Popis: |
Abstract An increasingly common response to the lack of specialist mental health services for refugees and asylum seekers in European host countries is peer‐supported services. This study examined the association between a peer‐provided psychosocial intervention and psychological symptom reduction among refugees and asylum seekers in Greece. The intervention consisted of Problem Management Plus (PM+) and peer case management sessions delivered by a team of Community Psychosocial Workers (trained refugees). The sample consisted of 173 participants, comprising Arabic and Farsi speakers, male and female participants, recognized refugees and asylum seekers. Anxiety, depression, and psychological distress were measured before and after the intervention using the Patient Health Questionnaire‐9, Generalized Anxiety Disorder‐7, and Psychological Outcome Profiles scales, respectively. Repeated measures analysis of variance was adopted to evaluate the difference in the degree of change across patient characteristics over the follow‐up period. The level of statistical significance was set at p |