A Scoping Review of Interventions Delivered by Peers to Support the Resettlement Process of Refugees and Asylum Seekers
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Peer Support
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Stage 1. Identifying the Essential Research Question
- What type of research methodologies are used in research of peer interventions during the resettlement process with refuges and asylum seekers?
- What outcomes are reported on in the peer literature
- What type of training regimes are provided to peers delivering interventions?
2.2. Stage 2. Identifying Relevant Studies
2.3. Stage 3. Study Selection
2.4. Stage 5. Collecting, Summarising, and Reporting the Results
3. Results
3.1. The Impact of Training on Peers and Their Roles
“Of course, we also had weekly supervision, so we talk about it. We are very clear and open about the difficulties we face, how we can better approach it, from how other colleagues dealt with it”.
“Interviewees said they need ongoing training around systems and resources, how to interact with colleagues and clients, and how to act and communicate with clients who may be upset, or frustrated. Caseworkers said they wanted opportunities for certification and professional training. Multiple interviewees talked about wanting qualifications beyond their experience”.[56]
3.2. Co-Producing Culturally Sensitive Peer Training Leads to Positive Outcomes
“For a culturally sensitive and effective intervention, the trained refugee leaders were actively involved in the development and adaptation process by providing inputs and feedback on the topics and the contents and adding culturally relevant examples and activities to the curriculum (ex. Bhutanese proverbs regarding health, chanting for opening and closure, etc.)”.
“Participants appreciated that female and male refugees met separately and that the Somali and Sudanese refugees had separate groups. A few suggested that groups could be even more exclusive in terms of language and age. To illustrate, one Sudanese group comprised people who spoke different versions of Arabic making communication challenging. Age-based support interventions were suggested to enable people of the same age group to discuss similar issues affecting them”.
“Facilitators provided information on conflict management, financial counselling, addressing spousal conflicts, supporting children with schoolwork, dealing with discrimination, accessing services and seeking optimum employment. This information was derived from settlement agencies, government departments or the internet, in addition to peer facilitators’ experiential knowledge”.
“Key terms of the intervention topics, such as stress, acculturation, mental health, nutrition, healthy lifestyle, and community, were examined as a team in both languages and the peer facilitators had additional meetings prior to each session to go over the contents in Nepali”.
“In my culture, it is very hard to look at a person face-to-face […] and […] being women, you don’t just laugh or smile […] And when we practice sitting, facing one another, talking […] it changed my relationship because I practice it with other community, the wider community, looking at the person’s eyes and smile ”.[52]
“Although all the participants had experienced positive changes in many aspects of their lives, there were many more issues that they had to cope with. At the end of the program the women were still confronted by bread-and-butter issues: ‘can you tell me how to get a job?’ (Wuail); ‘do you have any friends who need housecleaning? I can do it’ (Kui); ‘there are seven of us living in my three-bedroom house. It is so small. I have to sleep in the kitchen (Nyamata)”.
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations of this Scoping Review
4.2. Implications for Practice, Policy, and Research
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mahon, D. A Scoping Review of Interventions Delivered by Peers to Support the Resettlement Process of Refugees and Asylum Seekers. Trauma Care 2022, 2, 51-62. https://doi.org/10.3390/traumacare2010005
Mahon D. A Scoping Review of Interventions Delivered by Peers to Support the Resettlement Process of Refugees and Asylum Seekers. Trauma Care. 2022; 2(1):51-62. https://doi.org/10.3390/traumacare2010005
Chicago/Turabian StyleMahon, Daryl. 2022. "A Scoping Review of Interventions Delivered by Peers to Support the Resettlement Process of Refugees and Asylum Seekers" Trauma Care 2, no. 1: 51-62. https://doi.org/10.3390/traumacare2010005
APA StyleMahon, D. (2022). A Scoping Review of Interventions Delivered by Peers to Support the Resettlement Process of Refugees and Asylum Seekers. Trauma Care, 2(1), 51-62. https://doi.org/10.3390/traumacare2010005