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Common Mental Disorders and Resilience Among Internally Displaced in Sri Lanka: Follow-up study on Return migration.

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Longitudinal data are lacking on mental health trajectories following conflict resolution and return migration. COMRAID-R is a follow-up study of Muslims displaced by conflict from Northern Sri Lanka 20 years ago who are now beginning to return.

Of 450 participants in displacement interviewed in 2011, 338 (75.1%) were re-interviewed a year later, and a supplementary random sample (n = 228) was drawn from return migrants with a comparable displacement history. Common mental disorder (CMD; Patient Health Questionnaire) and post-traumatic stress disorder (CIDI-subscale) were measured.

A CMD prevalence of 18.8% (95%CI 15.2–22.5) at baseline had reduced to 8.6% (5.6–11.7) at follow-up in those remaining in displacement, and was 10.3% (6.5–14.1) in return migrants. PTSD prevalences were 2.4%, 0.3% and 1.6% respectively.

We observed a substantial decrease in CMD prevalence in this population over a short period, which may reflect the prospect of return migration and associated optimism following conflict resolution.

Read the Journal Article

Siriwardhana, C., Adikari, A., Pannala, G. et alChanges in mental disorder prevalence among conflict-affected populations: a prospective study in Sri Lanka (COMRAID-R)BMC Psychiatry 15, 41 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12888-015-0424-y