Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Scaling-up Psychological Interventions With Syrian Refugees in Switzerland
The current refugee crisis across the Middle East and Europe has large effects on individual refugees' psychological well-being, as well as on the healthcare systems of countries hosting refugees. For example, in Switzerland patients sometimes have to wait up to 12 months for the specific psychological treatment due to a lack of specialists. To address this problem the WHO has developed Problem Management Plus (PM+), a brief (five sessions), low-intensity psychological intervention, delivered by paraprofessionals, that addresses common mental disorders in people in communities affected by adversity. The feasibility of PM+ has never been examined in Switzerland before, this is the aim of the current pilot study.
Recent crises in the Middle East, most notably in Syria, have resulted in an unprecedented increase in the worldwide number of refugees and asylum seekers. Switzerland (CH) is strongly affected by this crisis too. Eight percent of asylum requests in 2016 were made by people from Syria (2015: 12 %). More than 7'000 asylum seekers from Syria entered CH over the last two years. Due to the ongoing war in this region, it is unlikely that this kind of migration and flight will stop. Notably, 50% of the refugee population are children and adolescents. Refugees have typically been exposed to multiple stressors related to war and displacement including loss of family members, destruction of homes and livelihoods and human rights violations such as sexual violence or torture. They have often undertaken a risky and stressful flight leaving their homes for an unknown future. Accordingly, studies consistently show that refugees are at considerable risk of developing common mental disorders, including depression, anxiety, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and related somatic health symptoms. Recent WHO projections suggest that approximately 15-20% of Syrian refugees will develop some type of mental health problem and therefore represent an enormous public mental health challenge. According to the UNHCR, 86% of all displaced persons remain in conflict or neighboring countries where appropriate health care is mostly not available. But also Western health systems are often unable to appropriately cover the needs of this particularly vulnerable population regarding prevention and treatment of mental health problems. As a response to this situation, the WHO developed the low-intensity Problem Management Plus (PM+) programs, a new generation of shorter, less expensive and trans-diagnostic (i.e., not specifically aimed at treating a certain mental disorder) programs to reduce common mental health symptoms and improve psychosocial functioning. PM+ is based on the WHO treatment guidelines for conditions related to stress. PM+ is a 5-sessions intervention aimed at reducing symptoms of depression, anxiety, PTSD, and related conditions, is delivered by trained non-specialized workers or lay people, and is available in individual and group delivery formats for both children and adults. It comprises evidence-based techniques of (a) problem solving, (b) stress management, (c) behavioral activation, and (d) accessing social support. PM+ has been successfully implemented in Kenya and Pakistan. The STRENGTHS (Syrian REfuGees MeNTal HealTH Care Systems) study aims at evaluating the effectiveness and implementation of PM+ with Syrian refugees in different settings in low- and high-resource countries. The study consortium includes international experts in the domains of trauma and public mental health as well as representatives of WHO and UNHCR. The Zürich study site has been consigned to examine PM+ with adult refugees in an individual treatment setting in Switzerland. At the same time, similar studies in other countries will be undertaken. Despite the objective of these studies to implement and evaluate the effectiveness of PM+ in refugees, each research institution acts independently. Moreover, the other studies will be completed in different treatment settings - i.e., in children and adolescents (Lebanon), in groups (Turkey and Netherlands), and internet-delivered PM+ (Germany and Egypt). To date, the feasibility of PM+ has not been investigated in a highly industrialized country, such as Switzerland. In the present study, the investigators will evaluate the feasibility of PM+ in Syrian refugees in Switzerland. This research entails single-blind randomized controlled trial. The amendment was secured by December 2018. Trainers, assessors, supervisors and helpers are already identified, recruited an trained. After the approval, the first participants will be identified, invited to screening and if they fulfill the criteria they will be invited to participate in the pilot study. The pilot study will end by the end of 2019. After the pilot study the results will be evaluated, analyzed and integrated in the planning of the definitive randomized controlled trial (RCT) (next study, not the part of current registration). ;
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