| Literature DB >> 30739625 |
G Turrini1, M Purgato1, C Acarturk2, M Anttila3, T Au4, F Ballette5, M Bird6, K Carswell4, R Churchill7, P Cuijpers8, J Hall4, L J Hansen6, M Kösters9, T Lantta3, M Nosè1, G Ostuzzi1, M Sijbrandij8, F Tedeschi1, M Valimaki3, J Wancata10, R White11, M van Ommeren4, C Barbui1.
Abstract
AimsIn the past few years, there has been an unprecedented increase in the number of forcibly displaced migrants worldwide, of which a substantial proportion is refugees and asylum seekers. Refugees and asylum seekers may experience high levels of psychological distress, and show high rates of mental health conditions. It is therefore timely and particularly relevant to assess whether current evidence supports the provision of psychosocial interventions for this population. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) assessing the efficacy and acceptability of psychosocial interventions compared with control conditions (treatment as usual/no treatment, waiting list, psychological placebo) aimed at reducing mental health problems in distressed refugees and asylum seekers.Entities:
Keywords: Asylum seekers; mental health; psychosocial interventions; refugees
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30739625 PMCID: PMC6669989 DOI: 10.1017/S2045796019000027
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci ISSN: 2045-7960 Impact factor: 6.892
Fig. 1.PRISMA flow-chart diagram.
Selected characteristics of included studies
| Study | Country | Ethnic group | Treatment (no. of sessions – intervention level) | Comparison group | Outcome measures | Mental health status at recruitment | Follow-up (months) | Allowed medication | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acarturk | Turkey | Syria | EMDR (7 – I) | Waiting list (WL) | 29 | IES-R, BDI-II | PTSD symptoms | 1 | No |
| Acarturk | Turkey | Syria | EMDR (4.2 – I) | WL | 98 | HTQ, BDI-II, HSCL-25 | PTSD | 1 | No |
| Adenauer | Germany | Middle and central east, the Balkans, Africa | NET (12 – I) | WL | 44 | CAPS, HDRS | PTSD, depression | 4 | Yes |
| Baker and Jones ( | Australia | Sudanese, Iranian, Liberian, Rwandan, Ethiopian, and Congolese | Music therapy (10 – G) | No treatment | 31 | BSI | Behavioural problems | Post-treatment | Unclear |
| Bolton | Thailand | Burman, others (Karen, Kayah, Kachin, Mon, Chin, Rakhine, Shan) | CETA (10 – I) | WL | 347 | HTQ, HSCL-25 | PTSD symptoms, depression | Post-treatment | Unclear |
| Buhmann | Denmark | Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Ex-Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, other | CBT (16 – I) | WL | 138 | HTQ, HRSD, HRSA, SDS | PTSD | Post-treatment | Yes |
| Hijazi | USA | Iraq | NET (3 – I) | WL | 63 | HTQ, BDI-II, WHO-5 | PTSD symptoms | 3 | Unclear |
| Hinton | USA | Cambodia, Vietnam | CBT (11 – I) | WL | 12 | HTQ, HSCL-25 | PTSD | Post-treatment | Yes |
| Hinton | USA | Cambodia | CBT (12 – I) | TAU | 40 | CAPS, ASI | PTSD | Post-treatment | Yes |
| Hinton | USA | Cambodia | CBT (12 – I) | TAU | 24 | CAPS | PTSD | Post-treatment | Yes |
| Kalantari | Iran | Afghanistan | Writing for recovering (6 – G) | No treatment | 64 | TGIC | PTSD symptoms | Post-treatment | Unclear |
| Liedl | Germany, Switzerland | Balkans, Turkey, Others | CBT-BF (10 – I) | WL | 36 | PDS, HSCL-25 | PTSD symptoms | 3 | Unclear |
| Meffert | Egypt | Sudan | IPT (6 – I) | WL | 22 | HTQ, BDI-II, CTS | PTSD symptoms | Post-treatment | Unclear |
| Morath | Germany | Africa, Middle East | NET (12 – I) | WL | 34 | CAPS, HAM-D | PTSD | 4 | Yes |
| Neuner | Uganda | Sudan | NET (4 – I) | TAU (1) | 43 | PDS, SF-12 | PTSD | 12 | Unclear |
| Neuner | Uganda | Somalia, Rwanda | NET (6 – I) | No treatment (1) | 277 | PDS | PTSD | 6 | Unclear |
| Neuner | Germany | Turkey, Balkans, Africa | NET (9 – I) | TAU | 32 | PDS, HSCL-25 | PTSD | 6 | Yes |
| Ooi | Australia | Africa, Asia, Middle East | TRT(CBT) (8 – G) | WL | 82 | CRIES-13, DSRS, SDQP | PTSD | Post-treatment | Unclear |
| Otto | USA | Cambodia | CBT (10 – G) | No treatment | 10 | CAPS, SCL-90-R | PTSD | Post-treatment | Yes |
| Renner | Austria | Chechnya | CROP (15 – G) | WL | 94 | HTQ | PTSD symptoms | Post-treatment | Unclear |
| Ruf | Germany | Turkey, Balkan, Syria, Chechnya, Russia, Georgia | KIDNET (8 – I) | WL | 26 | UCLA PTSD index | PTSD | 12 | Unclear |
