Factors That Affect Refugees’ Perceptions of Mental Health Services in the UK: A Systematic Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
- Migrants are defined as people who ‘choose to move not because of a direct threat of persecution or death, but mainly to improve their lives by finding work, or in some cases for education, family reunion, or other reasons. Unlike refugees who cannot safely return home, migrants face no such impediment to return. If they choose to return home, they will continue to receive the protection of their government.’ (UNHCR 2015, p. 1).
- Persons seeking asylum (often termed asylum-seekers) are regarded as individuals who have sought international protection and whose claims for refugee status (as defined by the UN Refugee Convention) have not yet been determined. Since March 2013, the UK Home Office Immigration Enforcement and Visas and Immigration directorates have controlled asylum administration. According to Owers (2003), individuals may apply for asylum under the Refugee Convention, the European Convention of Human Rights 1953, or the Human Rights Act 1998.
- A Refugee is a person who ‘…owing to well-founded fear of being persecuted for reason of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or political opinion1, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not having a nationality and being outside the country of his former habitual residence as a result of such events, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to return to it.’ (Article 1A(2) UNHCR 1951, p. 14). What is commonly referred to as refugee status or ‘legitimate refugee’ (see Kirkwood et al. 2016) applies to those ‘whose asylum application has been successful and who is allowed to stay in another country having proved [a ‘well-founded fear’] they would face persecution back home’ (Refugee Council 2005, p. 1). A person who has refugee status under the Refugee Convention in the UK is given five years leave to remain as a refugee. They can then apply for indefinite leave to remain (generally referred to as ILR or ‘settlement’), gaining the right to live, study, and work in the UK permanently. After one year, they are eligible to apply for British citizenship. It is this latter group who was the focus of our systematic review.
2. Method
- Empirical studies about mental health services for adult refugees with mental health problems and/or post-traumatic stress disorders (PTSDs).
- UK articles published from 2000 to 2024.
- Quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods studies.
- Children and older (over 65 years) refugees; more than two-thirds of refugees arriving in the UK are over 18 years and less than 65 years (UNHCR 2022).
- Non-UK studies.
- Articles not written in English.
- Articles published before 2000.
- Non-empirical articles
2.1. Screening
2.2. Data Extraction
2.3. Quality Appraisal
2.4. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Prevalence of Psychological Disorders
3.2. Factors Which May Affect Individuals’ Access to Mental Health Services
3.2.1. Theme One: Stigma and Cultural Beliefs About Mental Health Problems
And in Linney et al. (2020, p. 8), whose participants demonstrated how cultural stigma generalizes all forms of mental health problems under one negative label:Back in Syria, people are used to or have the assumption that people who go to psychiatrists have something wrong in their brains, crazy or something.(Participant 9, man)
Other cultures, such as Ethiopian, attributed mental health problems to supernatural or psychosocial causes:Crazy person is crazy person. It doesn’t differentiate—whether it is depression or schizophrenia, it is all the same.(Participant 2, Somali community, UK).
Such closely held values meant that those within the group who were suffering from mental health problems avoided services for fear of being stigmatized by their own communities, as exemplified by the following quote from Paudyal et al. (2021, p. 5):…when someone is depressed in Ethiopia, people say it is an illness caused by Satan.(070 male: 206) Papadopoulos et al. (2004, p. 66)
Similarly, in Palmer and Ward’s (2007) study, two participants said:[…] so the majority of Syrian people are coy of going to the doctor or are not used to this habit, because we don’t have something like that in Syria.(Participant 9, man).
…If someone is stressed, they say [In Ethiopia] ‘Waa waa she’ which means mad. It is quite extreme, there is nothing in between. Stress is less than mad but Somalians talk about being mad.(Somali male, p. 205).
The cultural stigmatization of mental health problems was also a feature of Linney et al.’s (2020, p. 8) study:Inside Somalia people are crazy but they don’t have depression. They (Somali community) didn’t know about depression….I didn’t want to publicize. Depression doesn’t mean anything in Somalia.(Somali male, p. 205).
It’s embarrassing for the families to admit we need help.(Male, FG2, P4).
