Journal article

Mechanisms underlying the mental health impact of family separation on resettled refugees

BJ Liddell, Y Byrow, M O’Donnell, V Mau, N Batch, T McMahon, R Bryant, A Nickerson

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry | Published : 2021

Abstract

Objective: Many refugees experience prolonged separation from family members, which research suggests has adverse effects on mental health and post-displacement outcomes in refugee populations. We examine mental health differences in refugees separated and not separated from their families, and key post-migration factors and cultural mechanisms that may underlie this impact. Methods: A sample of 1085 refugees resettled in Australia, of which 23.3% were separated from all of their immediate family, took part in an online battery of survey measures indexing pre- and post-migration refugee experiences, mental health symptoms, disability and individualistic/collectivistic self-identity. Family s..

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University of Melbourne Researchers