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  1. AU="Piwowarczyk, Linda A"
  2. AU="Boaglio, Sean"
  3. AU="Honda, Tetsuya"
  4. AU="Valenti, Manuela"
  5. AU="Philipsen, Lars"
  6. AU="Lafarge, Antoine"
  7. AU="Skorey, Kathryn"
  8. AU=Perricone Carlo AU=Perricone Carlo
  9. AU=Amodio Giada
  10. AU=Sharma Purva AU=Sharma Purva
  11. AU="Pellengahr, Christoph Schulze"
  12. AU="Valdivia, Aitor"
  13. AU="Navarro, Pablo"
  14. AU=Khiew Stella H.
  15. AU="Hamedi, Homa"
  16. AU="De Yoreo, James J"
  17. AU="Von Feldt, Joan M"
  18. AU="Collins, Jorja"
  19. AU="Jaffe, D A"
  20. AU="Li, Hehe"
  21. AU=McClain Micah T
  22. AU=Feitosa Gilson
  23. AU="Ficara, Elena"
  24. AU=Choi KeunOh
  25. AU="van Driel, Mieke L"
  26. AU="Guzmán, María Camila"
  27. AU="Tom Van Den Bogaert"
  28. AU="Di Gioia, Mariacarla"
  29. AU=Hassan Omar F
  30. AU="Rose, Dale"
  31. AU="Baba, Satoshi"
  32. AU=Orienti Isabella
  33. AU="Ragasa, Catherine"
  34. AU="Sadrzadeh, S M Hossein"
  35. AU=Celedon Vera
  36. AU="Ravins Dohare"
  37. AU="Köcher, Thomas"
  38. AU="Iyengar, Sudha K"
  39. AU="Dimitroulis, Ioannis"
  40. AU="García Sandoval, Blanca"
  41. AU="Yuchio Yanagawa"
  42. AU="Ben Warne"
  43. AU="Freitas, Bruna Andrade Santos"
  44. AU="Behar, Raquel"
  45. AU="Hakimi, Mathew"
  46. AU="Voigt, C"
  47. AU="Harenberg, Job"
  48. AU="Bradfield, Owen"
  49. AU=Parmegiani Lodovico
  50. AU=Nasmyth Kim AU=Nasmyth Kim
  51. AU=Krumm Brian AU=Krumm Brian
  52. AU="Isojima, Tsuyoshi"
  53. AU="Rioufol, Gilles"
  54. AU="Hiesmayr, B. C."
  55. AU="Qudrat-Ullah, Hassan"
  56. AU=Kim Ginah Lee
  57. AU="Jeannin, Anne-Caroline"

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  1. Artikel ; Online: COVID-19 and U.S.-based refugee populations: Commentary.

    Mattar, Sandra / Piwowarczyk, Linda A

    Psychological trauma : theory, research, practice and policy

    2020  Band 12, Heft S1, Seite(n) S228–S229

    Abstract: The arrival of the pandemic known as COVID-19 has resulted in an emergency appraisal of the way mental health services are delivered to refugee and asylum-seeker populations at the Boston Medical Center in Massachusetts. The following commentary ... ...

    Abstract The arrival of the pandemic known as COVID-19 has resulted in an emergency appraisal of the way mental health services are delivered to refugee and asylum-seeker populations at the Boston Medical Center in Massachusetts. The following commentary summarizes some of the main approaches used to address the unique needs of this vulnerable population under lockdown. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Adult ; Boston ; COVID-19 ; Coronavirus Infections ; Humans ; Infection Control ; Mental Health Services ; Pandemics ; Pneumonia, Viral ; Psychological Trauma/psychology ; Psychological Trauma/therapy ; Refugees/psychology ; Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychology ; Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/therapy ; Telemedicine
    Schlagwörter covid19
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2020-06-15
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2497028-1
    ISSN 1942-969X ; 1942-9681
    ISSN (online) 1942-969X
    ISSN 1942-9681
    DOI 10.1037/tra0000602
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  2. Artikel: BeWell: quality assurance health promotion pilot.

    Piwowarczyk, Linda A / Ona, Fernando

    International journal of health care quality assurance

    2019  Band 32, Heft 2, Seite(n) 321–331

    Abstract: Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to determine the experience participating in a health promotion program for refugee and asylum seekers and torture survivors in a safety net clinical setting.: Design/methodology/approach: Refugee and asylum ... ...

