| Literature DB >> 35387680 |
Sarah DeSa1, Akalewold T Gebremeskel2,3, Olumuyiwa Omonaiye4,5, Sanni Yaya6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Based on the Global Trends report from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugee, in high-income countries, there are 2.7 refuges per 1000 national population, girls and women account for nearly 50% of this refuge population. In these high-income countries, compared with the general population refuge women have higher prevalence of mental illness. Thus, this review was conducted to examine the barriers to and facilitators of access to mental health services for refugee women in high-income countries for refugee resettlement.Entities:
Keywords: Access; Asylum-seekers; Barriers; Challenges; Enablers; Facilitators; Mental health service; Refugee; Resettlement countries; Women
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35387680 PMCID: PMC8985267 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-022-01936-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1PRISMA Flowchart
Study and participant characteristics
| Author | Year | Study setting | Study design | Participant characteristics | Immigration status | Participant country of origin | Type of usual standard mental health services for refugee women |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whittaker, et al. | 2005 | UK | Cross-sectional | Female refugees born in north Somalia, entered UK as a child or adolescent living in England for over 1 year | Asylum-seeker; refugees | Somalia | Doctors, counsellors, “shrinks”, psychologists, bereavement groups, telephone help lines, homecare |
| Wong, et al. | 2006 | USA | Cross-sectional | Refugees from Cambodian origin between 35 and 75 years old | Refugees | Cambodian | Mental health care services |
| Donnelly, et al. | 2011 | Canada | Qualitative | Refugee and migrant women living with mental illness. | Refugees | China and Sudan | Mental health care services |
| Drummond, et al. | 2011 | Australia | Cross-sectional | Refugee women aged between 20 and 67 years from Liberia or Sierra Leone who have lived in Australia for 6 months to 5 years. | Refugees | Liberia, Sierra Leone | Health care services and mental health services |
| O'Mahony, et al. | 2013 | Canada | Qualitative | Over 18 years old, non- European women with immigrant or refugee s status, living in Canada | Refugees | Costa Rica | post-partum depression mental health services |
| Piwowarczyk, et al. | 2014 | USA | Qualitative | Refugee women from Congolese or Somalian backgrounds, above the age of 18 years old. (Age range 18–59) | Refugees | Somalia and Congolese | Mental health services |
| Ahmed, et al. | 2017 | Canada | Mixed-methods | Pregnant or within 1 year of giving birth, admitted to Canada as government or privately sponsored refugees, able to speak English and Arabic. (Age range:20 to 37 years) | Refugees | Saskatoon, Canada | Natal and antenatal mental health care |
| Clark N. | 2018 | Canada | Qualitative | Karen women receiving frontline health care services (Age range: 26–60). | Refugees | Karen speaking; Burmese, and Thailand | Mental health services |
| Smith, et al. | 2019 | Australia | Qualitative | Adult and youth former refugee and essential service providers residing in Launceston. | Refugees | Afghanistan, Bhutan, Burma, Sierra Leone, Sudan and Iran | Mental health essential services |
| Willey, et al. | 2019 | Australia | Qualitative | Refugees that are in the last stages of pregnancy or post-natal pregnancy care, living in a suburb in Melbourne. | Refugees | Burmese and Dari- Afghan, Indian, Vietnamese refugee women | Perinatal mental health screening |
| Babatunde Sowole, et al. | 2020 | Australia | Qualitative | Women aged 18 years and older who are fluent in English living in Australia for over 12 months. | Asylum-seeker; refugees | West Africa | Mental health provision |
| Tulli, et al. | 2020 | Canada | Qualitative | Immigrant and refugee mothers living in Edmonton, Canada, and have children living in Canada. (Age range:18–50) | Refugees | Sudan, Syria, Colombia | Pediatric and immigrant mental health care |