Howard Katie, Moore Darren, Dimitrellou Eleni, Janik Blaskova Lenka, Howard James
School of Education, University of Exeter, EX1 2LU, United Kingdom.
School of Education, University of Exeter, EX1 2LU, United Kingdom.
J Sch Psychol. 2024 Dec;107:101393. doi: 10.1016/j.jsp.2024.101393. Epub 2024 Nov 21.
Schools are increasingly considered as critical to the identification and support of child and adolescent mental health difficulties. However, research often fails to capture critical aspects of context and culture, such as migration, in assessing both the accessibility and effectiveness of school-based interventions. Although migrant youth may be at risk for poor mental health, little is known about the barriers and facilitators they face in accessing mental health support in schools. This scoping review aims to map existing research into school-based mental health interventions for migrant children and young people and, in particular, identify potential cultural and contextual effects related to accessibility. Drawing on scoping review methodology, we searched seven psychology, education, and health databases (i.e., Education Research Complete, British Education Index, ERIC, Web of Science, EMBASE, Medline, and PsycInfo) for studies published between 2002 and 2023. Study selection and data extraction were performed independently by reviewers. Narrative and thematic synthesis were used to analyze included papers and address the research questions. Thirty-eight studies met our inclusion criteria and are presented in this review. Our findings reveal a lack of targeted school-based mental health interventions for migrant young people despite the clear need among this growing population. Furthermore, few studies directly addressed issues of accessibility. Despite the range of migrant groups considered, the primary barriers and facilitators to access identified were contextual, cultural, and systemic, such as stigma, acculturative stressors, and partnerships between families, schools, and mental health services. The results of this scoping review highlight the need for a more intersectional framework for the design and implementation of school-based mental health support for migrant youth, arguably one that positions migration as a key social determinant of health and in particular, child and adolescent mental health.
学校越来越被视为识别和支持儿童及青少年心理健康问题的关键所在。然而,在评估基于学校的干预措施的可及性和有效性时,研究往往未能捕捉到背景和文化的关键方面,比如移民情况。尽管移民青少年可能面临心理健康不佳的风险,但对于他们在学校获得心理健康支持时所面临的障碍和促进因素,我们却知之甚少。本范围综述旨在梳理关于移民儿童和青少年基于学校的心理健康干预措施的现有研究,尤其要确定与可及性相关的潜在文化和背景影响。利用范围综述方法,我们在七个心理学、教育和健康数据库(即《教育研究完整版》《英国教育索引》《教育资源信息中心》《科学引文索引》《医学与健康领域数据库》《医学索引》和《心理学文摘数据库》)中搜索了2002年至2023年发表的研究。研究筛选和数据提取由评审人员独立进行。采用叙述性和主题性综合分析方法来分析纳入的论文并回答研究问题。38项研究符合我们的纳入标准,并在本综述中呈现。我们的研究结果表明,尽管这一不断增长的群体有明确需求,但针对移民青少年的有针对性的基于学校的心理健康干预措施却很缺乏。此外,很少有研究直接涉及可及性问题。尽管考虑了各类移民群体,但所确定的获得服务的主要障碍和促进因素是背景、文化和系统性的,比如耻辱感、文化适应压力源以及家庭、学校和心理健康服务机构之间的伙伴关系。本范围综述的结果凸显了为移民青少年设计和实施基于学校的心理健康支持需要一个更具交叉性的框架,这个框架可以将移民定位为健康尤其是儿童和青少年心理健康的关键社会决定因素。