影响叙利亚难民儿童风险和复原力的生物和环境因素。

Journal of psychiatry and brain science Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2021-02-24 DOI:10.20900/jpbs.20210003
Arash Javanbakht, Anaïs Stenson, Nicole Nugent, Alicia Smith, David Rosenberg, Tanja Jovanovic
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引用次数: 13

摘要

全球有2100多万人是难民。其中一半以上(超过1000万)是儿童,这是一个非常脆弱的群体。大多数儿童都经历了高度的创伤暴露,包括战争创伤,以及与移民和重新安置有关的巨大压力。这些暴露会带来精神健康问题的风险,包括创伤后应激障碍(PTSD),但它们的相对贡献尚未得到充分阐明。这些影响可能受到创伤和压力暴露的发育时间的调节:童年创伤和压力与整个生命周期中较差的健康结果广泛相关,但这些影响的发育特异性仍不确定。难民儿童通常经历导致流离失所的创伤(例如内战),这种创伤往往持续数十年,对有些人来说,随后是重新安置。通过这一过程跟踪儿童的纵向研究可以提供独特的见解,了解这些在发展过程中的创伤、流离失所和重新安置经历如何影响风险和复原力机制。他们还可以阐明环境和生理因素如何调节创伤和压力的影响。本研究包括两组家庭(父母及其7- 17岁的孩子):(1)2016年~2016年在美国定居前经历过战争创伤的叙利亚和伊拉克难民家庭;(2)2016年~2016年在美国定居前没有经历过战争创伤的阿拉伯移民家庭。我们评估了难民和移民儿童及其父母的焦虑、抑郁和创伤后应激障碍症状。皮肤电导反应,一种自主反应的测量,用于遗传和表观遗传分析的唾液样本,以及关于社会和环境背景的信息,包括家庭结构,资源和社区质量,也被收集。难民参与者提供了在美国重新安置后3年内的三个时间点的数据:第1波,重新安置后1个月内,第2波,重新安置后12-24个月,第3波计划重新安置24-36个月。移民参与者将在移民后3-5年内提供一次与第一波年龄匹配的数据。这个比较组使我们能够比较难民和移民之间的心理健康和生物标志物。这些比较分析的结果将有助于深入了解战争创伤与其他类型的创伤和逆境对儿童心理健康结果的生物标志物的影响。纵向分析的结果将处理难民在一段时间内的心理健康轨迹,以及儿童在整个发展过程中的心理健康轨迹。第一波的初步数据显示,难民儿童的焦虑程度很高,他们的父母也有高度的创伤后应激障碍症状和焦虑。总之,这些比较和纵向分析的结果将为难民和移民的创伤和压力暴露的多个方面提供见解,包括创伤暴露的发育时间如何影响整个发展过程中的生物标志物和心理健康。我们对创伤暴露后影响儿童心理健康的多种因素的评估,包括重新安置后的家庭、社区和社会环境,可能会确定可修改的干预目标,以支持难民的福祉。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Biological and Environmental Factors Affecting Risk and Resilience among Syrian Refugee Children.

More than 21 million people globally are refugees. More than half of these (>10 million) are children, representing a highly vulnerable population. Most children experience high levels of trauma exposure, including war trauma, as well as substantial migration- and resettlement-related stress. These exposures confer risk for mental health problems, including posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), but their relative contributions have not been fully explicated. These effects may be modulated by the developmental timing of trauma and stress exposure: childhood trauma and stress are broadly linked to worse health outcomes across the lifespan, but the developmental specificity of these effects remains uncertain. Refugee children typically experience the trauma leading up to displacement (e.g., civil war) which often lasts for decades, and for some, followed by resettlement. Longitudinal studies that follow children through this process can provide unique insight into how these experiences of trauma, displacement, and resettlement during development impact mechanisms of risk and resilience. They can also elucidate how environmental and physiological factors may modulate the effects of trauma and stress. The present study includes two groups of families (parents and their 7- to 17-year-old children): (1) Syrian and Iraqi refugee families who experienced war-zone trauma before resettling in the United States in ~2016, and (2) Arab immigrant families who did not experience war-zone trauma prior to resettlement in the United States in ~2016. We assessed symptoms of anxiety, depression, and PTSD in refugee and immigrant children and parents. Skin conductance responses, a measure of autonomic response, saliva samples for genetic and epigenetic analyses, and information about social and environmental context, including family structure, resources, and neighborhood quality, were also collected. Refugee participants provided data at three time points spanning ~3 years following resettlement in the United States: Wave 1, within 1 month of resettlement, Wave 2, 12-24 months post resettlement, and Wave 3 planned for 24-36 months resettlement. Immigrant participants will provide data once, within 3-5 years after immigration, matching the age of Wave 1. This comparison group enables us to compare mental health and biomarkers between refugees and immigrants. Results of these comparative analyses will provide insight into the impact of war trauma versus other types of trauma and adversity on biomarkers of child mental health outcomes. Results from the longitudinal analyses will address refugee mental health trajectories over time, and, in children, across development. Initial data from Wave 1 showed high levels of anxiety in refugee children, as well as high levels of PTSD symptoms and anxiety in their parents. Together, results from these comparative and longitudinal analyses will provide insight into multiple aspects of trauma and stress exposure in refugees and immigrants, including how the developmental timing of trauma exposure impacts biomarkers and mental health across development. Our assessment of multiple factors affecting childhood mental health following trauma exposure, including familial, neighborhood and social context following resettlement may identify modifiable targets for interventions to support well-being in refugees.

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