2023
DOI: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-2814406/v1
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“I’ve been waiting for 10 years to start living again” – Self-perceived problems of Afghan asylum seekers and refugees and their experiences with a short psychological intervention

Abstract: Background: This study examined Afghan asylum seekers and refugees’ experiences treated with an adapted version of the brief psychological intervention Problem Management Plus (aPM+) and explored which problems trouble them most, and how these problems influence their daily functioning. It further examined how various standardized outcome measures correlate with these subjectively perceived problems. Method: This study is part of a larger research project (PIAAS study) and uses a multi-method approach consisti… Show more

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“…Importantly, post-migration life difficulties like the uncertainty of the application process, perceived discrimination, and having relatives in the war zone are associated with acculturation orientations. Asylum seekers who have less hope for acceptance, who have relatives in the war zone, and who have strong political concerns about their home country are more likely to endorse segregation orientations characterized by rejecting the destination culture and maintaining the heritage culture (e.g., Berry, 2001;Kantor et al, 2023;Steel et al, 2011).…”
Section: Future Aspirations Of Asylum Seekersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Importantly, post-migration life difficulties like the uncertainty of the application process, perceived discrimination, and having relatives in the war zone are associated with acculturation orientations. Asylum seekers who have less hope for acceptance, who have relatives in the war zone, and who have strong political concerns about their home country are more likely to endorse segregation orientations characterized by rejecting the destination culture and maintaining the heritage culture (e.g., Berry, 2001;Kantor et al, 2023;Steel et al, 2011).…”
Section: Future Aspirations Of Asylum Seekersmentioning
confidence: 99%