Introduction
The causes that propel individuals into forced migration have been increasing across the globe – be that because of environmental degradation, natural disasters, global austerity and deepening poverty as well as organised violence. This latter precipitant is the focus of this issue, as in recent years, wars and civil unrest have contributed to the largest forced movement of people across the globe since World War II, predominantly as a result of unrest in the Middle East (UNHCR, 2017).
The mental health implications of forced migration for refugee children have been documented as higher than in host populations in a number of studies and reviews (Fazel et al. Reference Fazel, Wheeler and Danesh2005; Jakobsen et al. Reference Jakobsen, Demott and Heir2014; Barghadouch et al. Reference Barghadouch, Carlsson and Norredam2016a ; Close et al. Reference Close, Kouvonen, Bosqui, Patel, O'Reilly and Donnelly2016). The prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), anxiety and depressive disorders are in general higher than in host populations but there is significant heterogeneity given the dramatically different experiences these children might have had in their native countries as well as in their journey to and reception in a country of refuge (Reed et al. Reference Reed, Fazel, Jones, Panter-Brick and Stein2012). For example, prevalence rates of PTSD can range in studies from 10 to 25% in studies from high-income countries but have been as high as 75% in low- and middle-income country studies; and estimates of depression have ranged from 5 to 30% (Fazel et al. Reference Fazel, Reed and Stein2015). Furthermore, refugee children can arrive with primary caregivers, other family members or enter a high-income nation unaccompanied – either as a result of trafficking or other potentially fearsome journeys – all of which can contribute to very different mental health considerations.
The study, development and scrutiny of different interventions for refugee children is significantly impacted by the heterogeneity of refugee populations, as described above. This then effects opportunities to better systematise and interpret the available evidence as appropriate meta-analyses of interventions cannot be conducted. For example, studies can differ substantially in how populations are defined as refugees, what control group, if any, is chosen, the location of the intervention, the tools utilised to conduct any mental health measurements and their cross-cultural validity, the primary outcomes chosen, and finally aspects of the scope and intensity of the intervention itself.
Furthermore, there can be difficulties inherent in studying refugee populations because of cultural, environmental and political factors that can lead to greater mobility, numerous socio-economic needs, and immigration and residence insecurity. These, in combination with a poor conceptualisation of mental health presentations and services, add to the complexities of conducting systematic studies on these populations (Reed et al. Reference Reed, Fazel, Jones, Panter-Brick and Stein2012). This is further evidenced by the widespread underutilisation of mental health services by refugee children and their families (Colucci et al. Reference Colucci, Szwarc, Minas, Paxton and Guerra2014). It can thus be difficult to approach the field of intervention studies for refugee children in an integrated manner.
The prominent focus on treatments for PTSD (Cloitre, Reference Cloitre2009; Nickerson et al. Reference Nickerson, Bryant, Silove and Steel2011; Eberle-Sejari et al. Reference Eberle-Sejari, Nocon and Rosner2015; Nose et al. Reference Nose, Ballette, Bighelli, Turrini, Purgato, Tol, Priebe and Barbui2017) have dominated the majority of studies thus far conducted. Although PTSD is only one of a broad number of different presentations seen in refugee children, its study is possibly facilitated by a discrete diagnostic categorisation, often identified by specific events rather than the totality of the refugee experience, which might seem overwhelming. The data on interventions, therefore, are skewed towards treating PTSD. It is also an area of treatment that has, in children and across a range of potentially traumatic exposures, had positive results with moderate effect sizes observed across the different types and populations that have been traumatised. However, as the actual numbers participating in studies that can be compared remain small, there remains much to be done, especially given the substantial numbers of children currently forcibly displaced across the globe (Peltonen & Punamaki, Reference Peltonen and Punamaki2010).
A number of areas will now be considered. Firstly, the importance of a thorough assessment of the refugee child and their caregivers is discussed and then a range of encouraging interventions will be described.
