The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients

Dumke L, Wilker S, Kotterba A, Neuner F (2023)
Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy 30(5): 1071-1082.

Zeitschriftenaufsatz | Veröffentlicht | Englisch
 
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Abstract / Bemerkung
Access to psychotherapy is critical to improving mental health, but only a small proportion of refugees receive treatment in the regular psychotherapeutic care system in high-income countries. In previous research, outpatient psychotherapists reported several barriers to more frequent treatment of refugee patients. However, it is unclear to what extent these perceived barriers contribute to the poor provision of services to refugees. In a survey of N=2002 outpatient psychotherapists in Germany, we collected data on perceived treatment barriers and on the integration of refugees into regular psychotherapeutic practice. Half of the psychotherapists reported that they do not treat refugee patients. In addition, therapies provided for refugees were, on average, 20% shorter than for other patients. Regression analyses showed direct negative associations between psychotherapists' overall perception of barriers with the number of refugees treated and the number of sessions offered to refugee patients, even when controlling for sociodemographic and workload-related characteristics. Correlation analyses on the level of specific types of barriers further revealed that particularly language-related barriers and lack of contact with the refugee populationare negatively correlated with the number of refugees treated and the number of sessions for refugees. Our findings indicate that the integration of refugees into regular psychotherapeutic care could be improved by measures to connect psychotherapists with refugee patients as well as professional interpreters and to ensure coverage of costs for therapy, interpreters and related administrative tasks. © 2023 The Authors. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
Stichworte
barriers; interpreters; psychotherapy; refugees; therapists
Erscheinungsjahr
2023
Zeitschriftentitel
Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy
Band
30
Ausgabe
5
Seite(n)
1071-1082
eISSN
1099-0879
Page URI
https://pub.uni-bielefeld.de/record/2978770

Zitieren

Dumke L, Wilker S, Kotterba A, Neuner F. The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy. 2023;30(5):1071-1082.
Dumke, L., Wilker, S., Kotterba, A., & Neuner, F. (2023). The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 30(5), 1071-1082. https://doi.org/10.1002/cpp.2859
Dumke, Lars, Wilker, Sarah, Kotterba, Anna, and Neuner, Frank. 2023. “The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients”. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy 30 (5): 1071-1082.
Dumke, L., Wilker, S., Kotterba, A., and Neuner, F. (2023). The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy 30, 1071-1082.
Dumke, L., et al., 2023. The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, 30(5), p 1071-1082.
L. Dumke, et al., “The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients”, Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, vol. 30, 2023, pp. 1071-1082.
Dumke, L., Wilker, S., Kotterba, A., Neuner, F.: The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy. 30, 1071-1082 (2023).
Dumke, Lars, Wilker, Sarah, Kotterba, Anna, and Neuner, Frank. “The role of psychotherapists' perceived barriers in providing psychotherapy to refugee patients”. Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy 30.5 (2023): 1071-1082.
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2024-02-06T13:22:47Z
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Material in PUB:
Dissertation, die diesen PUB Eintrag enthält
Mental health care for refugees in Germany: Needs and barriers
Dumke L (2024)
Bielefeld: Universität Bielefeld.
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