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Implementing Psychosocial Interventions to Syrian Refugee Women Who Are Exposed to Psychological Trauma

I

Istanbul Sehir University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Psychological Trauma
Psychological Distress

Treatments

Behavioral: Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03912077
16/2018No:1

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study assesses severity of trauma, depression and anxiety symptoms of Syrian women under temporary protection who reside in Istanbul and types of exposed trauma that they have experienced. This study also evaluates the effectiveness of the Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CA-CBT) in Syrian women under temporary protection who are with psychological distress in Turkey. Half of participants will receive Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CA-CBT), while the other half will receive treatment as usual.

Full description

Background: Due to the ongoing conflict in Syria, Syrian people have faced with various atrocities. Many of them were displaced from their home, causing them to experience difficulties during and after the immigration. Being exposed to such stressors makes refugees susceptible to psychological distress and put them at risk to develop psychological disorders such as post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety disorders, depression and so on (Alpak et al., 2015).

Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CA-CBT) is an evidence-based psychological intervention manual developed by Devon Hinton, MD from Harvard University and Baland Jalal from University of Cambridge. It is a group therapy protocol that consists of 7 sessions. CA-CBT is a brief intervention that adopts a transdiagnostical approach and can be delivered by trained facilitators to people who are psychologically distressed. Several RCTs has been conducted to evaluate effectiveness of CA-CBT and demonstrated positive results. (Hinton et al., 2012).

Objectives: This study has two aims. First aim of the study is to assess severity of trauma, depression and anxiety symptoms and types of exposed trauma of Syrian refugee women who reside in Istanbul. Second aim of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of the Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy in Syrian refugee women with psychological distress resettled in Turkey, as compared with treatment as usual (TAU). The primary outcome is the decrease in psychological distress symptoms. Secondary outcomes are depression, anxiety and psychological trauma symptoms along with post-migration living difficulties and related distress symptoms.

Design: This is a parallel-group randomized controlled trial, therefore participants will have an equal probability (1:1) of being randomly allocated to the CA-CBT intervention or the TAU.

Methodology: Screening will be conducted before randomization. Syrian refugee women who score 1.75 or above (≥ 1.75) at the Hopkins Symptom Checklist - 25 (HSCL-25) will enter the study. After randomization they will receive the 7- session CA-CBT or the TAU. The CA-CBT intervention phase will last 7 weeks (1 session per week). After intervention, post-assessments will be performed.

Expected outcomes: The expected outcome is decrease in the depression, anxiety and psychological trauma symptoms and general improvement in distress symptoms caused by post-migration living difficulties, in refugees in the CA-CBT intervention arm, as compared to TAU.

Enrollment

23 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Being 18 years old and older
  • Being a Syrian woman under temporary protection who resides in Istanbul
  • Being able to speak and understand Arabic
  • Having psychological distress symptoms, as shown by a score of 1.75 or more at the Hopkins Symptoms Checklist-25 (HSCL-25 ≥ 1.75 )

Exclusion criteria

  • Imminent risk of suicide
  • Severe mental disorder (psychotic disorders, substance dependence)
  • Severe cognitive impairment (severe intellectual disability or dementia)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

23 participants in 2 patient groups

Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Experimental group
Description:
Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CA-CBT) is an evidence-based psychological intervention manual developed by Devon Hinton, MD from Harvard University and Baland Jalal from University of Cambridge. It is a group therapy protocol that consists of 7 sessions. It is a brief, feasible and culturally sensitive intervention that has a transdiagnostical approach. Detailed information about Syrian culture, idioms of stress, cultural differences, and psychological problems that Syrian refugee women have been facing and their needs, expectations and sensitivities are considered in the adaptation process. Examples, cultural metaphors and imageries that take part in the manual are adapted according to Syrian culture.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Culturally Adapted Cognitive Behavioural Therapy
Treatment as Usual
No Intervention group
Description:
Control arm participants will receive routine social support and/or care according to ordinary practice of the non-governmental organization (treatment as usual). Also, they will receive baseline and post assessments according to the study schedule.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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