Abstract

Young refugees are a high-risk group for mental disorders, particularly for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Individuals with PTSD suffer from an altered time perspective with a focus on negative experiences in the past and a disregard for positive life events and the future. This study investigates time perspectives and psychological distress in 30 adolescent refugees from Syria and Afghanistan in Germany. Time perspective was assessed using the Zimbardo Time Perspective Inventory. The refugees exhibited a distorted time perspective that is common for individuals with PTSD: a high orientation toward the negative past and a low orientation toward the positive past and future. A high orientation toward the negative past was associated with high levels of general psychological distress, PTSD symptoms, and depression. A low orientation toward the future was related to high levels of anxiety. Taking time perspective and corresponding beliefs into consideration may be advantageous when treating refugees with trauma-related disorders.

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