Importance of a thorough assessment
The importance of an appropriate and thorough assessment that takes place in an accessible setting must necessitate any approach to identifying the best intervention that might be needed for a refugee child. This is because such a large proportion of refugee children do not access mental health services and those that do might not engage well with any determined treatment approach (Colucci et al. Reference Colucci, Minas, Szwarc, Guerra and Paxton2015; Barghadouch et al. Reference Barghadouch, Kristiansen, Jervelund, Hjern, Montgomery and Norredam2016b ). In order to best appreciate the factors that contribute to this, it is important to consider the many, often competing demands, placed on refugee children and their families such as their basic survival needs of food, housing, financial security and immigration determination. These needs are then coupled with the complexities of stigma that afflict all mental health interventions, especially for vulnerable populations. For refugee children and families, the concept of mental illness and services might be poorly understood; especially as such services are often poorly developed in many of the countries from which refugee populations have arrived.
The assessment of the refugee child needs to ensure that a full picture is drawn of their experiences across their life thus far, from what they might have experienced in their countries of origin, to their journeys to a country of refuge and then, in their current situation. The full extent of the psychological assessment has been described elsewhere, and includes assessment of their family, school and community as well as their full psychosocial needs (Fazel et al. Reference Fazel, Reed and Stein2015; Ng et al. Reference Ng, Cook and Thomas2016). The integrative model of adaptation and development after trauma and persecution (ADAPT) can guide a more tailored assessment as it proposes five core psychosocial pillars that are disrupted by trauma – feeling safe and secure; bonds and attachments; a sense of fairness or justice; having a role and identity; and existential meaning (Silove, Reference Silove2013).
Conducting a comprehensive neurodevelopmental and cognitive assessment can be particularly challenging in the context of cross-cultural differences in social behaviour in addition to the barriers that might be presented by assessments being conducted on a child who has only newly acquired the language (Kaplan et al. Reference Kaplan, Stolk, Valibhoy, Tucker and Baker2016; Ng et al. Reference Ng, Cook and Thomas2016). A recent systematic review of learning problems in refugee children highlighted a number of risk factors for learning problems (Graham et al. Reference Graham, Minhas and Paxton2016). These included parental misunderstandings about educational styles and expectations, teacher stereotyping and low expectations, bullying and racial discrimination, pre-migration and post-migration trauma, and forced detention. Factors for success included high academic and life ambition, parental involvement in education, family cohesion and supportive home environment, accurate educational assessment and grade placement, teacher understanding of linguistic and cultural heritage, culturally appropriate school transition, supportive peer relationships and successful acculturation. These place an emphasis, therefore, on the role of key environmental actors – such as schools – to facilitate success. An assessment of the school and its environment, if the refugee child has been placed in school, is often essential in helping identify, assess and treat refugee children in need of mental health interventions (Tyrer & Fazel, Reference Tyrer and Fazel2014; Fazel et al. Reference Fazel, Garcia and Stein2016).
Review of a refugee child's physical health needs is important as this can be overlooked. It should include chronic health conditions, oral health and skin as well as questions about previous health, exposure to any infectious diseases endemic in countries of origin and transit, as well as physical injuries (Davidson et al. Reference Davidson, Skull, Chaney, Frydenberg, Isaacs, Kelly, Lampropoulos, Raman, Silove and Buttery2004; Gerritsen et al. Reference Gerritsen, Bramsen, Devillé, van Willigen, Hovens and van der Ploeg2006; Benson & Smith, Reference Benson and Smith2007). Previous head injury, especially if associated with loss of consciousness, is an important factor to ascertain as studies have demonstrated that this is highly prevalent in torture survivors and can have significant long-term neurodevelopmental and psychological effects including depression and PTSD (Mollica et al. Reference Mollica, Henderson and Tor2002; Mollica et al. Reference Mollica, Lyoo, Chernoff, Bui, Lavelle, Yoon, Kim and Renshaw2009; Keatley et al. Reference Keatley, Ashman, Im and Rasmussen2013).
