| Literature DB >> 30151800 |
Christina Kien1, Isolde Sommer2, Anna Faustmann3, Lacey Gibson4, Martha Schneider5, Eva Krczal6, Robert Jank7, Irma Klerings2, Monika Szelag2, Bernd Kerschner2, Petter Brattström2, Gerald Gartlehner2,8.
Abstract
The European Union member states received about 385,000 asylum applications from children and adolescents below 18 years in 2015, and 398,000 in 2016. The latest political crises and war have led to an upsurge in refugee movements into European countries, giving rise to a re-evaluation of the epidemiology of psychiatric disorders and mental health problems among young refugees and asylum seekers. We systematically searched five electronic databases and reference lists of pertinent review articles. We then screened the results of forward citation tracking of key articles for relevant studies in the field for the period from January 1990 to October 2017. We dually reviewed citations and assessed risk of bias. We reported the results narratively, as meta-analyses were impeded due to high heterogeneity. We included 47 studies covered in 53 articles. Overall, the point prevalence of the investigated psychiatric disorders and mental health problems varied widely among studies (presenting interquartile ranges): for posttraumatic stress disorder between 19.0 and 52.7%, for depression between 10.3 and 32.8%, for anxiety disorders between 8.7 and 31.6%, and for emotional and behavioural problems between 19.8 and 35.0%. The highly heterogeneous evidence base could be improved by international, methodologically comparable studies with sufficiently large sample sizes drawn randomly among specific refugee populations. The prevalence estimates suggest, nevertheless, that specialized mental health care services for the most vulnerable refugee and asylum-seeking populations are needed. REGISTRATION: The systematic review protocol was registered in PROSPERO on October 19th, 2017 with the number: CRD42017080039 and is available from: https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=80039.Entities:
Keywords: Accompanied refugee minors; Depression; Mental health; Posttraumatic stress disorder; Systematic review; Unaccompanied refugee minors
Year: 2018 PMID: 30151800 PMCID: PMC6785579 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-018-1215-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Eligibility criteria according to Condition-Context-Population-Framework (CoCoPop) for prevalence data [17]
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
|---|---|---|
| Condition | Primary outcomes: anxiety disorder (general anxiety disorder, social phobia, panic disorder), bipolar disorder, eating disorder, major depressive disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, schizophrenia, somatoform disorders, substance abuse of illicit drugs, alcohol and tobacco, suicidal ideation and behaviour Secondary outcomes: | All other mental disorders, such as personality disorder |
Assessment process: With a reliable, validated self-assessment or proxy-assessment tool or with a structured clinical interview Assessment time: When the assessment happened over several time points we took the first available data point | Self-developed questionnaire without reporting on psychometric properties | |
| Context | European Countries (Albania, Andorra, Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Macedonia [FYROM], Malta, Moldova, Monaco, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Russia, San Marino, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, United Kingdom [UK], Vatican City [Holy See]) see list: | |
