Abstract

Abstract Background Refugees are forced migrants but there is a large variation in the distance that refugees cover. This may importantly affect their health needs. Previous studies suggest an inverse association between long-distance migration and self-rated health in the general population, possibly related to difficulty in acculturation but there is a knowledge gap in the health effects of migration in refugee populations. Here, we estimate the association between long-distance migration and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a severe mental health disorder associated with deteriorating psychiatric and somatic health and highly prevalent in refugees. Methods Included were 712 adult Syrian refugees and asylum seekers in Lebanon and Denmark arriving no more than 12 months prior to inclusion. The Harvard Trauma Questionnaire was used to assess PTSD and the estimate of association was obtained by multiply imputing missing data and adjusting for confounding by propensity score-weighting with covariates age, sex, socioeconomic status, trauma experience, and WHO-5-score, reporting the bootstrap 95-percentile confidence interval (CI). Additionally, a number of sensitivity analysis were carried out. Results The prevalence of PTSD was high in both Lebanon (55%) and Denmark (60%). After adjusting for biases the prevalence difference increased from 5 percentage point (95-percentile CI [-5; 15] percentage point) to 9 percentage point (95-percentile CI [-1; 19] percentage point). All sensitivity analysis produced estimates of the same direction and magnitude, except when grossly violating the assumption of multiple imputation which halved the magnitude of the association. Conclusions We found that long-distance migration was associated with an increase in the prevalence of PTSD among newly arrived Syrian refugees and asylum-seekers. This is a first step in examining the effects of migration in refugee health. Key messages Long-distance migration was positively associated with prevalence of post-traumatic stress disorder in Syrian refugees. This is a first step to investigate the impact of migration in refugee health.

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