Finally, a sensitive assessment of violence exposure is needed. This is not only about previous exposures to torture and violence, which have consistently predicted longer term mental health needs, but also current exposures to violence within the child's home as well as community and school. Refugee families, in some studies, have been observed to have a higher rate of parent to child aggression (Pottie et al. Reference Pottie, Dahal, Georgiades, Premji and Hassan2015). This can be as a result of the complex interplay that might be experienced by refugee parents of deskilling on arrival in a new country, downward social mobility with lower socio-economic status than they had experienced previously and social isolation, all of which can then impact on the risk of maltreatment for children (LeBrun et al. Reference LeBrun, Hassan, Boivin, Fraser, Dufour and Lavergne2016). A proposed cycle of violence highlights a potential sequence of events in which adults exposed to human rights violations are more prone to outbursts of excessive anger in the post-conflict environment with perceptions of enduring injustice playing an important role in perpetuating this cycle (Rees et al. Reference Rees, Silove, Chey, Ivancic, Steel, Creamer, Teesson, Bryant, McFarlane and Mills2011; Rees et al. Reference Rees, Silove, Tay and Kareth2013; Tay et al. Reference Tay, Rees, Chen, Kareth and Silove2015). The impact of exposure to continuing violence in the post-migration environment, either witnessed or experienced by the refugee child, needs therefore to be carefully considered and addressed.
The future might offer further assessment opportunities to identify higher risk populations, as highlighted by two recent studies looking at the potential role of genetic predisposition. These studies have demonstrated how variants of certain genes can increase susceptibility to mental health problems following trauma, such as the degree of MAOA expression in one study of Syrian refugees (Mulligan et al. Reference Mulligan, Clukay, Quinlan, Dajani, Hamadmad, Abudayyeh and Panter-Brick2017) and in another where carriers of a certain cortiocotropin-releasing hormone receptor 1 allele were more susceptible to mental health problems following trauma in both refugee and Dutch adolescents (Sleijpen et al. Reference Sleijpen, Heitland, Mooren and Kleber2017).
Treatments of note
The study of interventions for refugee children can be framed under two main headings, those that are unimodal – directed at treating a specific disorder and comprise the majority of higher quality studies, or multimodal – those that are trying to address the many needs refugee children might present with in both their mental and physical health as well as their broader systems, be that in their family, school or wider community. Across high-income countries, a range of different interventions are offered, often with a limited evidence base. Many services offer no specific or targeted treatments, and those that do, primarily include enhanced services to treat individuals with PTSD. A small number of family-based and school-based interventions have also been offered (Tyrer & Fazel, Reference Tyrer and Fazel2014). Many third sector and charitable organisations have arisen to meet the treatment gap by providing psychosocial interventions but few have been evaluated. A few innovative treatments of note are described below.
PTSD and Narrative Exposure Therapy
The evidence highlights how there are certain high-risk groups for PTSD and these include those who have experienced cumulative exposure to multiple types of torture, as well as post-migration instability such as many house moves, a lack of basic resources and immigration detention (Miller & Rasmussen, Reference Miller and Rasmussen2010; Fazel et al. Reference Fazel, Reed, Panter-Brick and Stein2012).
The treatment of PTSD has been one of the more extensively studied areas, yet systematic reviews of adult literature often identify small numbers of high-quality studies, and much less so for child populations (Eberle-Sejari et al. Reference Eberle-Sejari, Nocon and Rosner2015; Brown et al. Reference Brown, Witt, Fegert, Keller, Rassenhofer and Plener2017; Morina et al. Reference Morina, Malek, Nickerson and Bryant2017; Nose et al. Reference Nose, Ballette, Bighelli, Turrini, Purgato, Tol, Priebe and Barbui2017). Narrative Exposure Therapy (NET) has the strongest evidence base thus far, a reflection of its consistent positive findings in adult and child studies and also the number of high-quality studies testing it (Neuner et al. Reference Neuner, Catani, Ruf, Schauer, Schauer and Elbert2008; Robjant & Fazel, Reference Robjant and Fazel2010; Ruf et al. Reference Ruf, Schauer, Neuner, Catani, Schauer and Elbert2010; Catani et al. Reference Catani, Kohiladevy, Ruf, Schauer, Elbert and Neuner2012). NET holds promise as it is potentially scalable having been studied in low-resource settings with lay counsellors and, for mental health professionals, has a brief 2-day training. It has been developed to treat people who have suffered multiple traumatic experiences and chronologically explores each event in intricate detail to produce a life narrative. There is a need to replicate existing NET studies in more high-income settings, as well as test it against other treatment modalities of note – such as Eye-Movement Desensitisation and Reprocessing (EMDR) and Trauma-focused CBT (TF-CBT). NET's adaptation for children, KIDNET, has been tested in at least seven studies mainly conducted in low- and middle-income countries (Neuner et al. Reference Neuner, Catani, Ruf, Schauer, Schauer and Elbert2008; Robjant & Fazel, Reference Robjant and Fazel2010; Ruf & Schauer, Reference Ruf and Schauer2012). It comprises approximately 6–10 sessions of around 90 min conducted at weekly intervals. The studies thus far conducted have demonstrated significant symptom reduction with sustained effects at follow-up of up to 12 months. Lay counsellors (including teachers) have been utilised in the studies in low- and middle-income settings, but how this would translate into high-income countries is still unclear but feasible given the success so far.
