1 / 36

The Right to Rehabilitation Beirut, Lebanon 2013 Refugees and Asylum Seekers In the United States Karen Hanscom PhD Advo

The Right to Rehabilitation Beirut, Lebanon 2013 Refugees and Asylum Seekers In the United States Karen Hanscom PhD Advocates for Survivors of Torture and Trauma (ASTT) www.astt.org. Refugees & Asylum Seekers in the US Refugee Benefits Asylum Seekers in the US

sani
Télécharger la présentation

The Right to Rehabilitation Beirut, Lebanon 2013 Refugees and Asylum Seekers In the United States Karen Hanscom PhD Advo

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Right to Rehabilitation Beirut, Lebanon 2013 Refugees and Asylum Seekers In the United States Karen Hanscom PhD Advocates for Survivors of Torture and Trauma (ASTT) www.astt.org

  2. Refugees & Asylum Seekers in the US • Refugee Benefits • Asylum Seekers in the US a) Detention b) no govt. services • Torture Rehabilitation in the U.S. Torture Victim Relief Act National Consortium • ASTT’s Treatment Program

  3. Total: 115,000 62,000 Refugees40,000 Asylees + Cuban/Haitians500 Trafficing Survivors

  4. Top 10 countries of Origin Bhutan (15,000) Burma (14,000) Cuba Iraq Somalia Democratic Republic of Congo Iran Eritrea Sudan Ethiopia

  5. Who is a “Refugee”

  6. 1 - From outside the U.S. 2 – Special humanitarian concern to the U.S. 3 – Demonstrate persecution or fear of persecution (race, religion, political opinion, nationality, membership in a social gr.

  7. Education (under 18 same free educ. - access to Univ. as US citizens • Resettlement Services (1st 3 mo. Clothes, food etc.) • Public Assistance (Cash and Medical Treatment • Employment Benefits (work authorization Refugee Benefits

  8. After 1 year: eligible to become permanent U.S. residents After 5 years: can petition for citizenship Spouse and any unmarried minors automatically receive refugee status Refugees

  9. Have fled to the United States and enter the country. then apply for political asylum. After granted asylum, are called refugees Asylum Seekers

  10. Some arrive with Visas. Others do not.

  11. 429,000

  12. Asylum Seeker Benefits

  13. Torture Victim Relief Act (TVRA) • National Consortium of Torture Treatment Programs (NCTTP) • Capacity to Serve 5-6,000 of the estimate 400,000 torture survivors in the U.S. Torture Treatment in the U.S.

  14. 34 NCTTP Members in 15 States and Washington, DC • Of these - 24 comprehensive torture treatment programs • 5 legal or other programs • 1 torture survivor organization

  15. Torture Victim Relief Act Funds distributed by the Office of Refugee Resettlement • Other Federal Funding (very limited) • UNVFVT • State Grants • Foundations • Corporations • Individual Donations Sources of Funding

  16. Case Management Referrals: Legal, Medical, Housing, Food, English Classes … • Psychosocial Groups & Activities • Psychological Treatment Individual and Group • Evaluations & Expert Court Testimony Advocates for Survivors of Torture and Trauma (ASTT)Washington DC and Baltimore, Maryland

  17. Survey of National Consortium of Torture Treatment Programs Therapists about the Assessment, Diagnosis, and Treatment of the Psychological Sequelae of Torture Scott Vrana, Thomas Campbell & Russ Clay Traumatology 19(2) 144-153. 2013

  18. 17 therapists from 10 centers • 21 center directors • Therapist Survey (online) Semi-structured phone interview Note: During the study 2 centers closed due to lack of funding.

  19. 1) Psychological Assessment: Most respondents used a combination of: interview (usually non-structured); and assessment tools - the most common being: Hopkins Symptom Checklist and the Harvard Trauma Questionnaire. Some of the Findings

  20. 2) Therapists clearly stated the need for more resources to conduct research to advance the field. 3) Therapists agreed that the psychological, social, legal, medical and economic aspects of a client’s functioning were intertwined and need to be considered together.

More Related