| Literature DB >> 32843894 |
Andrew Riley1, Yasmin Akther1, Mohammed Noor1, Rahmat Ali1, Courtney Welton-Mitchell1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Almost 900,000 Rohingya refugees currently reside in refugee camps in Southeastern Bangladesh. Prior to fleeing Myanmar, Rohingya experienced years of systematic human rights violations, in addition to other historical and more recent traumatic events such as the burning of their villages and murder of family members, friends and neighbors. Currently, many Rohingya struggle to meet basic needs in refugee camps in Bangladesh and face mental health-related concerns that appear linked to such challenges. The purpose of this study is to describe systematic human rights violations, traumatic events, daily stressors, and mental health symptoms and to examine relationships between these factors.Entities:
Keywords: Bangladesh; Daily stressors; Human rights violations; Mental health; Refugees; Rohingya; Southeast Asia; Trauma
Year: 2020 PMID: 32843894 PMCID: PMC7441657 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-020-00306-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Percentage of respondents reaching diagnostic cutoff scores
| Scale | Mental health composite score threshold | % |
|---|---|---|
| Respondents who scored higher than the typically diagnostic cutoff score of 2.5 | 61.2% | |
| Respondents who scored higher than the typically diagnostic cutoff score of 1.75 | 84.0% |
Models predicting PTSD, emotional distress, and functioning difficulty
| Variables | Model 1: Predicting PTSD symptoms | Model 2: Predicting emotional distress (anxiety and depression) | Model 3: Predicting functioning difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stand. β = .095 | Stand. β = .160 | Variable not included in this model | |
| Stand. β = .185 | Stand. β = .341 | Stand. β = .033 | |
| Stand. β = .000 | Stand. β = .105 | Stand. β = .336 | |
| Stand. β = .000 | Stand. β = .337 | Variable not included in this model | |
| Stand. β | Stand. β = .037 | Stand. β = −.065 | |
| Stand. β | Stand. β = .109 | Stand. β = −.017 | |
| Stand. β = .313 | Variable not included in this model | Variable not included in this model | |
| Stand. β = .366 | Variable not included in this model | Variable not included in this model | |
| Variable not included in this model | Variable not included in this model | Stand. β = .140 | |
| Variable not included in this model | Variable not included in this model | Stand. β = .362 | |
*p < .05, **p < .01
Systematic human rights violations by severity
| “Were Rohingya people in Rakhine State blocked/prevented from.. . | Average Score | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Obtaining | |
| 2 | ||
| 3 | Obtaining official | |
| 4 | ||
| 5 | ||
| 6 | ||
| 7 | ||
| 8 | ||
| 9 | ||
| 10 | ||
| 11 | ||
| 12 | ||
| 13 | Pursuing | |
| 14 | ||
| 15 | ||
| 16 | ||
| 17 | ||
| 18 | ||
| 19 |
Response options: 1 = “Not at all”, 2 = “A little”, 3 = “Quite a bit”, and 4 = “Extremely”
Trauma events
| Myanmar | Bangladesh | |
|---|---|---|
| Average number of trauma events experienced by Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh and Myanmar | ||
| Exposure (i.e., hearing and/or seeing) to frequent gunfire | ||
| Witnessed destruction/burning of villages | ||
| Repeatedly exposed to violent images against Rohingya on websites (i.e., Facebook, RVision, TV, WhatsApp, etc.) | ||
| Forced to do things against religion (e.g., eat pork, remove cap/niqab/veil, burn/cut beard, etc.) | ||
| Threats against your ethnic group | ||
| Home destroyed | ||
| Witnessed dead bodies | ||
| Witnessed physical violence against others | ||
| Confiscation/looting of personal property | ||
| Murder of extended family or friend | ||
| Threats against you or your family | ||
| Forced to flee under dangerous conditions | ||
| Extortion (i.e., paying money due to force or threats) | ||
| Forced to hide because of dangerous conditions | ||
| Death of family or friends while fleeing or hiding (e.g., not from violent injury like shooting or stabbing, but because of illness, lack of food, drowning etc.) | ||
| Witnessed sexual violence/abuse of others | ||
| Unjust detainment | ||
| Present while security forces forcibly searched for people or things in your home (or the place where you were living) | ||
| Torture (i.e., while in captivity you received deliberate and systematic infliction of physical or mental suffering) | ||
| Forced labor (i.e., forced to do work that you could not decline, for example, patrolling, working for security forces, etc.) | ||
| Beaten by non-family member | ||
| Turned back while trying to flee | ||
| Sexual abuse, sexual humiliation, or sexual exploitation (e.g., coerced sexual acts, inappropriate touching, forced to remove clothing, etc.) | ||
| Murder of immediate family member (i.e., father, mother, sister, brother, husband/wife, or children) | ||
| Physical injury from being intentionally stabbed or cut with object (e.g., knife, axe, sword, machete, etc.) | ||
| Disappearance of family member | ||
| Beaten by spouse or family member | ||
| Other serious physical injury from violence (e.g., shrapnel, burn, landmine injury, etc.) | ||
| Forced Abortion (only female) | ||
| Physical Injury from being shot (bullet wound) | ||
| Rape by security forces (i.e., forced to have unwanted sexual relations with security forces)g | ||
| Rape by others (i.e., forced to have unwanted sexual relations with a stranger, acquaintance, or family member) | ||
Daily stressors in Bangladesh and Myanmar
| Bangladesh Daily Stress: | % | Myanmar Daily Stress: “ | % |
|---|---|---|---|
| “Because you do not have enough | 95% | “Because you do not have enough | 30% |
| “ | 79% | “ | 24% |
| “Because your family are not in | 72% | “Because your family are not in | 84% |
| “ | 66% | “ | 96% |
| 62% | 7% | ||
| “Safe access to clean toilet and | 62% | “Safe access to clean toilet and | 11% |
| “ | 62% | “ | 42% |
| 60% | 17% | ||
| “ | 47% | “ | 44% |
| 14% | 66% | ||
| 13% | “ | 97% | |
| 4% | 98% |