| Population | Unaccompanied or accompanied asylum-seeking children and adolescents or refugee minors (≤ 21 years) [including adolescents up to 23 years, if the age group 21–23 years comprised < 50% of the study population] | Internally displaced children and adolescents (i.e. people who have not crossed a boarder to find safety); Study participation is based on the attendance of a mental health department/clinic |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process
Study characteristics of included studies
| Study | Country of study | Region of origin: | Sample size, | Sampling procedure | Year of assessment | Mean age in years, M (SD) | Gender—female, | Outcome | RoB | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adam and Klasen [ | Germany | ME: NR (80.9%) EE: NR (19.1%) | 215 | NRS | 2002–2003 | 14.8 (2.1) | NR (41.4%) |
| A, D, EBP, PTSD | High |
| Almqvist et al. [ | Sweden | ME: 50 (100%) | 50 | NRS | NR | M: 5.8 (1.1) | 14 (28%) |
| PTSD | Uncl |
| F: 5.8 (1.1) | ||||||||||
| Angel et al. [ | Sweden | EE: 99 (100%) | 99 | NRS | 1994–1995 | 11.3 (NR) | NR |
| A, EBP, PTSD | Uncl |
| Barghadouch et al. [ | Denmark | AS: 2349 (15.4%) EE: 6505 (42.6%) | 15,264 | Census | NR | 9.1 (NR) | 6909 (45.3%) | AD*, ND*, PD* | Low | |
| Bean et al. [ | Netherlands | AF: NR (53%) AS: NR (8%) ME: NR (4%) | 1110 | NRS/RS | 2002 | 15.8 (NR) | 329 (29.8%) |
| A, D, EBP, PTSD | Uncl |
| Begovac et al. [ | Germany/Croatia | EE: 133 (100%) | 133 | NRS | 1997–1999 | NR | 160 (49.7%) | NR | D, PTSD | High |
| Bronstein et al. [ | UK | ME: 222 (100%) | 222 | NRS | NR | 16.3 (1.0) | 0 (0%) |
| A, D, PTSD | Uncl |
| Derluyn et al. [ | Belgium | AF: NR (59%) AS: NR (25.3%) EE: NR (14.3%) SA: 2 (1.2%) | 142 | NRS | NR | <14 y: 9.6% 15–17 y: 52.9% >18 years 37.3% | NR (37.3%) |
| A, D, EBP | High |
| Derluyn et al. [ | Belgium | AF: 517 (43.4%) AS: 267 (22.4%) EE: 349 (29.3%) SA: 59 (4.9%) | 1234 | RS | 2002–2003 | 16.6 (1.31) | U: 43 (35.8%) A: 516 (46.5%) | A, D, PTSD | Uncl | |
| Elklit et al. [ | Denmark | EE: 119 (100%) | 119 | NRS | NR | 18.5 (1.8) | NR (33.3%) | PTSD | Uncl | |
| Fazel et al. [ | UK | EE: NR (48%) AS: NR (16%) ME: NR (10%) | 101 | NRS | NR | NR | 40 (40%) | EBP | Uncl | |
| Gavranidou et al. [ | Germany | EE: 32 (NR) ME: 11 (NR) | 55 | NRS | NR | 13.4 (NR) | 23 (41.8%) | A*, EBP* | Uncl | |
| Goldin et al. [ | Sweden | EE: NR | 48 | NRS | 1994–1995 | NR | 24 (50%) |
| A, D, PTSD, HYP, PSYCom | Uncl |
| Gusic et al. [ | Sweden | ME: 26 (60%) | 42 | NRS | NR | 16.1 (1.5) | 16 (38%) | DP, PTSD | High | |
| Hjern et al. [ | Sweden | SA: 43 (68%) ME 20 (32%) | 63 | NRS | 1986–1987 | 5.9 (NR) | NR |
| EBP | Uncl |
| Hodes et al. [ | UK | ~EE: 34 (28.8%) AF: 52 (44.1%) ME: 26 (22.0%) AS: 3 (2.5%) SA: 3 (2.5%) | 113 | NRS | 2002–2003 | 17.0 (NR) | 44 (38.9%) | D, PTSD | Uncl | |
| Hollins et al. [ | UK | EE: 99 (100%) | 99 | NRS | NR | 16 (1.2) | 12 (NR) |
| A, EBP | High |
| Huemer et al. [ | Austria | AF: 41 (100%) | 41 | NRS | NR | 17.0 (0.8) | 6 (15%) |
| A*, D, PTSD, S | Uncl |
| Jakobsen et al. [ | Norway | ME: 105 (76%) AF: 33 (24%) | 138 | NRS | 2009–2011 | 16.2 (0.8) | 0 (0%) |
| A, D, EBP, OPD, PTSD | Uncl |
| Jensen et al. [ | Norway | ~AS: 59 (63%) AF: 34 (37%) EE: 1 (1%) | 93 | Census | 2010–2012 | 13.8 (1.4) | 28 (19%) |
| A, D, EBP, PTSD | Uncl |
| Kocijan-Hercigonja et al. [ | Croatia | EE: 35 (100%) | 35 | NRS | NR | NR | NR |
| A*, D*, PSYCom* | High |
| Longobardi et al. [ | Italy | AF: 12 (63.2%) EE: 5 (26.3%) AS: 1 (5.3%) | 23 | NRS | NR | NR | 1 (5%) |
| A, D, PTSD | High |
| Möhrle et al. [ | Germany | ME: NR (51.6%) AF: NR (16.8%) | 191 | NRS | 2015–201 | 17.1 (1.2) | 0 (0%) |
| EBP | Uncl |
| Montgomery [ | Denmark | ME: 131 (96.24%) | 131 | NRS | 2000–2001 | 15.3 (NR) | 76 (58%) | EBP | Uncl | |
