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Against the background of missing culturally sensitive mental health care services for refugees, we developed a group intervention (Empowerment) for refugees at level 3 within the stratified Stepped and Collaborative Care Model of the project Mental Health in Refugees and Asylum Seekers (MEHIRA). We aim to evaluate the effectiveness of the Empowerment group intervention with its focus on psychoeducation, stress management, and emotion regulation strategies in a culturally sensitive context for refugees with affective disorders compared to treatment-as-usual (TAU).
Method
At level 3 of the MEHIRA project, 149 refugees and asylum seekers with clinically relevant depressive symptoms were randomized to the Empowerment group intervention or TAU. Treatment comprised 16 therapy sessions conducted over 12 weeks. Effects were measured with the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) and the Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MÅDRS). Further scales included assessed emotional distress, self-efficacy, resilience, and quality of life.
Results
Intention-to-treat analyses show significant cross-level interactions on both self-rated depressive symptoms (PHQ-9; F(1,147) = 13.32, p < 0.001) and clinician-rated depressive symptoms (MÅDRS; F(1,147) = 6.91, p = 0.01), indicating an improvement in depressive symptoms from baseline to post-intervention in the treatment group compared to the control group. The effect sizes for both scales were moderate (d = 0.68, 95% CI 0.21–1.15 for PHQ-9 and d = 0.51, 95% CI 0.04–0.99 for MÅDRS).
Conclusion
In the MEHIRA project comparing an SCCM approach versus TAU, the Empowerment group intervention at level 3 showed effectiveness for refugees with moderately severe depressive symptoms.
This chapter explores security in the context of electronic communication. Firstly, a definition of information security will be given. Secondly, the method of threat assessment will be introduced, which allows the determination of the level of security that is sufficient for a given application (e.g. communications between parties and the arbitral tribunal). Thirdly, specific security requirements will be provided for each type of potential attacker in a specific context. This consists of basic security hygiene measures that are necessary for individuals accessing the Internet, followed by more specific requirements for law offices. The last part of this chapter introduces a blueprint for secure infrastructure suited for e-arbitration that is defendable against the most sophisticated adversaries.1
This critical note deals with the human factor out of concern that, as crucial as all technical prevention is, true security ultimately boils down to the human factor. The author explores human risks, the risk of demotivation, and its consequences, how unethical behaviour might lead to security breaches, and how social engineering attacks can exploit the slightest weakness to breach what would appear to be a tight technical security system.
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