Social Behavior and Personality
Volume 40, Issue 1, 2012, Pages 129-145

Social support as a moderator of acculturative stress among refugees and asylum seekers (Article)

Renner W.* , Laireiter A.-R. , Maier M.J.
  • a Department of Psychology, University of Innsbruck, Innrain 52, A-6020 Innsbruck, Austria
  • b Department of Psychology, University of Salzburg, Austria
  • c Institute for Statistics and Mathematics, Vienna University of Economics and Business, Austria

Abstract

A group of 63 refugees and asylum seekers, comprising 27 women and 36 men with a mean age of 33.08 years (SD = 10.3) from Chechnya and Afghanistan were granted sponsorship for 6 months and were randomized to an intervention or waiting-list control group. Only those participants who had been traumatized benefited from the intervention. For the traumatized subsample, sponsorship led to a significant and stable decrease in anxiety, depression, and psychological problems as compared to the control group, with effect sizes comparable to those of psychotherapy. As the effects were palliative rather than instrumental, sponsorship did not instigate improvements in acculturation, societal contact, or coping capability. Women benefited from the intervention more than men, and Afghans benefited more than Chechens. © Society for Personality Research.

Author Keywords

Social support Asylum seekers Refugees Sponsorship Lay help Acculturation

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84930482933&doi=10.2224%2fsbp.2012.40.1.129&partnerID=40&md5=39aad694bd5b2373ceb9702a54a6b3d7

DOI: 10.2224/sbp.2012.40.1.129
ISSN: 03012212
Cited by: 13
Original Language: English