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"Mental Health Is for Crazy People": Perceptions and Barriers to Mental Health Service Use Among Refugees from Burma

Overview
Specialty Health Services
Date 2020 Aug 26
PMID 32840690
Citations 4
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Abstract

Good mental health is essential to successful integration for refugee populations that resettle in the U.S. We explored perceptions of mental illnesses and barriers to mental health service use as well as solutions to current mental health problems from the perspective of refugees. The interviews with a convenience sampling of 11 community leaders (6 men and 5 women) from various Burmese ethnic communities revealed three major categories, including sources of mental illnesses (e.g. traumatic experiences and post-resettlement challenges), barriers to service use (e.g. lack of understanding about mental health, linguistic challenges, cultural stigma, alternative treatments, and unresponsive system), and proposed community solutions (e.g. community education, culturally-competent providers, and beyond mental health treatment). The findings suggest that the ethnic community can be a source of potential solutions to mitigate barriers to mental health service use.

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Health disparities among Burmese diaspora: an integrative review.

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Accessing and navigating healthcare: A scoping review of the experiences of women of refugee background from Myanmar.

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Social Determinants of Mental Health Among Karen Refugees from Burma.

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