PeerJ
Volume 2014, Issue 1, 2014

Quality of life of Syrian refugees living in camps in the Kurdistan region of Iraq (Article) (Open Access)

Aziz I.A. , Hutchinson C.V. , Maltby J.*
  • a University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom
  • b University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom
  • c University of Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom

Abstract

The current study explores the perceived quality of life of Syrian refugees who have entered the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. Two hundred and seventy participants residing in refugee camps in the Erbil region in Kurdistan completed the WHOQOL-BREF, which measures Quality of Life (QOL) within four domains; physical, psychological, social relationships and environment. Syrian refugees in Kurdistan scored significantly lower for general population norms on physical health, psychological and environment QOL, and score significantly lower for physical health and psychological QOL for refugees in the Gaza strip. However, respondents in the current sample scored significantly higher on environment QOL compared to refugees in the Gaza strip, and significantly higher on all the QOL domains than those reported for refugees inWest Africa. Finally, Syrian refugees in Kurdistan scored significantly higher than general population norms for social relationships QOL. The current findings provide the first report of QOL domain scores among Syrian refugees in the Kurdistan camps and suggest that social relationships and environmental QOL circumstances are relatively satisfactory, and that further investigation might be focused on physical and psychological QOL. © 2014 Aziz et al.

Author Keywords

Psychological health Refugees Physical health Syria Quality of life

Index Keywords

married person male education Iraq female policy social interaction refugee Environment cross-sectional study refugee camp Article interview health quality of life human adult psychologic assessment

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84911437400&doi=10.7717%2fpeerj.670&partnerID=40&md5=c647882faab4aa7654121beaa80d4409

DOI: 10.7717/peerj.670
ISSN: 21678359
Cited by: 10
Original Language: English