There are so many people amongst Somali community, it’s a really big taboo subject.(Female, FG1, P3)
Any news that you hear about the country, whether it’s small or big news, it hurts and disturbs the person’s mental state, so you fine us happy for their happiness and sad for their sadness or their suffering.(Participant 8, man; p. 3)
If a person could see his children…like for one of our children to come, we probably would not need a psychiatric doctor…you know? Isn’t this, right?.(Participant 5, woman; p. 3)
Subtheme 2. Lack of trust in UK mental health services and reliance on traditional healers: helped perpetuate refugees’ negative beliefs that they could be helped psychologically. Although Linney et al. (2020, p. 9) reported that women in their sample were more likely to trust UK health services than men, one female participant stating:It is necessary to resort to psychiatric medicine…psychiatry is a normal thing and healthy […] we have a misconception about it likes it’s for crazy people or so…no, no. On the contrary, it’s something healthy and a person must resort to it whenever he feels the need to speak to someone.(Participant 7, man).
We don’t have, not that many barriers affecting with the health services. Whatever the problem we have in mind, the first person to contact will always be the GP.(Female, FG3, P2).
No one would understand what we went through, and the situation like you would…who did not witness it won’t sympathize, yes, so it’s hard for me to go and explain my mental status to a doctor, it’s better to explain to God.(Participant 11, man) (Paudyal et al. 2021, p. 5)
This meant that in the eyes of many refugees, there was no need for mental health services offered by the UK, with a Somali participant in Linney et al.’s (2020, p. 8) study stating:There are also non-religious ceremonies, like the Saar ceremony used in Somalia or the rituals used by the Poosary spiritual healer amongst Tamils, in which the sufferer must dance and sing out the spirit or djinn inside them. Both the Sheikhs (Somalia) and Hojas (Turkey), who use the Quran against evil spirits, can be found in the UK.
Similarly, Nyiri and Eling (2012, p. 600) stated that one participant at a London clinic expressed that:We felt like NHS do not understand what we want, we sent my [family member] back home and he’s ok, thanks God.(Male, FG2, P4).
Subtheme 3. Bravado. Perhaps as a partial antidote to frustrations of perceiving the UK NHS mental health services as not being appropriate to their needs, refugees reported using a form of bravado—appearing ‘strong’ as a coping strategy—to help reduce their own feelings of anxiety and depression. This was also recognized as a cultural trait in studies, since vulnerability is not always expressed easily within some cultures. For example, in Papadopoulos et al. (2004), one refugee stated:It takes so long to see a doctor, and when you do, they don’t understand what I mean. So why should I go again?.(Participant 3, man)
If you show weakness, people will look down on you. So, I keep everything inside and just pretend I am strong.(Participant, Ethiopian refugee in the UK, p. 67).
My mental state is better when I recite the Quran, I continue to do it, it provides comfort for me…Reciting the Quran is a comfort for me….Sometimes I listen to it on the phone, and this is honestly a comfort for me(Participant 11, man, p. 5)
I go to the sea and sit by the seaside, and I express my concerns to the sea, I speak to it. I go to the park, I try to get away from people(Participant 8, man, p. 5)
When I play my instrument, I feel at peace, I don’t think about my problems.(Ethiopian refugee, man)
The person is his own doctor. Whatever happens to you, support or help, if you were not helping yourself from the inside, you won’t be able to succeed. You must keep combating in this life, there is no other way(Participant 1, woman)
3.2.2. Theme Two: Cultural Barriers
You can’t seek help outside and you don’t know how to approach that person who is not in your language speaking.(Female, FG1, P1) (Linney et al. 2020, p. 9)
I think that’s the biggest thing, the language, because medical terminologies you know are very difficult, especially psychological ones […] the language.(Participant 7, man) (Paudyal et al. 2021, p. 5).
You have to translate pain into another language—sometimes the meaning changes completely.
For the translation I think it’s not very helpful, sadly…I mean every expression or word I give out has a certain feeling to it, and for a translation it might not give out the proper meaning, or it won’t come out the intended way, I believe.(Participant 12, man).
This lack of cultural awareness often led refugees to perceive UK mental health services as alien or unresponsive to their needs, reinforcing stigma and discouraging engagement.“When I talk about my pain, they think it is in my body, but it is in my heart.”(Ethiopian refugee, woman).
