mental health of migrants and refugees

14
Halima ZEROUG-VIAL,psychiatrist Samdarra Network Birmingham 2 to 9 November 2010

Upload: brandon-luby

Post on 31-Dec-2015

60 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

Mental health of migrants and refugees. Halima ZEROUG-VIAL, psychiatrist Samdarra Network Birmingham 2 to 9 November 2010. French context. France has always been a country of migration Geographical situation, historical links with former colonies - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Halima ZEROUG-VIAL,psychiatristSamdarra NetworkBirmingham 2 to 9 November 2010

Page 2: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

France has always been a country of migration

Geographical situation, historical links with former colonies

Contradictory and restrictive policies, Since September 11 2001 an increasing tendency to limit entry and to guard borders

Voluntary migration/involuntary migration

Page 3: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees
Page 4: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Exile: Loss of … home (in abstract and concrete sense), continuity, social, cultural dimensions, seat of family life and experiences, locus of identity, roots, security base family status, political and ideological affiliation, sense of belonging, perceptive dimension; sounds, smells, tastes, feel

(climate, clothes) Exile: Restructuring of identity, need to adapt

to a new environment

Page 5: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

The migration trajectory: pre- and post-migratory experiences

Psycho-social effects: insecurity,(material, living conditions, legal

backround) isolation unemployment (non-recognition of qualifications) discrimination lack of self esteem, lack of sense of self worth

Language barrier

Page 6: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Culture-specific dimension: representation of the disease and of its treatment, a specific way of expressing distress.

Language interpreters: cultural mediators rather than translators, facilitate mutual understanding.

Page 7: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Vulnerabilty:

propensity to suffer damage or loss and to find it difficult to recover

a tendency to be hurt by lack of supportive and/or protective factors.

Page 8: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Migration: a vulnerable state?

Vulnerability and resilience can coexist.

Importance of social, political,economical factors

Danger of generalising and neglecting the uniqueness of the individual.

Page 9: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Epidemiology : Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) (30% to 80%), depression (30% to 60%)

Psycho-traumatism: trauma - from the Greek to pierce, wound, injure.

PTSD: introduced in 1980 in the third version of DSM(Diagnostic and statistical Manual of mental disorders ) by the American Psychiatric Association, mainly concerning US soldiers in Vietnam

Psychotraumatism is not limited to PTSD

Page 10: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Nature of psychotraumatism: organised, extreme, and repeated violence, torture, genocide.

Torture: intentional acts of humiliation, being forced to break cultural taboos, the infliction of extreme mental and physical suffering.

Psychological effects of torture: mental death, destruction of the feeling of social, psychological & physical integrity.Feelings of guilt and shame. Destruction of the victim’s identity.

Page 11: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Psychiatric disorders: depression, anxiety, somatisations, cognitive disorders (concentration, memory)

Weakness of the current nosography: PTSD complex or DESNOS: Disorder Of Extreme Stress Not Otherwise Specified.

DESNOS: Anger attacks, autodestructive behaviour, alteration of the belief system, despair, hopelessness, mistrust, loss of ability to project into the future, pervasive anxiety, insecurity, sense of unreality, loss of sense of familiarity, lack of confidence, cognitive impairment, emotional disfunction, impulsiveness, personality change.

Page 12: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Post-migratory stressors: social precariousness, length of the procedure, uncertainty, risk of having to leave the country, unemployment.

Pre-migratory factors: forced exile,dispersed family, lack of family news .

Cultural dimension

Page 13: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Care rights: AME, CMU

Special needs: interpreting, difficulty of access to the public health system

Transcultural mental health units (of which very few - Paris, Bordeaux, Strasbourg) take the cultural dimension into account , work with interpreters. Their theoretical basis is for the most part ethno-psychoanalytic.

Units for victims of torture and forced exile : very few(Paris, Marseille, Lyon)

Page 14: Mental  health  of migrants and  refugees

Specific needs?

Specific mental health units/Public mental health system?

Differents fields overlapping global care, multidisciplinary approaches

Enhance partneships

Sensibilization, specific training

Share practices, collaborative approach, new refferal pathways