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Reference 18: Advancing refugee health data management: the implementation of ICD-11 in UNRWA’s primaryrefugee
JMIR Public Health Surveill 2025;11:e66223
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Yet, a separation of the participating Ukrainian refugees from being a refugee became apparent, revealing an underlying identity conflict (identity of being a refugee): “They don't identify as refugees, so in a way that [experience reports from the adapted version of the intervention] would even be a disconnect for them.” [05_ukr_a3_int, pos. 246]; “Just I lived in prosperity [...] I have everything.
JMIR Form Res 2025;9:e65412
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Homestay Hosting Dynamics and Refugee Well-Being: Scoping Review
Refugee homestay programs in Europe enhance refugee well-being through personal connections, diverse housing setups, and interactions with political landscapes, showcasing evolving solidarity amid immigration policies [4]. Refugee cohabitation and homestay programs play a critical role in improving the health and well-being of refugees by providing stable, supportive, and integrated living environments [12].
Interact J Med Res 2024;13:e58613
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However, Meyerhoff and Rohan [15] found a large disparity between their reports of SI, 6.7%, and desire for death, 48.3%, suggesting that culturally inflexible models could mask the real prevalence of SI for different asylum seeker and refugee subgroups. Most importantly, despite their risk for developing mental health issues and SI, refugees and asylum seekers continue to underuse mental health services [16-19].
JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e56957
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Homestay Hosting Dynamics and Refugee Well-Being: Protocol for a Scoping Review
One prosperous solution that has arisen from housing needs is refugee hosting [2]. Within the purview of refugee studies, the term “hosting” signifies the established societies or communities that undertake the resettlement of refugees [3]. Hosting communities are often credited with the expectation to foster welcoming and accepting environments for refugee women and their families to settle after escaping conflict [4].
JMIR Res Protoc 2024;13:e56242
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After receiving refugee status, they may continue to experience stressors associated with a loss of social networks and environmental mastery [3,15,16], with acculturation, with discrimination, and with mental health services based on dominant models of illness in Western developed countries [17].
JMIR Res Protoc 2023;12:e47627
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Socioenvironmental stressors in slums and informal settlements—such as violence and poverty—may harm mental well-being, yet mental health interventions in these contexts have not centered on the needs and priorities of urban refugee and displaced youth [12]. Most studies on the health of refugee and displaced persons have focused on refugee settlement contexts, leaving knowledge gaps regarding efficacious strategies to improve mental health among urban refugees [11].
JMIR Res Protoc 2022;11(12):e42342
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