3.2.3. Theme Three: Structural Barriers to Accessing Mental Health Care
Nevertheless, a lack of knowledge about how to access mental health systems could thwart access, with some refugees in Linney et al.’s (2020, p. 9) study saying that they did not know their way around the UK health system, one even stating:PS2: I was really getting at the end of my rope. I was, I was tired of, sort of, like fighting to be alive […] I was really, really close to just ending everything.
Another refugee talked about how the GP system worked in the UK to exacerbate their lack of trust:It’s always good to seek help but we don’t know how to and that’s the main thing.(Female, FG1, P2)
Being passed from one unit to another combined with long waiting times before gaining treatment was not an uncommon issue, as a refugee in Nyiri and Eling’s (2012, p. 600) study mentioned:Every time you make an appointment you see a different GP which is a big problem.(Female, FG3, P4)
Similarly, a Somali refugee in McCrone et al.’s (2005, p. 355) study said:Even when we manage to register, it feels like the system is not for us. We are always sent from one place to another.(Participant 4, man).
“Even if you are sick, the system makes you wait and wait. By the time help comes, you feel worse.”(Somali refugee, male participant).
We don’t like the police because they intimidate you, they put you down for no reason and health services same as that.(Male, FG2, P4).
There are not many, there’s nowhere to turn other than locally, apart from going to your doctors which is a part of what we are so afraid of.(Male, FG2, P4).
Your GP who will later on section your driving license for God’s sake if you tell them, you haven’t slept the last few days.(Male, FG2, P4).
They also noted that refugees often relied on informal advice networks for help navigating the NHS:When you go to the doctor, you don’t know who you will see, and they don’t know you or what happened before. It feels like starting again every time.(Participant 8, male).
It’s better to ask another Syrian because they know how to get appointments; the doctors don’t have time,(Participant 5, woman).
Let me give you an example. My family and I myself moved a number of times. It is different when the housing officers said ‘this family moved voluntarily’. I do not move voluntarily and I know a lot of people and a lot of families in different boroughs who change addresses because they have to. I myself did four times within three years until eventually I got a place of my own. And I didn’t mean to move, I hate to move, but I had to.(Male, professional).
4. Discussion
it would make sense if you could talk to some Somali person who could understand you rather than going to your GP.(Male, FG1, P4)
Arafat (2016) argued that it is imperative to acknowledge and understand that the presentation of mental health symptoms may be different across minoritized communities. Community integration, acculturation, and psychological distress are some of the key benefits of increased collaboration. When such interventions are co-produced in participatory research involving refugees and the civil society organizations that support this population, they are naturally culturally responsive and can therefore address issues relative to different ethnic needs during the resettlement process (Mahon 2022).Mental health team to recruit an elderly, an elderly person who understands the culture of the community.(Male, FG2, P3)
Comparison with International Systematic Reviews
5. Policy and Practice Implications for the UK and Recommendations
- Professional, trauma-informed interpreting: There is a need to commission regional pools of professionally trained mental-health interpreters with clear confidentiality protocols, independent of local community pressures (Simkhada et al. 2021; Krystallidou et al. 2024; Summerfield 2003; Vincent et al. 2013).
- Co-locate and integrate access points such as the establishment of one-stop “health and settlement” hubs, which could be co-located with primary care, legal aid signposting, and psychological therapies, in areas of high refugee settlement. This approach is supported by evidence from Canadian and European practice (Thomson et al. 2015; Watters and Ingleby 2004).
- Embed bilingual health navigators/cultural brokers within GP practices serving asylum hotels and dispersal accommodation to accelerate registration and referral (McColl and Johnson 2006; Nyiri and Eling 2012).
- Commission culturally adapted and scalable therapies: Scale TF-CBT/NET groups with adaptations to language, idioms of distress, pacing, and inclusion of family/faith-sensitive social and nature components (Nosè et al. 2017; Vincent et al. 2013).
- Making services visibly safe and stigma-reducing such as by holding sessions in neutral community venues (libraries, faith-neutral centers) and providing groups tailored by language, where relevant, that is mindful of the particular challenges in the UK around privacy and visibility within close communities (Linney et al. 2020; Simkhada et al. 2021).