Improving home environment, families and multimodal interventions
There is a consensus that in the resettlement environment, positive psychosocial outcomes for youth and adults is significantly influenced by the integrity and functioning of families. Yet few intervention programs in mental health focus specifically on families in the refugee field. PTSD clusters in families (Sack et al. Reference Sack, Clarke and Seeley1995) and can have negative effects on attachment and parenting (van Ee et al. Reference van Ee, Kleber, Jongmans, Mooren and Out2016). An interesting model of participatory research based within two refugee communities in Boston demonstrates how developing interventions for refugee communities can take account of the needs that are identified by the refugee communities themselves. As a result of research to understand the problems, help-seeking behaviours and strengths to be fostered in each community, an intervention was developed with promising acceptability (Betancourt et al. Reference Betancourt, Fawzi, Bruderlein, Desmond and Kim2010; Betancourt et al. Reference Betancourt, Frounfelker, Mishra, Hussein and Falzarano2015). This intervention includes ten modules delivered to caregivers and children in separate sessions and builds towards a family meeting to support understanding of previous and current stressors and foster more positive relationships.
Facilitating better generic psychological treatment using a common elements approach
Another method of treatment that is gaining increasing momentum and has interesting results are those that utilise a common elements treatment approach incorporating treatments for mood disorders, post-traumatic stress or anxiety problems. Lay workers have been trained to deliver a treatment intervention using a transdiagnostic approach for which early data showed a decrease in clinical symptoms and promising acceptability as determined by good retention in treatment (Murray et al. Reference Murray, Dorsey, Haroz, Lee, Aisiary, Weiss and Bolton2014). It has been piloted in the USA, Iraq and on the Thai-Myanmar border, although with little evidence to date for refugee children in high-income settings. Bolton has shown lay counsellors can effectively deliver interventions across disorders among trauma survivors (Bolton et al. Reference Bolton, Lee, Haroz, Murray, Dorsey, Robinson, Ugueto and Bass2014) as supported by a broader review of the use of paraprofessionals in treating PTSD in low-resource settings (Jain, Reference Jain2010). Transdiagnostic protocols, which enlist a core set of elements to address a range of mental disorders, have emerging evidence of being as effective as disorder-specific treatments, and are potentially more scalable (Hersh et al. Reference Hersh, Metz and Weisz2016; Michelson & Patel, Reference Michelson and Patel2017).
In considering the practicalities of offering such intervention approaches to refugee children in high-income countries, it might be important to consider who might comprise a ‘lay counsellor’; the training they might need as well as careful consideration of safeguarding and clinical governance issues. This term might apply to teachers, school assistants and other education staff as well as a range of mental health care workers who are without specific mental health qualifications but employed in third sector or voluntary organisations, and currently deliver a high proportion of community psychosocial interventions. More generic mental health services are starting to work collaboratively with ‘lay workers’ and community organisations to enhance engagement with more vulnerable hard-to-reach populations as well as improving experiences of and services offered by mental health services. This approach, therefore, holds promise for refugee children.
School-based interventions to improve mental health outcomes
There is emerging interest in the potential role that schools can play in providing mental health support and interventions, especially for vulnerable refugee populations such as unaccompanied minors as well as for families (Tyrer & Fazel, Reference Tyrer and Fazel2014; Anders & Christiansen, Reference Anders and Christiansen2016; Fazel et al. Reference Fazel, Garcia and Stein2016). Unimodal and multimodal interventions have been examined in schools and although the evidence base at present remains limited, it is growing and worthy of further enquiry. Interventions that have been trialled include targeted interventions to treat those with PTSD to interventions delivered in classrooms, often for newly arrived children. A range of interventions have been studied, with the greatest evidence base in those that focus on the verbal processing of previous traumatic events (Tyrer & Fazel, Reference Tyrer and Fazel2014).