| Nasiroglu and Ceri [ | Turkey | ME: 55 (100%) | 55 | NRS | NR | 11 (3.7) | 25 (45.6%) | NR | A, D, HYP, NE, PTSD | High |
| Nielsen et al. [ | Denmark | EE: 118 (48%) ME: 67 (27%) | 246 | NRS | 2006 | 9.6 (NR) | 104 (42%) |
| EBP | Uncl |
| Oppedal and Idsoe [ | Norway | ME: NR (70%) | 948 | NRS | 2000–2010 | 18.6 (2.5) | NR (15.8%) |
| D*, PTSD | Uncl |
| Papageorgiou et al. [ | Greece | EE: NR | 95 | NRS | NR | 9.6 (NR) | 54 (57%) |
| A, D, EBP, OPD, PTSD | Uncl |
| Reijneveld et al. [ | Netherlands | EE: 6 (4.9%) AS: 9 (7.4%) AF: 107 (87.7%) | 122 | NRS | 2002 –2003 | 16.1 (0.7) | 40 (32.8%) |
| A*, D*, EBP*, PTSD* | Uncl |
| Reis et al. [ | Germany | ME: 40 (80%) | 58 | NRS | 2007–2009 | 12 (NR) | 25 (43%) |
| EBP | Uncl |
| Rücker et al. [ | Germany | ME: 45 (86.5%) OC: 7 (13.5%) | 52 | NRS | 2016 | 16.2 (1.4) | 1 (1.9%) |
| EBP | High |
| Ruf et al. [ | Germany | EE: 47 (45.2%) | 98 | NRS | 2003–2004 | 10.6 (2.6) | 56 (53.8%) |
| D, S, PTSD | Uncl |
| Sabuncuoglu and Berkem [ | Turkey | EE: 19 (100%) | 19 | NRS | NR | Range 13–73 (NR) | 10 (53%) | D* | High | |
| Salari et al. [ | Sweden | ME: NR (100%) | 208 | NRS | 2015–2016 | 15.4 (1.3) | NR (2.4%) |
| PTSD | Uncl |
| Sanchez-Cao et al. [ | UK | EE: 25 (35%) AF: 36 (51%) | 71 | NRS | 2003–2004 | NR | 23 (32.4%) |
| D, EBP, PTSD | Uncl |
| Sikic et al. [ | Croatia | EE: NR | 669 | NRS | 1994–1995 | 12.03 (2.5) | 989 (48%) | NR | A*, D* | Uncl |
| Sleijpen et al. [ | Netherlands | ME: 52 (46.8%) AS: 15 (13.5%) AF: 6 (5.4%) OC: 37 (33.3%) | 111 | RS | 2014–2015 | 14.5 (1.8) | 57 (51%) | NR | PTSD | Uncl |
| Slodnjak et al. [ | Slovenia | EE: NR | 265 | NRS | 1994 | NR | 140 (52.8%) | D, S, PTSD | High | |
| Sourander et al. [ | Finland | AF: 42 (91.3%) | 46 | NRS | NR | 14.1 (2.3) | 12 (NR) |
| EBP | Uncl |
| Staehr [ | Denmark | EE: NR | 232 | NRS | 1999 | NR | NR | NR | PTSD | High |
| Staehr et al. [ | Denmark | NR | 780 | NRS | 2001 –2003 | NR | NR | S | High | |
| Stotz et al. [ | Germany | NR | 32 | NRS | 2011 | 15.6 (2.2) | 0 (0%) | PTSD | High | |
| Taurino et al. [ | Italy | AF: 29 (87%) | 34 | NRS | NR | 18.1 (0.6) | 0 (0%) |
| A, D, PTSD | High |
| Thommessen et al. [ | Italy | AF: 16 (NR) ME: 15 (NR) AS: 29 (NR) | 60 | NRS | NR | NR | 0 (0%) |
| EBP | Uncl |
| Vervliet et al. [ | Belgium/Norway | ME: 212 (69.1%) AF: 92 (30.0%) AS: 2 (0.6%) EE: 1 (0.3%) | 307 | Census | NR | 16.1 (0.8) | 16 (5.2%) |
| A, D, PTSD | Uncl |
| Wiegersma et al. [ | Netherlands | ME: NR (37%) EE: NR (39%) AF: NR (24%) | 267 | NRS | 2003 | 9.9 (3.5) | NR (50%) |
| EBP | Low |
| Yurtbay et al. [ | Turkey | EE: 250 (100%) | 250 | NRS | 1999 | Children: 10.8 (1.47) Adolescents: 15.4 (1.43) | 125 (50%) | NR | A, D* | High |
A anxiety, a accompanied, AD affective disorder, AF Africa, AS Asia, D depression, DP dissociative psychopathology, EBP emotional and behavioural problems, EE Eastern Europe, HYP hyperactiveness, M mean, ME Middle East, n sample size, NE nocturnal enuresis, ND neurotic disorder, NR not reported, NRS non-random sampling, OPD overall psychiatric disorder, PD psychotic disorder, PSYCom psychiatric complaints, PTSD posttraumatic stress disorder, RoB risk of bias, RS random sampling, S suicidal ideation and behaviour, SA South America, SD standard deviation, u unaccompanied, Uncl unclear
*mean and standard deviation but no point prevalences are reported
~overall sample size differed from n of distribution of countries of origin
†we grouped the reported countries of origin into Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe, Middle East and South America
Fig. 2Median and interquartile ranges of point prevalences of psychiatric disorders and mental problems in young refugees and asylum seekers. n sample size