| Literature DB >> 32604990 |
Douglas Gruner1, Olivia Magwood2, Lissa Bair3, Liezl Duff2, Shiva Adel1, Kevin Pottie1,2,4.
Abstract
Culture, tradition, structural violence, and mental health-related stigma play a major role in global mental health for refugees. Our aim was to understand what factors determine the success or failure of community-based psychotherapy for trauma-affected refugees and discuss implications for primary health care programs. Using a systematic realist-informed approach, we searched five databases from 2000 to 2018. Two reviewers independently selected RCTs for inclusion, and we contacted authors to obtain therapy training manuals. Fifteen articles and 11 training manuals met our inclusion criteria. Factors that improved symptoms of depression, anxiety, and PTSD included providing culturally adapted care in a migrant-sensitive setting, giving a role to other clinical staff (task-shifting), and intervention intensity. Precarious asylum status, constraining program monitoring requirements, and diverse socio-cultural and gender needs within a setting may reduce the effectiveness of the program. Primary care programs may enable community based mental health care and may reduce mental health-related stigma for refugees and other migrants. More research is needed on the cultural constructs of distress, programs delivered in primary care, and the role of cultural and language interpretation services in mental health care.Entities:
Keywords: CBT; CETA; NET; global mental health; primary health care; refugees and asylum seekers
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32604990 PMCID: PMC7369747 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17134618
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Principles of trauma-informed programs and care (Adapted from Purkey et al. [4]).
| Principle | Applying the Principle |
|---|---|
| Trauma awareness and acknowledgment |
Be aware of the prevalence and effect of trauma on substance use, physical and mental health, and ensure that all staff members understand how trauma affects life’s experiences Recognize the effects of violence and abuse on a patient’s development and coping strategies Recognize the pervasiveness and long-term effects of violence and abuse |
| Safety and trustworthiness |
Help patients feel they are in a safe place Recognize the need for physical and emotional safety Avoid interventions that might trigger or re-traumatize a patient Design services that maximize access and participation by trauma survivors (including flexibility in scheduling) Promote humility and cultural competence for all who interact with patients |
| Choice, control, and collaboration |
Include patients in decisions affecting treatment Develop a collaborative relationship Involve service users when designing and evaluating services |
| Strengths-based and skill-building care |
Support a patient’s empowerment Highlight a patient’s strengths and resilience rather than focusing on symptoms and pathology |
| Cultural, historical, and gender issues |
Incorporate processes that are sensitive to a patient’s culture, ethnicity, and personal and social identity, as well as to his or her experience of trauma associated with group marginalization |
Realist-informed analysis.
| Analysis Step | Description |
|---|---|
| 1 | Organization of extracted data into evidence tables, supplemented by information from training manuals when appropriate; |
| 2 | Theming by individual reviewers; |
| 3 | Comparison of reviewers’ themes for a specific article and formulation of chains of inference from the identified themes; |
| 4 | Linking of the chains of inference and tracking and linking of articles; |
| 5 | Hypothesis formulation (context, mechanism, and outcome configurations). |
|
| For the purpose of this review, we defined “context” as |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Characteristics of Included Studies.
| Study ID | Related Training Materials | Study Design | Study Objective | Study Setting, Location, and Duration | Participant Characteristics | Intervention | Comparison | Language | Provider, Presence of Interpreter |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adenauer et al. 2011 [ | Schauer, Neuner and Elbert, 2017 [ | Randomized control trial | To examine whether narrative exposure therapy (NET) causes changes in affective stimulus processing in patients with chronic PTSD | The Psychological Research and Outpatient Clinic for Refugees at the University of Konstanz. | Participants were refugees and asylum seekers with a history of organized violence or persecution and current PTSD diagnosis | Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET) was used as a variant of trauma-focused CBT. NET is a manualized short-term approach that has been adapted to meet the needs of traumatized survivors of war and torture. | Participants in the control group were waitlisted. | Not reported | Clinical psychologists of the University of Konstanz with expertise in PTSD and NET carried out the treatment according to the manual, with the help of a translator if necessary. |
| =Bolton et al. 2014 [ | Murray et al. 2013 [ | Randomized control trial | To test a transdiagnostic treatment developed for comorbid presentations of depression, anxiety, and trauma symptoms among trauma survivors in a low-resource setting | Burmese-run MTC 5 km from Myanmar. | Participants were Burmese individuals at least 18 years of age who have witnessed or experienced a traumatic event and suffer from moderate to severe depression and/or PTSS | CETA CBT is a transdiagnostic treatment approach developed for delivery by lay counselors in low resource settings with few mental health professionals. CETA was designed to treat symptoms of common mental health disorders including depression, PTS, and anxiety. | Participants in the control group were waitlisted | Burmese | Counselors and supervisors were staff at one of three local service organizations. All were Burmese refugees, or members of the Burmese community in Mae Sot, and shared many cultural, religious, and political experiences with their clients. |
