Swiss Archives of Neurology, Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
Volume 169, Issue 6, 2018, Pages 171-180

Children and adolescents with refugee experiences [In der Schweiz lebende Minderjährige mit Fluchterfahrungen] (Review)

Asefaw F. , Bombach C. , Wöckel L.
  • a Ambulatorium für Kinder- und Jugendpsychiatrie und -psychotherapie, Clienia Littenheid AG, Winterthur, Switzerland
  • b Institut für Erziehungswissenschaften, Universität Zürich, Switzerland
  • c Kinder- und Jugendpsychiatrie und -psychotherapie, Clienia Littenheid AG, Littenheid, Switzerland

Abstract

The number of accompanied and unaccompanied minor asylum seekers in Switzerland has increased in recent years. Numerous studies, mostly from abroad, show that children and adolescents with refugee experiences are at high risk of mental illness. Events in their country of origin, the escape itself and the adjustment to the country of arrival can be associated with traumatic experiences and impede the mobilisation of resources. This article focuses on the housing of children and adolescents who have experienced displacement in the country of arrival and shows, using various examples and with regard to current international research, that the housing of children, adolescents and their families often does not take place in a way that is appropriate to their needs and age. Some stress factors in the country of arrival can represent a high psychosocial burden and a challenge for integration. Participation in social life is hindered for new arrivals in many regards. Accompanied and unaccompanied minor asylum seekers are evidently equally affected by stress and risk factors. Resources can be activated through suitable support measures and targeted integration measures. © 2018 EMH Swiss Medical Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Author Keywords

Mental illness Psycho-social burden Stress factors Transcultural psychiatry Asylum accommodation Unaccompanied minor asylum seekers Accompanied minor asylum seekers Child and adolescent psychiatry UASC Children with experience of displacement Paediatric neurology Ethnopsychiatry trauma

Index Keywords

personal experience refugee displacement behavior social life human mental stress housing mental disease asylum seeker Adolescent stress risk factor Review high risk population cultural psychiatry child psychiatry experience integration age Switzerland health care need public health Child

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85054560643&partnerID=40&md5=da23c77929cd1a88d3f9644e1a59471a

ISSN: 22976981
Original Language: German