Publications by authors named "Kim Yuval"

Article Synopsis
  • This study investigates how living difficulties after migration affect the relationship between maternal trauma and children's emotional outcomes among East African mothers seeking asylum in Israel.
  • It found that maternal PTSD symptoms typically impact children's internalizing behaviors, while maternal symptoms of complex PTSD influence both internalizing and externalizing behaviors, particularly when mothers experience high living difficulties.
  • The research suggests that addressing maternal living conditions is crucial for improving child socioemotional outcomes and highlights the need for policies that support healing from trauma in displaced populations.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates how traumatic stress, specifically Complex Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (CPTSD) and depression in asylum-seeking mothers, affects the mental health of their children after displacement.
  • It focuses on 127 Eritrean mothers in Israel with varying degrees of trauma and their preschool-aged children, analyzing how maternal mental health issues correlate with children's internalizing and externalizing difficulties.
  • Results indicate that mothers with CPTSD have a greater negative impact on their children's socio-emotional development compared to those with PTSD or depression alone, highlighting the need for targeted interventions for families affected by displacement.
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We sought to, first, better understand the role of emotional responding, and specifically shame and guilt, in trauma recovery among asylum-seekers following forced displacement; and, second, to explore whether therapeutic effects of a mindfulness- and compassion-based intervention on trauma recovery among asylum-seekers are mediated by therapeutic effects of the intervention on shame and guilt. Study aims were tested through a randomized waitlist-controlled trial of a 9-week Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees program among a community sample of 158 Eritrean asylum-seekers (55.7% female) residing in an unstable high-risk urban postdisplacement setting in the Middle East (Israel).

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Objective: Forcibly displaced persons may be at elevated risk for poor mental health outcomes because of the COVID-19 pandemic. This study sought to examine associations between COVID-19-related socioeconomic insecurity and mental health outcomes among asylum seekers.

Methods: The authors evaluated the association between the degree of food, housing, and income insecurity related to the pandemic and mental health outcomes among East African asylum seekers in a high-risk, postdisplacement setting in the Middle East (i.

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Objective: Mindfulness- and compassion-based interventions may represent a promising intervention approach to the global mental health crisis of forced displacement. Specifically, Mindfulness-Based Trauma Recovery for Refugees (MBTR-R)-a mindfulness- and compassion-based, trauma-sensitive, and socioculturally adapted intervention for refugees and asylum-seekers-has recently demonstrated randomized control evidence of therapeutic efficacy and safety. Yet, little is known about potential mechanisms underlying these therapeutic effects for trauma recovery and for refugees and asylum-seekers.

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There is an important, long-standing debate regarding the universality vs. specificity of trauma-related mental health symptoms in socio-culturally and linguistically diverse population groups, such as refugees and asylum seekers. Network theory, an emerging development in the field of psychological science, provides a novel data analytic methodology to evaluate and empirically examine long-standing questions about the structure and function of posttraumatic stress symptoms.

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Background: A fast-growing population of refugees and survivors of violent conflict and atrocities are at risk for trauma-related mental health problems. Experimental clinical research key to the development of interventions tailored to this population is limited.

Aims: In an experimental psychopathology laboratory paradigm, we tested the expression and function of avoidance in posttraumatic stress (PTS) among a highly traumatized community sample of forcibly displaced refugees seeking asylum.

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Despite promising theory, empirical study of the putative protective properties of self-compassion (SC) with respect to resilience to and recovery from traumatic stress is limited. The present study tested the theorized protective role(s) of SC with respect to trauma-related psychopathology over time among an at-risk sample of adolescents (N = 64, 26 % females, M(SD) age  = 17.5(1.

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