| Carlsson et al. 2018 [ | Vindbjerg et al. 2014 [ | Randomized control trial | To compare the effectiveness of CBT with a focus on stress management (SM) or cognitive restructuring (CR) in a clinical sample of trauma-affected refugees | The Competence Centre for Transcultural Psychiatry (CTP); an outpatient clinic. | Participants were refugees or family unified with refugees who have obtained asylum in Denmark and have trauma-related mental health problems | Stress management (SM): The primary goal of the therapy is to help | Cognitive restructuring (CR): The CR manual consisted mainly of psychoeducation and cognitive | Not reported | Participants in both groups were offered sessions with a medical doctor and sessions of psychotherapy with a psychologist. |
| Hensel-Dittman et al. 2011 [ | Schauer, Neuner and Elbert, 2017 [ | Randomized control trial | To compare the outcome of 2 active treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as a consequence of war and torture: narrative exposure therapy (NET) and stress inoculation training (SIT) | The Research and Outpatient Clinic for Refugees, a unit operated jointly by the University of Konstanz and the NGO Vivo | Participants were asylum seekers who had fled their country of origin after experiencing organized violence and had a current PTSD diagnosis | In NET, the participant constructs a detailed chronological account of his or her own biography in cooperation | SIT is a cognitive behavioral semi- structured program aimed at enhancing the patient’s ability to cope with stress. Techniques applied in SIT are training in breathing techniques, relaxation training, cognitive restructuring, thought stopping, guided self-dialog, covert modeling, and role play. | Not reported | Therapists were trained staff from the Research and Outpatient Clinic for Refugees. |
| Hijazi et al. 2014 [ | Schauer, Neuner and Elbert, 2017 [ | Randomized control trial | To test the effects of an adapted brief Narrative Exposure Therapy in a sample of traumatized Iraqi refugees | At the participant’s preferred location (typically the home but sometimes a church or community center) | Participants were Arabic-speaking adult Iraqi refugees who had resettled in southeast Michigan and had been exposed to a violent or traumatic event and were bothered by it. | Brief NET: Three sessions, lasting 60–90 min each and included psychoeducation. The participant then constructed a chronological narrative of his or her life, starting with highlights of childhood and then focusing on traumatic experiences during adulthood. At these trauma points, the therapist encouraged the participant to describe sensory, cognitive, and emotional experiences. | Participants in the control group were waitlisted. | Arabic | Therapists received training and weekly supervision by a licensed psychologist with expertise in exposure therapies. |
| Hinton et al. 2009 [ | Hinton and Patel, 2017 [ | Repeated- measures randomized control trial | To examine the effect of a culturally sensitive CBT for traumatized Cambodian refugees | A community-based outpatient clinic | Participants were Cambodian patients who were considered to have pharmacology-resistant PTSD with comorbid orthostatic panic. | CBT was offered across 12 weekly sessions and emphasized information about a cognitive-behavioral model of PTSD and panic disorder, muscle relaxation and diaphragmatic breathing, guided imagery and mindfulness training. The therapy emphasized various techniques to promote emotional regulation. | Treatment as usual: Supportive psychotherapy, which consisted of a meeting with a social worker every 2 weeks, and medications, which consisted in all cases of a combination of an SSRI (in most cases, paroxetine) and the benzodiazepine, clonazepam. | CBT was provided in Cambodian | The first co-author (Devon Hinton, Psychiatrist) who is fluent in Cambodian delivered or co-led the CBT treatment. |
| Hinton et al. 2005 [ | Hinton and Patel, 2017 [ | Repeated- measures randomized control trial | To examine the therapeutic efficacy of a culturally adapted third generation cognitive-behavior therapy for | A community-based outpatient clinic | Participants were Cambodian patients who were treatment resistant; that is, still meeting PTSD criteria despite receiving supportive counseling and SSRI. | Individual CBT was offered across 12 weekly sessions, providing information about the nature of PTSD | Treatment as usual: All patients continued supportive psychotherapy, which consisted of | CBT was provided in Cambodian | The first co-author (Devon Hinton, Psychiatrist), who is fluent in Cambodian, conducted the CBT sessions. |
| Hinton et al. 2004 [ | Hinton and Patel, 2017 [ | Repeated- measures randomized control trial | To examine the feasibility, acceptability, and therapeutic efficacy of a culturally adapted cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) | Two community-based outpatient clinics that provided specialized services to non-English speaking | Participants were Vietnamese patients (practicing Buddhists) who met PTSD criteria despite at least 1 year of SSRI and supportive counseling. | Individual CBT was offered across | Participants in the delayed group received CBT after the initial treatment group finished their treatment. | Vietnamese | The first author (Devon Hinton, Psychiatrist) led the CBT sessions. |