- Addressing post-migration stressors alongside therapy as “therapy-plus” pathways allows clinicians to trigger rapid practical support for housing, asylum advice, and income insecurity. These factors are repeatedly linked to poorer mental health and disengagement and need to be addressed at the same time as therapy (Carswell et al. 2011; Paudyal et al. 2021; Bogic et al. 2015).
6. Strengthening Generalizability
Limitations
7. Conclusions
Relevance to Clinical Practice
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Full Search Strings and Database Hit Counts
- Google Scholar: “Mental health AND refugee* AND (UK OR ‘United Kingdom’)” → 4337 hits;
- EBSCOhost: “Mental health services AND stigma AND refugee* OR asylum seekers” → 1245 hits;
- PubMed: “Refugee* OR asylum seekers AND PTSD OR post-traumatic stress disorder AND (UK OR Britain)” → 2133 hits;
- PsycINFO: “Refugee* OR asylum seekers AND post-traumatic stress disorders AND (United Kingdom OR UK)” → 876 hits;
- EBSCO: “Mental health care AND refugee* OR asylum seekers” → 543 hits.
| 1 | Note that people who flee their homes due to famine or flooding or environmental disaster are not regarded as fearing persecution for any of the Convention reasons. | 
| 2 | The papers we reviewed used a wide range of terms such as mental health needs, conditions, and disorders. Following the preferences of UK charities Mental Health Foundation and Mind as well as recent empirical work by Forrester-Jones et al. (2024), we use the term mental health problems. | 
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| Author (Year) | Design | QATSDD % | Quality Category | Key Strengths (High-Scoring Items) | Main Limitations (Lower-Scoring Items) | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paudyal et al. (2021) | Qualitative (Syrian refugees) | 76% | High | Clear aims; ethical procedures; strong data collection methods | Limited theoretical framework; small, gender-skewed sample | 
| Linney et al. (2020) | Qualitative (community participatory) | 81% | High | Participatory design; strong community engagement | Lack of explicit theoretical underpinning | 
| Vincent et al. (2013) | Qualitative (therapy acceptability) | 79% | High | Methodological transparency; ethics clearly addressed | Limited generalizability; small, selective sample | 
| Bogic et al. (2012) | Quantitative (epidemiological survey) | 86% | High | Large, representative sample; robust statistical analysis | Limited qualitative insight; cross-sectional design | 
| Nyiri and Eling (2012) | Service/clinic description | 48% | Moderate | Practical relevance; service-based insights | Weak methodological detail; limited analysis | 
| Green et al. (2012) | Qualitative (Kurdish interpreters) | 74% | Good | Culturally grounded; clear ethical procedures | Small sample; limited triangulation | 
| Carswell et al. (2011) | Mixed methods (post-trauma, service use) | 71% | Good | Integration of quantitative and qualitative data | Limited theoretical framework; moderate sample size | 
| Palmer and Ward (2007) | Qualitative (forced migrants in London) | 69% | Good | Rich qualitative narratives; clear ethical considerations | Lack of analytic transparency; small scale | 
| Warfa et al. (2006) | Qualitative (Somali refugees) | 74% | Good | Cultural contextualization; rich qualitative data | Small, convenience sample; limited theoretical framework | 
| McColl and Johnson (2006) | Qualitative (community project) | 67% | Good | Community-based approach; clear aims | Limited analytic rigor; descriptive reporting | 
| Papadopoulos et al. (2004) | Mixed methods (Ethiopian refugees) | 74% | Good | Clear link between methods and aims; ethical approval obtained | Limited user involvement; descriptive analysis | 
| Papadopoulos et al. (2003) | Mixed methods (Ethiopian refugees) | 69% | Good | Innovative design; culturally relevant findings | Weak theoretical justification; non-random sampling | 
| Summerfield (2003) | Clinical case reflection | 52% | Moderate | In-depth clinical insight; contextually rich | Anecdotal; lacks systematic methodology | 
| Turner et al. (2003) | Quantitative (Kosovan refugees) | 71% | Good | Large sample; defined variables; ethics stated | Cross-sectional; limited cultural interpretation | 
| Harris and Maxwell (2000) | Qualitative needs assessment (London refugee communities) | 72% | Good | Comprehensive community involvement; culturally appropriate model; clear ethical framework | Limited generalizability; small N (71 participants across multiple groups); lacks theoretical depth | 
| Article Title | Authors/Year of Publication | Study Location in UK | Aims | Sample Size (Gender) [Age] | Methods | Prevalence of Psychological Disorders | Findings | 