For example, a multi-tiered approach was used for a class of refugee children in a school in the USA, called Project SHIFA (Ellis et al. Reference Ellis, Miller, Abdi, Barrett, Blood and Betancourt2013). In this model, broad mental health promotion was offered to all, and those identified at higher risk were placed in school-based early intervention groups. Those with significant distress were given a direct trauma-based treatment under the trauma systems therapy (TST) model with more intense services including home-based mental health care, advocacy and case management. This model of treatment holds good promise, especially as it has engaged and utilised community resources. Future interventions can consider the whole school environment, as the interventions need not only be directed at refugee children but have the potential to focus on the whole community of learners at the school.
Conclusions
This focus on mental health interventions for refugee children in high-income settings does not negate the importance of appreciating the many strengths and capacities of refugee children and families arriving in high-income settings. However, in trying to ensure that those with mental health difficulties are able to access the best available interventions, it is important to appreciate the difficulties encountered in developing this field of research. In summary, the study of interventions for refugee populations has been hampered by difficulties with the heterogeneity of the populations studied and the limited number of high-quality studies conducted – a reflection of populations where the research agenda can be difficult to prioritise, especially for children.
Of the many challenges in the field, three might be worthy of consideration for a more united approach. First is the prospect of minimising modifiable causes of heterogeneity across data in outcome studies. If a more unified approach could be adopted in outcome measures and validated data can be gathered from a narrowed band of instruments, then studies might be more amenable to meta-analysis and the pooling of information, which can substantially support the development of an evidence base of treatments for refugee children.
Secondly, given the complexity of issues that these populations often have to concurrently manage, more multimodal interventions that bring together interventions from different theoretical backgrounds and practices are needed to enhance the poorly developed current evidence base (Silverstone et al. Reference Silverstone, Suen, Ashton, Hamza and Martin2016). For child refugee populations, multimodal interventions would potentially address components of the following: exposure to previous traumatic events; adjustment to new environments; linguistic and legal assistance; family and parenting support; and school-based interventions. These complex interventions can be harder to conceptualise, get funded and then be tested but given the global context of current need, these interventions need to be enhanced (Betancourt & Chambers, Reference Betancourt and Chambers2016).
Finally, collaboration across health services and policy makers to embed an implementation science approach to any interventions developed are urgently needed to ensure that we can better elucidate the barriers and facilitators for successful implementation of interventions whilst also taking into consideration local contexts (Betancourt & Chambers, Reference Betancourt and Chambers2016). A focus at the outset of intervention development on broader dissemination and identifying where an implementation strategy might facilitate making the intervention more successful and sustainable is needed. This is of heightened importance for the development of complex interventions across modalities to address the broad needs of refugee children (Kohn et al. Reference Kohn, Corrigan and Donaldson2001; Tabak et al. Reference Tabak, Khoong, Chambers and Brownson2012). Incorporating the refugee and other stakeholder's views will also ensure that all relevant perspectives are understood and have been shown to assist with more successful long-term implementation (Craig et al. Reference Craig, Dieppe, Macintyre, Michie, Nazareth and Petticrew2008; Curran et al. Reference Curran, Bauer, Mittman, Pyne and Stetler2012; Tabak et al. Reference Tabak, Khoong, Chambers and Brownson2012; Moore et al. Reference Moore, Audrey, Barker, Bond, Bonell, Hardeman, Moore, O'Cathain, Tinati and Wight2015; Lucero et al. Reference Lucero, Wallerstein, Duran, Alegria, Greene-Moton, Israel, Kastelic, Magarati, Oetzel and Pearson2016).
The present opportunities to develop interventions for refugee children are more exciting than ever, given the advances that have taken place in conceptualising and testing complex interventions as well as the frameworks for developing sustainable and scalable interventions using implementation science methodology. If these are utilised well, the field has the potential to be propelled forward as such large numbers of forcibly displaced children are present across the globe – those under the age of 18 years comprise half of all refugee populations. Resettlement strategies that can address the difficulties of accessing refugee populations for informed study and enabling a more coherent research agenda that is aligned with public health and policy strategies are needed. With such large numbers arriving, the potential to learn from these populations, as well as understanding and addressing their mental health needs, have never been more auspicious.
Conflicts of interest
Mina Fazel declares no conflicts of interest.