| Meffert et al. 2014 [ | Stuart, 2006 [ | Randomized control trial | To examine the impact of interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT) on Sudanese refugees living in Cairo, Egypt, who had symptoms of PTSD | Screening and therapy were conducted at the offices of Ma’an Organization; a Sudanese founded and run NGO | Participants were Sudanese refugees living in Cairo, Egypt who had difficulties with their mental health and relationships but without severe thought or mood disorder symptoms. | 6 bi-weekly sessions of IPT; a brief and highly structured manual-based psychotherapy. IPT aims to intervene specifically in current social functioning with consequent benefits for symptom experience. IPT does not focus on retelling of past traumatic experiences; rather, the goal is to change current relationships to improve mood symptoms. | Individuals assigned to the waitlist condition were offered IPT | Sudanese | Five members of the Sudanese community without prior mental |
| Neuner et al. 2010 [ | Schauer, Neuner and Elbert, 2017 [ | Randomized control trial | To examine the efficacy of trauma-focused treatment mainly Narrative Exposure Therapy among asylum seekers with PTSD | The Psychological | Participants were asylum seekers with a 3 months temporary leave to remain, who suffered a history of victimization by organized violence, and fulfilled the DSM-IV criteria for PTSD. | NET consisted of a median of nine treatment sessions with an average duration of 120 min. Sessions were scheduled on a weekly or biweekly basis. Treatment was terminated at the therapist’s discretion as soon as the patient could, according to clinical judgment, talk about his or her traumatic experiences in detail without avoidance, memory gaps, or being emotionally overwhelmed. | Patients who were randomized to the treatment as usual condition were encouraged to continue their current treatment or were referred to institutions of public mental health care. | German | NET treatment was carried out by therapists who were doctoral- level psychologists and graduate students with extensive training in NET from the University of Konstanz. |
| Neuner et al. 2008 [ | Schauer, Neuner and Elbert, 2017 [ | Randomized control trial | To examine whether trained lay counselors can carry out effective treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a refugee settlement | The Nakivale refugee settlement, one of eight official refugee camps in Uganda | Participants were Rwandan and Somalian refugees who were diagnosed with PTSD. | Narrative Exposure Therapy: Six sessions (usually two sessions per week); where the participant | Trauma Counselling: Six sessions (usually two sessions per week), a combination of a variety of treatment and counseling methods | Somali and Rwandan | Lay counselors: nine refugees (five women, four men) from the community were trained via a 6-week course in general counseling skills (e.g., active listening, empathy, verbalization, emotional processing, etc.) as well as specific abilities and methods that were needed for both treatment approaches. |
| Neuner et al. 2004 [ | Schauer, Neuner and Elbert, 2017 [ | Randomized control trial | To evaluate the efficacy of narrative exposure therapy, supportive counseling, and psychoeducation for treating PTSD | The Imvepi settlement in northern Uganda | Participants were Sudanese refugees living in a Ugandan refugee settlement who met the DSM-IV criteria for PTSD | In narrative exposure therapy, the first session always included psychoeducation about the nature and | In supportive counseling, the first session always included psychoeducation about the nature and prevalence of PTSD symptoms. The main goal of supportive counseling was to explore and strengthen the participants’ individual, social, and cultural resources. The focus of them treatment was on current interpersonal problems, personal decisions, and plans and hopes for the future. For participants in the psychoeducation group, no further treatment was offered. | All instruments were translated into the Arabic dialect spoken by the | Treatment was carried out by three female and two male therapists from the University of Konstanz and the aid organization Vivo with the help of interpreters. |
| Paunovic et al. 2001 [ | Hinton and Patel, 2017 [ | Randomized control trial | To investigate the efficacy of cognitive-behavior therapy CBT and exposure therapy in the treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder PTSD in refugees | Setting not identified. Referrals happened in psychiatric units and the Center for tortured and traumatized refugees at the Karolinska hospital. | Participants were refugee patients who met the DSM-IV criteria for PTSD, can speak the Swedish language, and have a lasting Swedish residence permit. | Cognitive Behavioral Therapy CBT included a flexible combination of exposure, cognitive therapy, and controlled breathing. Controlled breathing was used in order to help the patient control the irregular breathing. Cognitive therapy was used in order to teach the patient to decatastrophize his/her interpretations of intrusive recollections. | Exposure Therapy (ET): Patients were gradually confronted with anxiety-provoking trauma-related images and situations with the help of the therapist. Each step was completed when the patient successfully habituated to the trauma cues within and/or between the sessions. Each exposure lasted 20–60 min. | Swedish | Treatment was conducted by the first author, a doctoral student in clinical psychology. The |
| Sternmark et al. 2013 [ | Schauer, Neuner and Elbert, 2017 [ | Randomized control trial | To compare Narrative Exposure Therapy NET to treatment as usual in 11 general psychiatric health care units in Norway | Eleven centers in the general psychiatric services | Participants were refugees and asylum seekers fulfilling the DSM-IV criteria for PTSD who had been referred to | In the NET condition, the patients | In the treatment as usual (TAU) condition, the therapists were instructed to use any intervention they normally would use, except for the steps specific to NET. TAU mainly consisted of help | Norwegian or English | Twenty-four experienced mental health professionals including psychologists, psychiatrist, psychiatric nurses, occupational therapists, drama therapists, and clinical social workers. |