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Qualitative study on mental health and well-being of Syrian refugees, and integration in the UK | (Paudyal et al. 2021) | Southeast England | To investigate the mental well-being of Syrian refugees | 12 (3 women, 9 men) [18–79] | Qualitative in-depth semi-structured interviews | Not stated (for ethical reasons) | Syrian refugees face social integration challenges including accessing mental health services, cultural differences, and stigma around mental health and language. | 
| 2. “Crazy person is crazy person. It doesn’t differentiate”: an exploration into Somali views of mental health and access to healthcare in an established UK Somali community | (Linney et al. 2020) | Bristol | To discover UK Somali community beliefs and views about mental health problems, treatment, and access to medical services. | 23 (12 men, 11 women) | Qualitative focus groups | Not stated | Participants discussed their lived experiences of mental health problems in relation to trauma from war and forced migration. Language, waiting times, mistrust of doctors linked to cultural beliefs were barriers to accessing healthcare. | 
| 3. Asylum-seekers’ experiences of trauma-focused cognitive behavior therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder: A qualitative study | (Vincent et al. 2013) | England and Wales | To estimate the suitability of Trauma-focused CBT (TFCBT) for asylum seekers/refugees with PTSD | 7 (6 asylum seekers, 1 refugee) | Qualitative semi-structured interviews | Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) | Participants expressed their uncertainty about engaging in trauma-focused CBT (TFCBT); describing the treatment as very challenging, but helpful. Factors impeding uptake of treatment include fear of repatriation. | 
| 4. Factors associated with mental disorders in long-settled war refugees: refugees from the former Yugoslavia in Germany, Italy and the UK | (Bogic et al. 2012) | Germany, Italy, and UK (unknown) | To compare mental health problems across similar refugee groups resettled in different countries. | 85 (302 in the UK) [18–65] | Quantitative instruments. | Major depression and anxiety disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) | Sociodemographic traits, war experiences and postmigration stressors are separately linked to mental health problems in long-settled war refugees. | 
| 5. A specialist clinic for destitute asylum seekers and refugees in London | (Nyiri and Eling 2012) | Brixton | To examine the challenges faced by asylum seekers and refugees in London in accessing physical and mental health care. | 112 (61 male, 51 female) | Quantitative questionnaire | Depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). | Participants had encountered practical barriers to registering with general practices including reticence to request help, complex physical, psychological and social problems, long process of consultations, and language barriers. | 
| 6. Too close to home? Experiences of Kurdish refugee interpreters working in UK mental health services | (Green et al. 2012) | Unknown | To explore experiences of Kurdish refugee interpreters working in mental health services in the UK | (4 male–2 female) | Qualitative (semi-structured interview). | Not stated | Interpreters who were also refugees experienced ambiguous and complicated interactions with other professionals. | 
| 7. The relationship between trauma, post-migration problems and the psychological well-being of refugees and asylum seekers | (Carswell et al. 2011) | London | To explore the relationship between mental health problems of refugees and asylum seekers, to trauma, post-migration problems, and social support. | 47 | Quantitative standardized measures | Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). | Clinical services need to respond more holistically to the PTSD and emotional distress of refugees who have suffered trauma and post-migration problems. | 
| 8. ‘Lost’: Listening to the voices and mental health needs of forced migrants in London | (Palmer and Ward 2007) | Ten boroughs in London | To explore the opinions of refugees and asylum seekers who have mental health problems | 21 [21–65] | Qualitative semi-structured interviews. | Not stated | Forced migration including deculturation (due to the host country’s alien culture), unemployment, and lack of social support leads to mental health problems. Holistic mental health services that include preventative, practical, and interventions are needed | 
