Abdollahpour Ranjbar Hamed, Kaynak Selcan, Almeamari Fatema, Amayreh Farah, Yigit Ibrahim, Norcini Pala Andrea, Turan Bulent
Department of Psychology, College of Social Sciences and Humanities, Koç University, Istanbul, Türkiye; Department of Psychology, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Istinye University, Istanbul, Türkiye.
Department of Psychology, College of Social Sciences and Humanities, Koç University, Istanbul, Türkiye.
J Affect Disord. 2026 Jan 1;392:120222. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2025.120222. Epub 2025 Sep 4.
Refugees face psychosocial challenges after resettling in host nations, including experienced stigma and microaggressions. Microaggressions are subtle/ambiguous discriminatory remarks or behaviors. There is a dearth of research and instruments examining microaggressions faced by refugees.
We developed and validated the Microaggression Scale for Refugees (MSR) among Syrian and Afghan refugees in Türkiye and differentiated the unique/independent nature of microaggressions and experienced stigma and their effects on health.
445 Afghans and 406 Syrians completed the MSR and measures of psychological distress and somatic symptoms. We evaluated the factorial validity of the MSR independently of experienced stigma through the application of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA). Additionally, we employed multiple-group CFA to assess measurement invariance across Afghan and Syrian populations. Internal reliability was examined using Cronbach's alpha. Associations with relevant constructs were evaluated for convergent validity. Independent roles that experienced stigma and microaggressions play in contributing to psychological and physical symptoms were investigated using hierarchical regression analyses.
The MSR's two-factor model of microaggressions and experienced stigma fits the data well, with measurement invariance supported for Syrian and Afghan refugees. The MSR showed good internal reliability (α = 0.93). Convergent validity was supported by high correlations between microaggressions and experienced stigma, somatic symptoms, post-migration difficulties, and contact experiences with the host country. Both experienced stigma and microaggressions contributed independently to explaining variance in psychological and somatic symptoms.
The MSR is a psychometrically sound tool to assess microaggressions refugees experience. Results highlight the importance of addressing microaggressions in interventions for refugee/immigrant populations.
难民在东道国安顿后面临心理社会挑战,包括经历污名化和微侵犯。微侵犯是微妙/模糊的歧视性言论或行为。目前缺乏针对难民所面临微侵犯的研究和相关工具。
我们在土耳其的叙利亚和阿富汗难民中开发并验证了难民微侵犯量表(MSR),并区分了微侵犯与经历的污名化的独特/独立性质及其对健康的影响。
445名阿富汗人和406名叙利亚人完成了MSR以及心理困扰和躯体症状测量。我们通过应用验证性因子分析(CFA)独立于经历的污名化来评估MSR的因子效度。此外,我们采用多组CFA来评估阿富汗和叙利亚人群之间的测量不变性。使用Cronbach's alpha检验内部信度。通过与相关构念的关联来评估收敛效度。使用分层回归分析研究经历的污名化和微侵犯在导致心理和身体症状方面所起的独立作用。
MSR的微侵犯和经历的污名化两因素模型与数据拟合良好,叙利亚和阿富汗难民的测量不变性得到支持。MSR显示出良好的内部信度(α = 0.93)。微侵犯与经历的污名化、躯体症状、移民后困难以及与东道国的接触经历之间的高度相关性支持了收敛效度。经历的污名化和微侵犯均独立地有助于解释心理和躯体症状的方差。
MSR是一种心理测量学上合理的工具,用于评估难民经历的微侵犯。研究结果凸显了在为难民/移民群体开展的干预措施中应对微侵犯的重要性。