Traumatized Refugees in Psychotherapy : Long-Term Changes in Personality, Mental Health, Well-Being, and Exile Life Functioning

This pre- and posttreatment study of 22 severely traumatized adult refugees spanned a mean of 6.5 years. Changes in personality functioning, mental health, and well-being were examined using the Rorschach Performance Assessment System, Harvard Trauma Questionnaire, Hopkins Symptom Checklist–25, and the World Health Organization’s Quality of Life–BREF questionnaire. A paired samples t-test revealed significant improvement after psychotherapy in traumatic ideation and initial severe disruptions in thought processes, reality testing, perception, self and other representations, and relational capacity (Cohen’s d = 0.46–0.59).

 

Symptoms of anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress were significantly reduced (d = 0.54–0.84), quality of life in the physical health and psychological health domains increased significantly (d = 0.87 and 0.97), and percentage of participants with exile language proficiency and work/study status increased significantly. The findings demonstrate the potential of psychotherapy to contribute to normalizing perceptual, cognitive, and relational capacities in severely traumatized refugees, paramount to well-being and functioning in exile.

Reference: 
Opaas, Marianne PhD ; Hartmann, Ellen J. ClinPsyS | 2021
In: Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease ; ISSN : 0022-3018 | 209 | 12 | 859-871
https://doi.org/10.1097/NMD.0000000000001396
Keywords: 
Adults, Anxiety Disorders, Asylum Seekers, Depressive Disorders, Effectiveness, Exiles, Mental health, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Psychotherapy, Psychotrauma, PTSD (en), Quality of Life, Refugees, Treatment