2007
DOI: 10.2753/imh0020-7411360306
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Psychological Trauma: Research and Practice in Turkey

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Refugee studies conducted with a population exposed to the Marmara Earthquake in which 17,000 people were killed and 44,000 injuried (Aker, Onen, & Karakilic, 2007) points to cultural differences affecting the treatment of people exposed to disasters and trauma and decribes both the influence of Turkish and Muslim values related to the expression of symptoms and recovery. Aker (2007) sites other studies conducted by Sabucuoglu who investigated Bulgarian refugees and Yurbay who treated Albanian Muslim children who were refugees from Kosovo and also found the importance of including cultural values in their treatment as well as a high resiliency within these populations.…”
Section: Applied Trauma Theory: Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Refugee studies conducted with a population exposed to the Marmara Earthquake in which 17,000 people were killed and 44,000 injuried (Aker, Onen, & Karakilic, 2007) points to cultural differences affecting the treatment of people exposed to disasters and trauma and decribes both the influence of Turkish and Muslim values related to the expression of symptoms and recovery. Aker (2007) sites other studies conducted by Sabucuoglu who investigated Bulgarian refugees and Yurbay who treated Albanian Muslim children who were refugees from Kosovo and also found the importance of including cultural values in their treatment as well as a high resiliency within these populations.…”
Section: Applied Trauma Theory: Culturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, Mexican-origin Hispanics in the El Paso border region, even before the worst years of the conflict, report significantly higher rates of depression than immigrant groups or native born Hispanics (O’Connor et al, 2008). The additional stressor of an armed conflict thus increases the risk of negative mental health outcomes in a population that has already been documented as experiencing high rates of depression (Aker, Önen, & Karakili&ccedil, 2007; Amin & Khan, 2009; Ayazi, Lien, Eide, Swartz, & Hauff, 2014; Başoğlu et al, 2004; Fortuna et al, 2008; Husain et al, 2011).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%