International Journal of Interdisciplinary Social and Community Studies
Volume 11, Issue 1, 2016, Pages 1-16
Impact of daily stressors on psychological distress: A Sri Lankan Tamil refugee analysis (Article)
George M. ,
Jettner J.
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a
School of Social Work, Virginia Commonwealth University, Midlothian, VA, United States
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b
School of Social Work, Virginia Commonwealth University, Midlothian, VA, United States
Abstract
The objective of this study was to examine whether post-migration stressors mediate the relationship between pre-migration trauma and refugee psychological distress, regardless of host country status. Sri Lankan refugees living in Canada and India (n=83) were surveyed using the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire, the Post-Migration Living Difficulties Checklist, and the Symptoms Check List. Results indicate that the relationship between pre-migration trauma and psychological distress was partially mediated by post-migration stressors (b=1.03, 95% BCa CI (.18 2.5) and increased variance explained from 15.4% to 19.9% when included in the final model, while controlling for host country. The direct relationship between pre-migration trauma and psychological distress reduced, but remained significant (b=3.30, 95% BCa CI (.64, 5.95)). Implication for practice is that the failure to include post-migration stressors in explanatory models of distress will overestimate the predictive power of war exposure, and will overlook variance in refugee distress. © Common Ground, Miriam George, Jennifer Jettner, All Rights Reserved.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84974715984&partnerID=40&md5=37a5d34071aa9e54dc6a150117f70084
ISSN: 23247576
Original Language: English