| 9. Post-migration geographical mobility, mental health and health service utilization among Somali refugees in the UK: A qualitative study | (Warfa et al. 2006) | East and South London | To investigate the perspectives of Somali refugees on their geographical mobility, the relationship to mental health status. | 21 (12 female–9 male) [19–65] | Focus groups | Depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). | Refugees have trouble accessing adequate mental health care due to being moved from one location to another. There is a need for a national strategy to ensure services meet the needs of transient refugees. | 
| 10. Mental health needs, service use and costs among Somali refugees in the UK | (McCrone et al. 2005) | East and South London | To evaluate the mental health needs and service use among Somali refugees living in London. | 143 | Quantitative measures. | Not stated | Uptake of mental health services by Somali refugees is relatively low, reflecting their high geographical mobility, especially in the early part of the asylum seeking process. | 
| 11. Ethiopian refugees in the UK: Migration, adaptation and settlement experiences and their relevance to health | (Papadopoulos et al. 2004) | Unknown | To investigate the experiences of migration, among Ethiopian refugees and asylum seekers. | 106 refugees | Qualitative open-ended semi-structured and semi-structured questionnaire. | Not stated | Belief that mental illness is due to supernatural and psychosocial causes. Although participants sought help from general practitioners, language barriers and poor understanding of the healthcare system precluded getting adequate care | 
| 12. The impact of migration on health beliefs and behaviors: The case of Ethiopian refugees in the UK | (Papadopoulos et al. 2003) | Unknown | To investigate the migration experiences of Ethiopian refugees in the UK, and the effects on their health views and activities | 106 Ethiopian refugees and asylum seekers | Qualitative semi-structured and semi-structured questionnaire. | Not stated | Mental health services need to be holistic to address all refugees’ needs including physical, mental, spiritual, environmental, and social-cultural. Although acculturation to Western medicine may have happened, Ethiopian beliefs about mental health have evolved over thousands of years within a complex society and are unlikely to disappear—this needs to be understood. | 
| 13. War, exile, moral knowledge and the limits of psychiatric understanding: A clinical case study of a Bosnian refugee in London | (Summerfield 2003) | Unknown | A study of a Bosnian refugee, a survivor of war | 1 Bosnian refugee | Case study | Depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) | War victims may need intervention by experts as they try to re-establish their lives and need to be aware of the limitations to recovery techniques. | 
| 14. Mental health of Kosovan Albanian refugees in the UK | (Turner et al. 2003) | Unknown | To establish the frequency of mental health problems in Kosovan Albanian refugees in the UK | 842 adults/[38.1] | Quantitative measures | Depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) | Just under half of the sample had a diagnosis of PTSD and less than one-fifth had a major depressive disorder indicating refugee conflict survivor resilience. However, psychosocial interventions are likely to be an important part of treatment programs. | 
| 15. A needs assessment in refugee mental health project in northeast London: Extending the counselling model to community support | (Harris and Maxwell 2000) | Waltham Forest | To outline the model of care for refugee mental health needs in Waltham Forest. | 71 refugees | Qualitative needs assessment | Not stated | The main focus of the role of the refugee support psychologist was in empowerment, training, reinforcement of refugee identity, and the supply of a one-to-one counselling/therapy service. | 
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Koja, R.; Oliver, D.; Forrester-Jones, R. Factors That Affect Refugees’ Perceptions of Mental Health Services in the UK: A Systematic Review. Soc. Sci. 2025, 14, 635. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14110635
Koja R, Oliver D, Forrester-Jones R. Factors That Affect Refugees’ Perceptions of Mental Health Services in the UK: A Systematic Review. Social Sciences. 2025; 14(11):635. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14110635
Chicago/Turabian StyleKoja, Rahaf, David Oliver, and Rachel Forrester-Jones. 2025. "Factors That Affect Refugees’ Perceptions of Mental Health Services in the UK: A Systematic Review" Social Sciences 14, no. 11: 635. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14110635
APA StyleKoja, R., Oliver, D., & Forrester-Jones, R. (2025). Factors That Affect Refugees’ Perceptions of Mental Health Services in the UK: A Systematic Review. Social Sciences, 14(11), 635. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14110635
 
        


 
       