Abstract

Recent research has identified significant correlations between traumatic events and depression in refugees. However, few studies have addressed the role of acculturation strategies in this relationship. This study explored the relationship between cultural orientation, traumatic events and depression in female refugees from Syria, Afghanistan, Eritrea, Iran, Iraq, and Somalia living in Germany. We expected acculturation strategies to moderate the effect of traumatic experiences on depression. The sample included 98 female refugees in Germany. The depression scale of the Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL) represented the dependent measure. The trauma checklists derived from the Post-traumatic Diagnostic Scale (PDS) and the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire (HTQ) as well as the Frankfurt Acculturation Scale (FRACC) were used as independent measures for traumatic events and orientation toward the host culture as well as orientation toward the culture of origin, respectively. A moderation analysis was conducted to examine whether the relationship between the number of traumatic events and depression was influenced by the women’s orientation toward the culture of origin and the host culture. We identified a significant model explaining 26.85% of the variance in depressive symptoms (Cohen’s f2 = 0.37). The number of traumatic events and the orientation toward the host culture exerted significant effects on depressive symptoms. The moderating effect was not significant, indicating that the effect of the number of traumatic events was not influenced by cultural orientation. Based on our results, orientation toward the host culture as well as traumatic experiences exert independent effects on depressive symptoms in refugees.

Highlights

  • Refugees arriving in Germany are often burdened by the impact of traumatic events

  • Consistent with previous studies (Dulin and Passmore, 2010; Price and van Stolk-Cooke, 2015), we found that traumatic events are positively related to depressive symptoms

  • The results of our study indicate that neither orientation toward the culture of origin nor orientation toward the host culture significantly moderate the relationship between the number of traumatic events and depression, indicated by non-significant interactions

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Refugees arriving in Germany are often burdened by the impact of traumatic events. Lifethreatening attacks, violent deaths of relatives and permanent danger in daily life in war zones are the most frequently reported traumatic experiences (Richter et al, 2015; Jesuthasan et al, 2018). 41% of Middle Eastern refugees have experienced violent attacks, and 87% report war experiences (Kröger et al, 2016). Among Arabic-speaking asylum seekers in Germany, 80% reported having personally experienced or witnessed traumatic events (Georgiadou et al, 2017). The mental health of women is often reported to be more threatened than men’s mental health (Rasmussen et al, 2014). Women are rarely on the frontlines of war, they face severe

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call