War can harm intimacy: consequences for refugees who escaped Syria

被引:22
作者
Rizkalla, Niveen [1 ]
Segal, Steven P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Berkeley, Sch Social Welf, Mack Ctr Mental Hlth & Social Conflict, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA
关键词
POSTTRAUMATIC-STRESS-DISORDER; HARVARD TRAUMA QUESTIONNAIRE; CROSS-CULTURAL INSTRUMENT; SERIOUS MENTAL-ILLNESS; PSYCHOLOGICAL DISTRESS; MEASURING TORTURE; VIOLENCE; IMMIGRANTS; MIGRATION; CONFLICT;
D O I
10.7189/jogh.09.020407
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background Syrians seeking refuge have been exposed to atrocities and trauma beyond comprehension. This study examines how personal, interpersonal, displacement and war-related factors have impacted married refugees' intimate lives. Methods Data included 158 married Syrian refugee individuals who live in the host communities of Jordan. Refugees reported on their personal, interpersonal, current-displacement and past-war related experiences. Traumatic impacts were assessed using the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ), K6 screening scale for serious mental illness (SMI), The War Events Questionnaire (WEQ), and Personal Assessment of Intimacy in Relationships (PAIR). Stepwise multiple regressions were used to determine the factors associated with refugees' intimacy-total score and its six dimensions. Results Most refugees (94.2%) experienced war events, and 34% screened positive on the PTSD-HTQ scale. Overall intimacy scores were low, scoring M (+/- standard deviation) = 2.4 (+/- 1.1) of a possible five on average. Intimacy scores were lower for refugees who screened positive on the PTSD-HTQ (M = 1.95 +/- 65) compared to the ones screening negative, respectively (M = 2.23 +/- 66). Furthermore, the higher the PTSD symptoms reported, the lower the couples' intimacy. PTSD and forced marriage were the strongest factors to predict decreased total-intimacy scores (beta = -0.23, P = 0.002; beta = -0.32, P < 0.001), and decreased scores on four dimensions of intimacy (emotional, sexual, intellectual and recreational). Whereas gender was the second strongest factor associated with decreased total-intimacy scores (beta = -0.29, P < 0.001), and decreased scores on three dimensions of intimacy (emotional, social and anger), meaning that women reported suffering more than men from deteriorated intimacy in their marital relationships. Other displacement and war-related factors associated with intimacy were: decreased sexual intimacy associated with having been raped; increased intellectual intimacy associated with escaped from Syria with one's spouse; decreased recreational intimacy associated with the number of family members lived with; decreased sexual, emotional and total-intimacy scores associated with number of children; and years of education as a seemingly personal protective factor associated with increased intellectual and recreational intimacy. Conclusions Addressing Syrian refugees' intimacy issues in interventions is essential, as well as raising the awareness of stakeholders and community leaders to the negative impacts of PTSD, forced marriage, rape, and displacement difficulties endured by the already challenged and distressed married refugees.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 9 条
  • [1] Psychotraumatology of the war in Ukraine: the question of the psychological care of victims who are refugees or who remain in Ukraine
    Bouchard, Jean-Pierre
    Stiegler, Nancy
    Padmanabhanunni, Anita
    Pretorius, Tyrone B.
    ANNALES MEDICO-PSYCHOLOGIQUES, 2023, 181 (01): : 8 - 11
  • [2] The consequences of internal displacement on civil war violence: Evidence from Syria
    Lichtenheld, Adam G.
    Schon, Justin
    POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2021, 86
  • [3] War refugees from Ukraine in Poland - one year after the Russian aggression. Socioeconomic consequences and challenges
    Duszczyk, Maciej
    Gorny, Agata
    Kaczmarczyk, Pawel
    Kubisiak, Andrzej
    REGIONAL SCIENCE POLICY AND PRACTICE, 2023, 15 (01): : 181 - 199
  • [4] "People are still living with pains of the war": An assessment of long-term adjustment and consequences of war-related traumatic stress among Liberian refugees
    Dwanyen, Lekie
    Wieling, Elizabeth
    Griffes, Sarah E.
    CURRENT RESEARCH IN ECOLOGICAL AND SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2024, 6
  • [5] Searching for accountability: can the WHO global action plan for refugees and migrants deliver?
    Onarheim, Kristine Husoy
    Rached, Danielle Hanna
    BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH, 2020, 5 (06):
  • [6] Children and young people who are refugees, internally displaced persons or survivors or perpetrators of war, mass violence and terrorism
    Drury, John
    Williams, Richard
    CURRENT OPINION IN PSYCHIATRY, 2012, 25 (04) : 277 - 284
  • [7] Physical, mental and social consequences in civilians who have experienced war-related sexual violence: a systematic review (1981-2014)
    Ba, I.
    Bhopal, R. S.
    PUBLIC HEALTH, 2017, 142 : 121 - 135
  • [8] 'You can have a bit of my pain, see how it feels' - understanding male prisoners who engage in dual harm behaviours
    Pickering, Amanda
    Blagden, Nicholas
    Slade, Karen
    PSYCHOLOGY CRIME & LAW, 2023, 29 (08) : 825 - 848