New article published on the mental health of queer refugees and people seeking asylum

We’d like to congratulate a colleague of Pride Foundation Australia, Satrio Nindyo Istiko, who has been published alongside Andrian Liem Edwin Adrianta Surijah, and Ignacio Correa-Velez with the article “Understanding key priority areas of mental health among queer asylum seekers and refugees in Australia through the lens of structural violence: A modified Delphi method study”.

Published in Journal of Refugee Studies, the article is a based on a form of refugee-led research, identifying and examining key priority areas for refugee services to improve the mental health of LGBTQ+ asylum seekers and refugees in Australian context.

 

Abstract

Queer asylum seekers and refugees (QASaR) are more likely to have poor mental health compared to non-QASaR. This paper examines key priority areas for refugee services to improve mental health outcomes of QASaR in Australia. The key priority areas were identified through a modified Delphi method (DM), comprised of two stages: a scoping review of literature and three rounds of consensus building process. In the second stage, twenty-one participants were involved, including QASaR, health/social care professionals, and people in policy/funding-related roles. Drawing on Farmer’s understanding of structural violence, our consensus suggests QASaR’s poor mental health is primarily produced by the asylum system, further exacerbated by the lack of safe queer-inclusive refugee services, and can be improved by supporting QASaR-led organizations. Greater investments in QASaR-led organizations and initiatives are needed to improve cultural safety of refugee services and achieve systemic change.

 

Read the full article here.

Recent News

Congratulations Illawarra Shoalhaven Gender Alliance Inc, Ignite Pride Grant recipient

Announcing PFA’s Small Grant Recipients for Round 3 of 2024

Welcome Rainbow Giving Australia to Australian LGBTQIA+ Philanthropy

A New Car for Queer Refugee Couple Marya and Carmen

Acknowledgement of Country

Pride Foundation Australia pays respect to the traditional custodians of the land and sea on which we live, work and play, we pay our respects to Elders past and present, acknowledging that sovereignty was never ceded.

Pride Foundation Australia commits through the resources we have available to us, to work with, for, and alongside Aboriginal, Torres Strait Islander and South Sea Islander LGBTIQ+ Sistergirl and Brotherboy peoples and communities to embed a self-determined future.

We further commit the contribution of a significant proportion of grant funding received to Aboriginal Torres Strait  South Sea Islander LGBTIQ+ Sistergirl and Brotherboy led initiatives to improve social outcomes.

Australia was, and always will be Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander land.