| Stenmark | Norway | Iraq , Afghanistan, other Middle East Countries , African countries, other | NET (10 – I) | TAU | 81 | CAPS, HAM-D | PTSD | 6 | Yes |
| Ter Heide | Netherlands | Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola, Bosnia, Iran, Iraq, Lebanon and Turkey | EMDR (11 – I) | Psychological placebo (stabilisation therapy) | 20 | HTQ, HSCL-25, WHOQOL-BREF | PTSD | 3 | Yes |
| Ter Heide | Netherlands | Iraq, Afghanistan, Ex-Yugoslavia, altri Paesi del Medio Oriente, Africa | EMDR (12 – I) | Psychological placebo (stabilisation therapy) | 74 | CAPS, HSCL-25, WHOQOL-BREF | PTSD | 3 | Yes |
| Weine | USA | Bosnia | FGI (9 – G) | No treatment | 197 | PSS, CES-D | PTSD | 18 | Unclear |
| Weinstein | Jordan | Syria | Need-satisfaction intervention (NA – I) | No treatment | 41 | PSS; CES-D | PTSD symptoms, depressive symptoms | Post-treatment | Unclear |
I, individual; G, group; NET, narrative exposure therapy; EMDR, eye movement desensitisation and reprocessing; CETA, common elements treatment approach; CBT, cognitive behaviour therapy; CBT-BF, biofeedback-based cognitive behavioural intervention; IPT, interpersonal psychotherapy; TRT, teaching recovery techniques; CROP: culture-sensitive oriented peer; KIDNET, narrative exposure therapy for children; FGI, family-group intervention; TAU, treatment as usual; IES-R, impact of event scale-revised; BDI-II, Beck depression inventory-II; HTQ, Harvard trauma questionnaire; HSCL-25, Hopkins Symptoms Checklist-25; CAPS, Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale; HDRS, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; BSI, behavioural symptom index; HARSD, Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression; HRSA, Hamilton Rating Scale for Anxiety; SDS, Sheehan Disability Scale; WHO-5, World Health Organization's Well-being Index; ASI, Anxiety Sensitivity Index; TGIC, Traumatic Grief Inventory for Children; PDS, Post Traumatic Stress Diagnostic scale; CTS, Conflict Tactics Scale; HAM-D, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; SF-12, 12-item version of the Medical Outcome Study Self Report Form; CRIES-13, Children's Revised Impact of Event Scale; DSRS, Birleson Depression Self-Rating Scale; SDQP, parent-rated strengths and difficulties questionnaire; SCL-90, Symptom Checklist-90-R; UCLA PTSD index, UCLA; WHOQOL-BREF, The World Health Organization Quality of Life-BREF version; PSS, The PTSD Symptoms Scale; CES-D, The Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; NA, not applicable; PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder.
Three-arm study: (1) corresponds to comparison between NET v. TAU; (2) corresponds to comparison between NET v. psychological placebo.
Three-arm study: (1) corresponds to comparison between NET v. no treatment; (2) corresponds to comparison between NET v. psychological placebo.
Fig. 2.Efficacy of psychosocial interventions in refugees and asylum seekers: PTSD symptoms post intervention.
Fig. 3.Efficacy of psychosocial interventions in refugees and asylum seekers: depressive symptoms post intervention.
Fig. 4.Efficacy of psychosocial interventions in refugees and asylum seekers: anxiety symptoms post intervention.
Meta-analyses of secondary outcomes
| Meta-analysis | Comparisons ( | Patients ( | SMD | 95% CI | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTSD (follow-up) | 13 | 711 | −1.08 | −1.81 to −0.35 | 83 | 72–89 | 0.004 |
| Depression (follow-up) | 8 | 371 | −1.28 | −2.27 to −0.30 | 88 | 79–93 | 0.010 |
| Anxiety (follow-up) | 3 | 171 | −0.49 | −0.93 to −0.05 | 70 | 0–91 | 0.030 |
| Drop-out rate (RR) | 25 | 1636 | 0.96 | 0.82 to 1.13 | 0 | 0–52 | 0.620 |
| Functioning (post-treatment) | 4 | 547 | −0.17 | −0.58 to 0.24 | 74 | 27–91 | 0.420 |
| Functioning (follow-up) | 1 | 25 | −0.81 | −1.63 to 0.01 | NA | NA | 0.050 |
| Quality of life (post-treatment) | 5 | 173 | 0.23 | −0.08 to 0.54 | 0 | 0–79 | 0.140 |
| Quality of life (follow-up) | 5 | 174 | 0.27 | −0.08 to 0.63 | 17 | 0–83 | 0.130 |
N, number; SMD, standardised mean difference; CI, confidence interval; PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder.
Negative values favour active interventions.
Positive values favour active interventions.