Affiliation:
1. School of Behavioural and Health Sciences Australian Catholic University Melbourne Australia
2. Australian Research Centre in Sex, Health, & Society La Trobe University Melbourne Australia
Abstract
AbstractObjectiveTo systematically review existing research exploring the effectiveness of psychological interventions in reducing symptoms of distress amongst refugee and asylum‐seeker children.MethodSix databases were searched to identify English studies presenting original empirical quantitative data (published before September 2022) testing the efficacy of psychological interventions for children from refugee and asylum‐seeking backgrounds. Quality of studies were assessed through the Appraisal Tool for Cross‐Sectional Studies as well as the Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool. Relevant data were extracted to facilitate a narrative synthesis.ResultsSeventy‐one eligible articles were identified (n > 10,000). A number of cognitive‐behavioral, psychosocial, and trauma‐focused interventions that catered specifically to children and their families were identified. A synthesis of these results suggest that interventions may assist in the reduction of various psychopathologies, although the effects were mixed across intervention types.ConclusionsWhile the review yielded promising findings, most findings were derived from small pilot and empirical studies, leading to difficulties with drawing conclusions. There remains a need for studies using more rigorous research methodologies to expand and ratify this valuable knowledge base. Clinical significance: Forced displacement is at an all‐time high. Many children are being forced to seek asylum and refuge, and they become vulnerable to the development of poor mental health, with limited understanding surrounding how to appropriately intervene. This review aims to equip clinicians with increased knowledge and confidence in working therapeutically alongside clients from refugee or asylum‐seeking background, with the goal of fostering positive mental health and wellbeing.
Subject
Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Clinical Psychology
Cited by
2 articles.
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