Cultural Adaptations to Psychosocial Interventions for Refugee Families

Duration: 19 mins DOI: 10.13056/acamh.20871

Description

In this podcast, we are joined by Dr. Alice Taylor, a clinical psychologist for CAMHS in Scotland, to discuss her co-authored CAMH review paper “Cultural adaptations to psychosocial interventions for families with refugee/asylum-seeker status in the United Kingdom – a systematic review”.

Learning Objectives

1. Overview of the paper and sharing insight into what they looked at in this review.
2. Examples of cultural adaptations and explains how these differ from nonculturally adapted interventions, which are also known as treatment as usual.
3. Ways in which treatment as usual can act as a barrier to accessing quality mental health care for families with refugee and/or asylum-seeking status, before turning to explain how cultural adaptions could improve the situation.
4. Key takeaways from her review, comments on what the implications of her findings are for CAMH professionals, plus shares her message to policymakers based on her research.

Related Content Links

CAMH https://acamh.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/toc/14753588/2023/28/2

About this Lesson

Symptoms:

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Speakers

Alice Taylor

Alice Taylor

Clinical Psychologist at the University of Southern Queensland

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