Alpysbekova Aigerim, Scaramutti-Gladfelter Carolina, Cisco Mia M, Vo Duyen H, Duque Maria, Watkins Lawrence G, Cobb Cory L, Lee Seo Woo, Montero-Zamora Pablo, Schwartz Seth J, Pokul Inna
Department of Kinesiology and Health Education, University of Texas at Austin.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Miami.
Psychol Trauma. 2025 Aug 21. doi: 10.1037/tra0002024.
The present study was designed to examine the mental health challenges facing Ukrainian migrants exposed to the 2022 Russian invasion and who now reside in the United States, focusing on trauma, posttraumatic stress disorder, and emotional distress. Our study explored how anticipatory grief and perseverative worry intersect and contributed to migrants' emotional distress, which is further compounded by their ongoing emotional connection to Ukraine, where many relatives remain in danger.
Using a general inductive approach, we analyzed data from interviews with eight Ukrainian war migrants in the U.S. interviews were conducted in Ukrainian or Russian and analyzed using Dedoose Version 9.2.005.
The majority (five of eight) of participants discussed posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms and extreme emotional distress (six of eight) as a direct result of their exposure to war and violence, either firsthand or through loved ones. Participant statements suggested that emotional distress and strong emotional connection to Ukraine often co-occurred, with (a) 62.5% of individuals reporting both concerns for the safety of family members still in Ukraine, (b) material/emotional connections to Ukraine, and (c) 75% of participants indicating that their emotional distress was highly linked to trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder.
Ukrainian migrants face a complex spectrum of trauma and emotional distress, influenced by their ongoing connection to a conflict zone and by constant worry for their families' safety. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2025 APA, all rights reserved).
本研究旨在调查2022年遭受俄罗斯入侵、现居住在美国的乌克兰移民所面临的心理健康挑战,重点关注创伤、创伤后应激障碍和情绪困扰。我们的研究探讨了预期性悲伤和持续性担忧如何相互交织并导致移民的情绪困扰,而他们与乌克兰持续的情感联系(许多亲属仍处于危险之中)进一步加剧了这种困扰。
我们采用一般归纳法,分析了对八名在美国的乌克兰战争移民进行访谈的数据。访谈用乌克兰语或俄语进行,并使用Dedoose 9.2.005版本进行分析。
大多数参与者(八人中的五人)讨论了创伤后应激障碍症状,八人中的六人表示由于亲身经历或通过亲人接触到战争和暴力而出现极度情绪困扰。参与者的陈述表明,情绪困扰和与乌克兰的强烈情感联系经常同时出现,具体表现为:(a)62.5%的人报告既担心仍在乌克兰的家庭成员的安全,(b)与乌克兰有物质/情感联系,(c)75%的参与者表示他们的情绪困扰与创伤和创伤后应激障碍高度相关。
乌克兰移民面临着一系列复杂的创伤和情绪困扰,这受到他们与冲突地区持续的联系以及对家人安全的持续担忧的影响。(PsycInfo数据库记录(c)2025美国心理学会,保留所有权利)