Abstract

High rates of mental health problems are consistently found among immigrants from refugee generating countries. While refugees and their family members may have experienced similar traumas, refugees are more likely to have undergone a stressful asylum period. This study aims to determine whether their mental health differs. Using national registry data, refugees and non-refugees from the same countries were compared on primary healthcare service use for mental health problems and purchase of psychotropic medicine. Refugees had higher odds of using primary health care services than non-refugees. Refugee women were more likely to purchase psychotropic medicine than non-refugee women. Refugee men were more likely to purchase anti-depressants. The findings suggest that refugees have poorer mental health than non-refugees. This may be due to a combination of greater pre-migration trauma and post-migration stressors such as enduring a difficult asylum period.

Highlights

  • Recent years have seen a growth in the number of people seeking asylum around the world

  • The current study considers differences in use of primary health care services and psychotropic medicine for mental health problems between refugees and non-refugees from the same refugee-generating countries (RGCs), living in Norway

  • Men were more often refugees than women (82.0 % vs 59.0 % (X2 = 3449.8, df = 1, p \ 0.05)), though percentages varied by country of origin

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Summary

Introduction

Recent years have seen a growth in the number of people seeking asylum around the world. In 2014, there were 714,300 asylum applications in Europe, almost 50 % more than in 2013 [1]. Around 45 % of applicants are granted asylum in the first instance [2]. In 2015, Norway received over 31,000 applications for asylum [3]. By the end of 2014, there were 137,950 refugees living in Norway, and a further 50,180 spouses, children or parents reunited with their refugee counterparts [4]. These groups make up 28.1 % of the immigrant population

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