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Posted
October, 2010
Nine-Year
Outcomes for Young Middle Eastern Refugees Living in Denmark
Millions
of children and youths around the world have become refugees
from war, persecution, and ethnic cleansing. Many of the young
refugees have been accepted for resettlement in host countries.
To optimize care for young refugees, it is important to evaluate
their functioning in host countries and to identify factors
associated with good versus poor functioning. In a study of
131 Middle Eastern refugees living in Denmark, Edith Montgomery
(2010) used data from the refugees themselves and from their
parents to test associations of psychopathology with a variety
of potential risk and protective factors. Obtained when the
refugees were 11 to 23 years old, the outcome measures included
the YSR and Young Adult Self-Report (YASR-the predecessor
of the Adult Self-Report) and the CBCL and Young Adult Behavior
Checklist (YABCL-the predecessor to the Adult Behavior Checklist)
completed by the refugrees' parents. Respondents could choose
to complete either Arabic or Danish translations of the ASEBA
forms. The outcome measures also included the Schedule for
Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia (SADS), a semistructured
interview that yields DSM diagnoses. Information was obtained
on parents' educational level, family structure and relationships,
traumatic events before exile, and stressful events while
in Denmark. Based on problems reported at arrival in Denmark
8 to 9 years earlier and outcome ASEBA scores in the combined
borderline and clinical ranges, the youths were divided into
the following four groups for analysis: (a)
"spared"-unproblematic at arrival and follow-up;
(b) "reacting"-unproblematic at arrival
but problematic at follow-up; (c) "adapted"-problematic
at arrival but not at follow-up; (d) "traumatized"-
problematic at arrival and at follow-up. As only 3.1% of the
youths qualified for Group b, only Groups a, c, and d were
statistically compared. Montgomery found that the traumatized
youths (Group d) had significantly more kinds of traumatic
experiences prior to arrival than the spared youths (Group
a). The traumatized youths had also experienced significantly
more kinds of stressful events after arrival in Denmark than
the adapted youths (Group c). Significant protective factors
were length of father's education in the home country, youth's
current attendance at school or work, and speaking frequently
with mother about problems. Montgomery concluded that "The
cumulative effect of traumatic experiences . . . seems more
important than the effect of specific experiences related
to war and organized violence" (p. 485) and that experiencing
many kinds of stressful life events after arrival worked against
recovery from psychological problems related to the youths'
traumatic past.
Reference:
Montgomery,
E. (2010). Trauma and resilience in young refugees: A 9-year
follow-up study. Development and Psychopathology, 22, 477-489.
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