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Mental health and resilience among Eritrean refugees at arrival and one-year post-registration in Switzerland: a cohort study.

Afona ChernetNicole Probst-HenschVéronique SydowDaniel H ParisNiklaus D Labhardt
Published in: BMC research notes (2021)
At baseline, 107 refugees (11.2% female, median age 25) were interviewed: 52 (48.6%) screened positive for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (score ≥ 30), 10.3% for anxiety (≥ 10) and 15.0% for depression (≥ 10); 17.8% scored as risk/hazardous drinkers (≥ 8). The majority (94.4%) had a high resilience score (≥ 65). For one-year follow-up, 48 asylum seekers could be reached. In interviews 18 (38%) of these reported imprisonment in a transit country and 28 (58%) that they had witnessed the death of a close person along the migration route. At the one year assessment, rates of risky/hazardous alcohol use remained unchanged, rates of positive PTSD screening tended to be lower (50.0% (24/48) at baseline vs 25.0% (12/48) at follow-up), as were rates of positive screening for anxiety (8.3% vs 4.2%) and depression (14.6 vs 6.3%).
Keyphrases
  • sleep quality
  • social support
  • mental health
  • depressive symptoms
  • climate change
  • physical activity
  • mental illness
  • posttraumatic stress disorder