Prevalence and prevention of suicidal ideation among asylum seekers in a high-risk urban post-displacement setting.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to investigate the prevalence and risk factors for suicidal ideation among asylum seekers (study 1) and test whether Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R) could prevent or treat suicidal ideation (study 2).
Results Summary
MBTR-R prevented the onset of suicidal ideation (15.6% post-intervention vs. 23.1% in controls) and further reduced it at follow-up (9.8%). The preventive effects were mediated by reduced posttraumatic stress, depression, and anxiety, but MBTR-R did not reduce existing suicidal ideation.
Population
Asylum seekers in a high-risk, unstable post-displacement context.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
5-week follow-up (intervention duration not explicitly stated)
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
- | increase | Prevalence of suicidal ideation | asylum seekers in a high-risk unstable post-displacement context | 31% | was elevated | #1 |
- | increase | suicidal ideation severity | asylum seekers in a high-risk unstable post-displacement context | - | were strongly associated with | #2 |
- | increase | suicidal ideation | asylum seekers in a high-risk unstable post-displacement context | - | prospectively predicted the onset of | #3 |
Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R) | decrease | suicidal ideation | asylum seekers in a high-risk unstable post-displacement context | 15.6% | prevented the onset of | #4 |
Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R) | decrease | suicidal ideation | asylum seekers in a high-risk unstable post-displacement context | 9.8% | prevented the onset of | #5 |
Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R) | decrease | posttraumatic stress, depression, anxiety and their multi-morbidity | asylum seekers in a high-risk unstable post-displacement context | - | were mediated by reduced | #6 |
Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R) | no change | current suicidal ideation present at the beginning of the intervention | asylum seekers in a high-risk unstable post-displacement context | - | did not therapeutically reduce | #7 |
AIMS: Among asylum seekers in a high-risk unstable post-displacement context, we aimed to investigate the prevalence of and risk for suicidal ideation (study 1), and then to test whether and how Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R) may prevent or treat suicidal ideation (study 2). METHODS: Study 1 was conducted among a community sample of RESULTS: Prevalence of suicidal ideation was elevated (31%). Post-migration living difficulties, as well as posttraumatic stress, depression, anxiety and their multi-morbidity were strongly associated with suicidal ideation severity. Likewise, depression and multi-morbidity prospectively predicted the onset of suicidal ideation. Relative to its incidence among waitlist-control (23.1%), MBTR-R prevented the onset of suicidal ideation at post-intervention assessment (15.6%) and 5-week follow-up (9.8%). Preventive effects of MBTR-R on suicidal ideation were mediated by reduced posttraumatic stress, depression, anxiety and their multi-morbidity. MBTR-R did not therapeutically reduce current suicidal ideation present at the beginning of the intervention. CONCLUSIONS: Findings warn of a public health crisis of suicidality among forcibly displaced people in high-risk post-displacement settings. Although preliminary, novel randomised waitlist-control evidence for preventive effects of MBTR-R for suicidal ideation is promising. Together, findings indicate the need for scientific, applied and policy attention to mental health post-displacement in order to prevent suicide among forcibly displaced people.