1 / 5

Background

The Effects of Duration in Refugee Camp on the Coping Skills and Internal Resilience of African Refugee Children by Brandon Baca, B.S. Background. Refugees Liberia, DRC, and Burundi Warehousing 8.5 million = 10+ years Coping 4 factor model (Ayers et al., 1996)

ingo
Download Presentation

Background

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Effects of Duration in Refugee Camp on the Coping Skills and Internal Resilience of African Refugee Childrenby Brandon Baca, B.S.

  2. Background • Refugees • Liberia, DRC, and Burundi • Warehousing • 8.5 million = 10+ years • Coping • 4 factor model (Ayers et al., 1996) • active coping, distraction, avoidance, and support seeking strategies • Internal Resiliency • Six subscales (Hanson and Kim, 2007) • cooperation & communication, self-efficacy, empathy, problem-solving, self-awareness, and goals & aspirations.

  3. Research Questions/Methods • What are the psychological effects of refugee camps and warehousing on refugee children? • Specifically: • On Coping Skills • On Internal Resiliency • Methods: • 20 girls and 12 boys from ARWP • Ages 7-17 (mean = 11.69, SD = 3.02) • Two tailed pearson correlation

  4. Results • Internal Resilience: • Significant negative correlation between time in camps and overall internal resilience (r = - .61, p<.01) • And 5 of the 6 subscales: self-efficacy, empathy, problem-solving, self-awareness, goals and aspirations. • Cooperation & communication subscale was not significant. However, the reliability of this scale was low ( = .197) • Coping: • Significant negative correlation between time in camps and active coping (r = - .48, p < .01) • Other subscales (distraction, avoidance and support seeking strategies) were not significantly related • However, reliability was also low for these subscales

  5. Discussion • Limitations: • Factors prior to displacement were not controlled • Specific camp experiences were not included • Unreliable coping scales • No standardized methods of measuring coping and resilience • Implications: • Current refugee camp system is inadequate • UNHCR policies should be enforced to eliminate warehousing • Need of standardized methods of measuring coping and resilience. • U.S. health workers should be sensitive to the unique needs of child refugees

More Related