Aalto Sanni, Punamäki Raija-Leena, Vänskä Mervi, Kankaanpää Reeta, Turunen Tiina, Lahtinen Oskari, Derluyn Ilse, Spaas Caroline, De Haene Lucia, Smith Jervelund Signe, Skovdal Morten, Andersen Arnfinn J, Opaas Marianne, Osman Fatumo, Sarkadi Anna, Durbeej Natalie, Soye Emma, Peltonen Kirsi
INVEST Research Flagship Centre, University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
Faculty of Social Sciences / Psychology, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland.
Eur J Psychotraumatol. 2025 Dec;16(1):2479924. doi: 10.1080/20008066.2025.2479924. Epub 2025 Mar 27.
: Immigrant and refugee adolescents often face traumatic experiences and are vulnerable to mental health problems, such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety and depression. Yet, they also show remarkable resilience in the face of these stressors. Research is still scarce on how both mental health problems and resilience dynamically interplay in immigrant and refugee adolescents' development.: We aimed to identify latent profiles of immigrant and refugee adolescents' wellbeing, consisting of externalizing and internalizing symptoms, PTSD (intrusion and avoidance), and resilience, and analyse the demographic and contextual determinants of these profiles.: We employed cross-sectional survey data from the RefugeesWellSchool project for 1607 immigrant and refugee adolescents (mean age 15.3 years, SD 2.15, 42.3% girls) from six European countries: Belgium, Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. Latent profile analysis and three-step procedure with BCH weights were used to identify the wellbeing profiles and their determinants.: Results identified four adolescent wellbeing profiles: (1) Low symptoms (49.7%, = 791); (2) High symptoms with intrusion (10.6%, = 169); (3) Moderate symptoms (26.9%, = 428); and (4) Resilient avoidant (12.8%, = 203). Older participants, those with refugee background, shorter residence in the host country, more experiences of daily stressors or discrimination, or low family support were less likely to belong to the Low symptoms or Resilient avoidant groups ( ≤ .001).: The profiles reflected distinct differentiation of intrusive and avoidance dimensions of the PTSD-symptoms. Intrusion clustered with high level of other mental health problems, whereas avoidance co-occurred with high resilience. Experiences related to immigration, stressors, and family support were crucial determinants of the wellbeing profile membership. Future interventions should utilize information obtained by person-centered studies to create better targeted and tailored support for immigrant and refugee adolescents.
移民和难民青少年常常面临创伤性经历,且易患心理健康问题,如创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)、焦虑和抑郁。然而,面对这些压力源,他们也展现出了非凡的复原力。关于心理健康问题和复原力如何在移民和难民青少年的发展中动态相互作用的研究仍然匮乏。
我们旨在确定移民和难民青少年幸福感的潜在类型,包括外化和内化症状、PTSD(侵入和回避)以及复原力,并分析这些类型的人口统计学和背景决定因素。
我们使用了来自“难民健康学校”项目的横断面调查数据,该数据涉及来自六个欧洲国家(比利时、丹麦、芬兰、挪威、瑞典和英国)的1607名移民和难民青少年(平均年龄15.3岁,标准差2.15,42.3%为女孩)。采用潜在类别分析和带有BCH权重的三步程序来确定幸福感类型及其决定因素。
(1)低症状型(49.7%,n = 791);(2)伴有侵入的高症状型(10.6%,n = 169);(3)中度症状型(26.9%,n = 428);以及(4)有复原力的回避型(12.8%,n = 203)。年龄较大的参与者、有难民背景的人、在东道国居住时间较短、日常压力源或歧视经历较多,或家庭支持较低的人,属于低症状型或有复原力的回避型群体的可能性较小(p≤.001)。
这些类型反映了PTSD症状侵入和回避维度的明显差异。侵入与高水平的其他心理健康问题聚集在一起,而回避则与高复原力同时出现。与移民、压力源和家庭支持相关的经历是幸福感类型归属的关键决定因素。未来的干预措施应利用以个体为中心的研究所获得的信息,为移民和难民青少年提供更有针对性和个性化的支持。