缺乏知识和误解、对现有心理社会服务缺乏认识以及对心理健康治疗的感知需求;(2)可接受性包括身为难民、精神疾病的污名、医疗服务提供者的文化偏好和语言障碍;(3)可获得性与便利性涵盖交通障碍和中心位置、缺乏儿童保育支持以及时间不足;(4)可承受性包括经济困难和医疗保险覆盖范围;(5)适宜性包括未对PPD进行筛查以及间歇性服务且对心理健康关注有限。
本研究结果表明,叙利亚难民妇女在获得PPD心理健康服务方面经历了多方面的复杂障碍。对于包括护士在内的卫生专业人员和政策制定者而言,满足这一人群的文化心理健康需求并制定保护其合法和健康权利的策略非常重要。
我们的研究对于制定专门为难民母亲设计的策略具有重要的实践和政策意义,以减轻她们在PPD治疗方面感知到的障碍,并最终改善她们的心理健康。
采用了定性研究报告的综合标准。
无患者或公众贡献。参与者为有PPD症状的叙利亚难民妇女,仅参与了访谈和成员核对。