Health professionals' experiences of and attitudes towards mental healthcare for migrants and refugees in Europe: A qualitative systematic review

E Peñuela-O'Brien, MW Wan, D Edge… - Transcultural …, 2023 - journals.sagepub.com
Migrants living in Europe constitute over half of the world's international migrants and are at
higher risk of poor mental health than non-migrants, yet also face more barriers in accessing …

Humanitarian crisis on the US–Mexico border: mental health needs of refugees and asylum seekers

FR Morales, KL Nguyen-Finn, M Haidar… - Current Opinion in …, 2022 - Elsevier
Abstract Families and youth from the Northern Triangle of Central America seeking asylum
in the US report substantial trauma exposure and post-traumatic stress symptoms. Sexual …

Othering refugees: Psychotherapists' attitudes toward patients with and without a refugee background

L Dumke, F Neuner - Psychotherapy Research, 2023 - Taylor & Francis
Objective: A large proportion of refugees present with psychological disorders that require
psychotherapy as first-line treatment. However, even in countries with well-established …

Psychodynamic technique and therapeutic alliance in prediction of outcome in psychodynamic child psychotherapy.

S Halfon - Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2021 - psycnet.apa.org
Objective: This study is the first to investigate the effect of psychodynamic technique (PT),
therapeutic alliance, and their interactions with outcome in psychodynamic child …

A multimodal case study utilizing physiological synchrony as indicator of context in which motion synchrony is associated with the working alliance.

S Tal, E Bar-Kalifa, JR Kleinbub, L Leibovich… - …, 2023 - psycnet.apa.org
Interest in the association between patient and therapist's motion synchrony and the working
alliance has been growing in recent years. This interest is part of a larger effort in …

[HTML][HTML] The effect of a low-level psychological intervention (PM+) on post-migration living difficulties–Results from two studies in Switzerland and in the Netherlands

J Spaaij, AM De Graaff, A Akhtar, N Kiselev… - Comprehensive …, 2023 - Elsevier
Aims of the study After arriving in host countries, most refugees are confronted with
numerous post-migration stressors (eg, separation from family, discrimination, and …

The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients

L Dumke, S Wilker, A Kotterba… - Clinical Psychology & …, 2023 - Wiley Online Library
Access to psychotherapy is critical to improving mental health, but only a small proportion of
refugees receive treatment in the regular psychotherapeutic care system in high‐income …

The therapeutic use of self in counselling and psychotherapy

L Finlay - 2021 - torrossa.com
'Therapeutic use of self'is a slippery, elusive concept, one that can be likened to mist rather
than something we can grab hold of. It is hard to explain, yet being so central to the therapy …

Integrating cultural beliefs about illness in counseling with refugees: A phenomenological study

TT Bartholomew, BE Gundel, E Kang… - Journal of Cross …, 2021 - journals.sagepub.com
Researchers have suggested that people with refugee status have heightened rates of
western-defined psychiatric symptoms. Following this evidence, treatments have been …

Service providers' experiences of interpreter-assisted mental health care for people with refugee backgrounds.

EG Mahdavi, C Due, M Walsh… - … : Research and Practice, 2023 - psycnet.apa.org
Lack of a common language is one of the major barriers to providing mental health services
for people with refugee backgrounds. However, while research shows that using interpreters …