STARC-SUD. Adaptation of a Transdiagnostic Intervention for refugees with substance use disorders.

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STARC-SUD. Adaptation of a Transdiagnostic Intervention for refugees with substance use disorders. / Lotzin, Annett; Lindert, Jutta; Koch, Theresa; Liedl, Alexandra; Schäfer, Ingo.

in: Clinical Psychology in Europe, Jahrgang 3, Nr. Spec Issue, 23.11.2021, S. e5329.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

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@article{636f7181d79e46f6967e1b2bdf383cba,
title = "STARC-SUD. Adaptation of a Transdiagnostic Intervention for refugees with substance use disorders.",
abstract = "Background: Refugees often suffer from multiple mental health problems, which transdiagnostic interventions can address. STARC (Skills-Training of Affect Regulation – A Culture-sensitive Approach) is a culturally sensitive transdiagnostic group intervention that has been developed for refugees to improve affect regulation. In refugees with substance use disorders (SUD), the consideration of SUD-specific elements might improve the acceptance and effectiveness of such an intervention. We aimed to adapt the STARC program for refugees with SUD in a culturally sensitive way.Method: The conceptual framework of Heim and Kohrt (2019) was used to culturally sensitively adapt the STARC program to the needs of Syrian refugees with SUD. The results of five focus group discussions with refugees on cultural concepts of SUD and their treatment informed the adaption. An expert group suggested adaptions and decided by consensus on their implementation. Two pilot groups were conducted with the adapted STARC-SUD program. Interviews with the therapists of these pilot groups informed further adaption.Results: The concepts related to SUD identified in focus groups and therapists{\textquoteright} interviews that differed from Western concepts were integrated into the STARC intervention.Discussion: Further studies should assess the acceptance and effectiveness of the culturally sensitive STARC-SUD program for refugees with SUD.",
author = "Annett Lotzin and Jutta Lindert and Theresa Koch and Alexandra Liedl and Ingo Sch{\"a}fer",
year = "2021",
month = nov,
day = "23",
doi = "10.32872/cpe.5329",
language = "English",
volume = "3",
pages = "e5329",
journal = "Clinical Psychology in Europe",
issn = "2625-3410",
publisher = "PsychOpen",
number = "Spec Issue",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - STARC-SUD. Adaptation of a Transdiagnostic Intervention for refugees with substance use disorders.

AU - Lotzin, Annett

AU - Lindert, Jutta

AU - Koch, Theresa

AU - Liedl, Alexandra

AU - Schäfer, Ingo

PY - 2021/11/23

Y1 - 2021/11/23

N2 - Background: Refugees often suffer from multiple mental health problems, which transdiagnostic interventions can address. STARC (Skills-Training of Affect Regulation – A Culture-sensitive Approach) is a culturally sensitive transdiagnostic group intervention that has been developed for refugees to improve affect regulation. In refugees with substance use disorders (SUD), the consideration of SUD-specific elements might improve the acceptance and effectiveness of such an intervention. We aimed to adapt the STARC program for refugees with SUD in a culturally sensitive way.Method: The conceptual framework of Heim and Kohrt (2019) was used to culturally sensitively adapt the STARC program to the needs of Syrian refugees with SUD. The results of five focus group discussions with refugees on cultural concepts of SUD and their treatment informed the adaption. An expert group suggested adaptions and decided by consensus on their implementation. Two pilot groups were conducted with the adapted STARC-SUD program. Interviews with the therapists of these pilot groups informed further adaption.Results: The concepts related to SUD identified in focus groups and therapists’ interviews that differed from Western concepts were integrated into the STARC intervention.Discussion: Further studies should assess the acceptance and effectiveness of the culturally sensitive STARC-SUD program for refugees with SUD.

AB - Background: Refugees often suffer from multiple mental health problems, which transdiagnostic interventions can address. STARC (Skills-Training of Affect Regulation – A Culture-sensitive Approach) is a culturally sensitive transdiagnostic group intervention that has been developed for refugees to improve affect regulation. In refugees with substance use disorders (SUD), the consideration of SUD-specific elements might improve the acceptance and effectiveness of such an intervention. We aimed to adapt the STARC program for refugees with SUD in a culturally sensitive way.Method: The conceptual framework of Heim and Kohrt (2019) was used to culturally sensitively adapt the STARC program to the needs of Syrian refugees with SUD. The results of five focus group discussions with refugees on cultural concepts of SUD and their treatment informed the adaption. An expert group suggested adaptions and decided by consensus on their implementation. Two pilot groups were conducted with the adapted STARC-SUD program. Interviews with the therapists of these pilot groups informed further adaption.Results: The concepts related to SUD identified in focus groups and therapists’ interviews that differed from Western concepts were integrated into the STARC intervention.Discussion: Further studies should assess the acceptance and effectiveness of the culturally sensitive STARC-SUD program for refugees with SUD.

U2 - 10.32872/cpe.5329

DO - 10.32872/cpe.5329

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 3

SP - e5329

JO - Clinical Psychology in Europe

JF - Clinical Psychology in Europe

SN - 2625-3410

IS - Spec Issue

ER -