| Literature DB >> 33934263 |
Julia Rosenberg1,2, Jessica Kung Leung3, Kristin Harris4, Amer Abdullah5, Arzoo Rohbar4, Camille Brown6, Marjorie S Rosenthal7,6.
Abstract
Refugee children are at risk for mental/behavioral health problems but may not receive timely diagnosis or care. Parental experiences and perspectives about resources in the US may help guide interventions to improve mental/behavioral health care. In a community-academic partnership, we performed a qualitative study of recently-arrived Afghan refugee parents, using in-depth, semi-structured interviews to characterize experiences with parenting, education, and health care services. A four-person coding team identified, described, and refined themes. We interviewed 19 parents from ten families, with a median residence in the US of 24 months. Four themes emerged; parents described: (1) shifting focus as safety needs changed, (2) acculturation stress, (3) adjustment to an emerging US support system, and (4) appreciation of an engaged health care system. Health and educational providers' appreciation for the process of acculturation among newly-arrived refugee Afghan families may facilitate screening, diagnostic, and intervention strategies to improve care.Entities:
Keywords: Afghanistan; Education; Mental and behavioral health; Parenting; Refugee
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33934263 DOI: 10.1007/s10903-021-01206-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immigr Minor Health ISSN: 1557-1912