| Literature DB >> 35365108 |
Elisa Haase1, Antje Schönfelder2, Yuriy Nesterko2, Heide Glaesmer2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Suicidal ideation and attempts are one of the most serious mental health problems affecting refugees. Risk factors such as mental disorders, low socio-economic status, and stressful life events all contribute to making refugees a high-risk group. For this reason, this meta-analysis aims to investigate the prevalence of suicidal ideation and attempts among refugees in non-clinical populations.Entities:
Keywords: Asylum-seekers; Mental health; Prevalence; Refugees; Suicidal ideation; Suicide attempts
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35365108 PMCID: PMC8976302 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-022-13029-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Inclusion and exclusion criteria according to PICOS scheme (O'Connor et al., 2008)
| Inclusion criteria | |
|---|---|
| refugeesa or asylum seekersb, age 16 years and older | |
| not required | |
| not required | |
| detection of suicidal ideation and attempts in refugees and asylum seekers | |
| empirical studies on the prevalence of suicidal ideation and suicide attempt | |
| cross-sectional or longitudinal studies on the prevalence of suicidal ideation and suicide attempts; written in English language; published until August 2020 | |
• Immigrants, living in the host country for a long time (first, second generation immigrants) • Studies focused on refugees or asylum seekers under the age of 16 years • Studies conducted in clinical populations | |
a A refugee is an individual who is “owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable to, or owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country” (https://www.unhcr.org/protect/PROTECTION/3b66c2aa10.pdf)
b An asylum-seeker is an individual who is seeking international protection. In countries with individualized procedures, an asylum-seeker is someone whose claim has not yet been finally decided on by the country in which he or she has submitted it. Not every asylum-seeker will ultimately be recognized as a refugee, but every refugee is initially an asylum-seeker.” (UNHCR, 2016)
Quality Assessment of included studies (EPHPP)
| Author and year of publication | Selection bias | Study design | Data collection method | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akinyemi et al. (2015) [ | random selection | cross-sectional, cluster sampling | Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) | ||||
| Alley (1982) | random selection | statewide survey, cross-sectional | - | ||||
| Bhui et al. (2003) [ | random selection | cross-sectional | Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) last two weeks | ||||
| Cochran et al. (2013) [ | random selection | cross-sectional | Interview, lifetime and last month | ||||
| Falb et al. (2013) [ | random selection | survey, cross-sectional | non-standardized interview following guidelines of the Reproductive Health Toolkit for Conflict-Affected Women, last month | ||||
| Führer et al. (2016) [ | random selection | survey, cross-sectional | Hopkins-Symptom-Checklist-25 (HSCL-25) last week | ||||
| Leiler et al. (2019) [ | random selection | survey, cross-sectional | PHQ-9 last two weeks | ||||
| Meyerhoff et al. (2020) [ | random selection | cross-sectional | Beck Scale for Suicidal ideation (BSS) last week | ||||
| Nickerson et al. (2019) [ | random selection | cross-sectional, snowball-sampling | PHQ-9 last two weeks | ||||
| Rahman et al. (2003) [ | random selection in primary health care | survey, cross-sectional | Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ-20) last month | ||||
| Sohn et al. (2019) [ | random selection | survey, cross-sectional | the Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES) last year |
Fig. 1Flow diagram to reconstruct study selection
Study characteristics
| Author and year of publication | Suicidal ideation | Suicide attempt | Sample size | Gender distribution | Age distribution | Population | Country |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
121 (27.3%) female: 66 male: 55 | - | 444 | female: 263 male: 181 | 18 and older mean: 34.7 (SD = 12.8) | refugees (Liberians, Sierra Leonans, Sudanese, Congolese, Eritreans) | Oru-Ijebu, South-West Nigeria | |
| - | 6 (0.14%) female: 4 male: 2 | 4.192 | - | 17–52 | Indochinese refugees | Utha, USA | |
62 (34.4%) female: 24 male: 38 | - | 180 | female: 89 male: 91 | mean: 40.4 range: 20–88 | Somali refugees | Greenwich/London, GB | |
13 (lifetime) (3.07%) 9 (last month) (2.13%) | 1 (0.24%) | 423 | female: 202 male: 221 | 18 and older | Buhatan refugees | Arizona Georgia, New York and Texas, USA | |
| female: 63 (7.43%) | - | female: 848 | only women | 15–49 mean: 32.12 (SD = 8.42) | female refugees in a partnership | Thai–Burma border, Myanmar & Thailand | |
33 (15.79%)a female: 6 male: 25 others: 1 missing:1 | - | 209 | female: 24 male: 177 others: 3 missing:5 | 16 and older | asylum-seekers | Halle, Germany | |
| 173 (33.92%) | 510 | female: 136 male: 367 others: 7 | 18 and older | refugees (Afghanistan, Syria) | Jämtland-Härjedalen county, Sweden | ||
| 4 (6.67%) | 4 (7.55%) | 60 (ideation)/ 53 (attempt) | ideation: female: 29 male: 31 attempt: female: 22 male: 31 | 18–65 mean women: 43.7 (SD = 10.5) mean men: 38.2 (SD = 10.8) | Buhatan refugees | greater Burlington, Vermont region, USA | |
| 102 (39.38%) | - | 259 | female: 81 male: 178 | 18 and older, mean: 38.11 (SD = 11.8) | refugees or asylum-seekers (Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan) with no secure visa | Australia | |
| 154 (18.64%) | - | 826 | female: 384 male: 442 | refugees or asylum-seekers (Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan) with secure visa | |||
| female: 96 (32.32%) | - | female: 297 | only women | mean: 28.2 (SD = 7.3) | female refugees which are mothers | Shamshatu and Shalman; Afghanistan | |
| - | 1 (0.78%) | 129 | female: 93 male: 36 | < 31: 44 31–40: 50 41–50: 27 > 51: 8 | refugees and asylum seekers (Nigeria, Ethiopia, Liberia, Yemen, Egypt) | Seoul and Gyeonggi province, Korea |
a After correspondence with the authors, we received the detailed frequency tables on suicidal ideation and classified those who responded with 1 (‘a little”), 2 (‘quite a bit’) to 3 (‘extremly’) as individuals with suicidal ideation. The classification thus differs from that in the paper
Fig. 2Forest plot on the prevalence of suicidal ideation (n = 8)
Fig. 3Forest plot on the prevalence of suicidal ideation in women (n = 5)
Fig. 4Forest plot on the prevalence of suicidal ideation in men (n = 3)
Fig. 5Forest plot on the prevalence of suicide attempts (n = 4)