Thursday, April 13, 2006

Impact of immigration detention and temporary protection on the mental health of refugees

Br J Psychiatry. 2006 Jan;188:58-64.
http://bjp.rcpsych.org/cgi/content/full/188/1/58
Steel Z, Silove D, Brooks R, Momartin S, Alzuhairi B, Susljik I.
"Over the past decade, developed Western countries have supplied increasingly stringent measures to discourage those seeking asylum. AIMS: To investigate the longer-term mental health effects of mandatory detention and subsequent temporary protection on refugees. METHOD: Lists of names provided by community leaders were supplemented by snowball sampling to recruit 241 Arabic-speaking Mandaean refugees in Sydney (60% of the total adult Mandaean population). Interviews assessed post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), major depressive episodes, and indices of stress related to past trauma, detention and temporary protection. RESULTS: A multilevel model which included age, gender, family clustering, pre-migration trauma and length of residency revealed that past immigration detention and ongoing temporary protection each contributed independently to risk of ongoing PTSD, depression and mental health-related disability. Longer detention was associated with more severe mental disturbance, an effect that persisted for an average of 3 years after release. CONCLUSIONS: Policies of detention and temporary protection appear to be detrimental to the longer-term mental health of refugees."