    Abstract Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to determine the experience participating in a health promotion program for refugee and asylum seekers and torture survivors in a safety net clinical setting.
    Design/methodology/approach: Refugee and asylum seeker torture survivors participated in a seven-week health promotion program at a safety-net clinic. Participants interviewed before, during and after the program was designed to improve and maintain health promotion program quality.
    Findings: Six major themes emerged: social networks; tools/techniques/skills; wellness planning; spiritualism; health maintenance; and social/group interaction. Preliminary results suggest that this multi-pronged approach is feasible and acceptable to foreign-born torture survivors.
    Research limitations/implications: Torture impacts many facets of one's life. A program which addresses health from a multidisciplinary perspective has promise to facilitate healing.
    Practical implications: The impact of torture and human rights violations significantly affects many facets of peoples' lives including emotional, social, physical and spiritual dimensions. Therefore a program which utilizes a multidisciplinary integrated bio-psychosocial and spiritual approach has the potential to simultaneously address many domains facilitating healing.
    Originality/value: BeWell, a bio-psychosocio-spiritual health promotion strategy aimed at improving health service quality and increasing patient satisfaction to support positive health outcomes by implementing in-classroom/person modules for patients, to the authors' knowledge is unique in its efforts to encompass multiple domains simultaneously and fully integrate an approach to wellbeing.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Female ; Health Promotion/organization & administration ; Human Rights ; Humans ; Interpersonal Relations ; Male ; Pilot Projects ; Quality Assurance, Health Care/organization & administration ; Refugees/education ; Refugees/psychology ; Safety-net Providers/organization & administration ; Social Networking ; Spiritualism ; Torture/psychology
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2019-05-15
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 645125-1
    ISSN 0952-6862 ; 1366-0756
    ISSN 0952-6862 ; 1366-0756
    DOI 10.1108/IJHCQA-08-2017-0152
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  3. Artikel ; Online: COVID-19 and U.S.-based refugee populations

    Mattar, Sandra / Piwowarczyk, Linda A.

    Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy

    Commentary.

    2020  Band 12, Heft S1, Seite(n) S228–S229

    Schlagwörter Clinical Psychology ; Social Psychology ; covid19
    Sprache Englisch
    Verlag American Psychological Association (APA)
    Erscheinungsland us
    Dokumenttyp Artikel ; Online
    ZDB-ID 2497028-1
    ISSN 1942-969X ; 1942-9681
    ISSN (online) 1942-969X
    ISSN 1942-9681
    DOI 10.1037/tra0000602
    Datenquelle BASE - Bielefeld Academic Search Engine (Lebenswissenschaftliche Auswahl)

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  4. Artikel: COVID-19 and U.S.-based refugee populations: Commentary

    Mattar, Sandra / Piwowarczyk, Linda A

    Psychol Trauma

    Abstract: The arrival of the pandemic known as COVID-19 has resulted in an emergency appraisal of the way mental health services are delivered to refugee and asylum-seeker populations at the Boston Medical Center in Massachusetts. The following commentary ... ...

    Abstract The arrival of the pandemic known as COVID-19 has resulted in an emergency appraisal of the way mental health services are delivered to refugee and asylum-seeker populations at the Boston Medical Center in Massachusetts. The following commentary summarizes some of the main approaches used to address the unique needs of this vulnerable population under lockdown. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2020 APA, all rights reserved).
    Schlagwörter covid19
    Verlag WHO
    Dokumenttyp Artikel
    Anmerkung WHO #Covidence: #598509
    Datenquelle COVID19

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  5. Artikel ; Online: Embedding Chaplaincy Services in Primary Care for Immigrants, Refugees and Asylum Seekers: A Boston Pilot Intervention.

    Kimball, Sarah L / Syeda, Haniya Saleem / Chergui, Houda / Piwowarczyk, Linda A / Gould, Jennie

    Journal of religion and health

    2022  Band 62, Heft 1, Seite(n) 55–64

    Abstract: This Boston-based pilot research was an exploratory study that integrated outpatient chaplaincy into a refugee and immigrant health primary care clinic. Patients were screened for spiritual distress and offered a meeting with chaplaincy interns. Forty- ... ...

    Abstract This Boston-based pilot research was an exploratory study that integrated outpatient chaplaincy into a refugee and immigrant health primary care clinic. Patients were screened for spiritual distress and offered a meeting with chaplaincy interns. Forty-eight patients were seen in clinic, 28 were screened, and 9 met with a chaplain. Most frequent domains of spiritual distress were grief (n = 8), feelings of abandonment (n = 5), guilt (n = 4), betrayal (n = 4), fear of death (n = 3), shame (n = 3), and trust (n = 3). Faith was relevant to treatment decision-making for 6 patients. It was found that outpatient chaplaincy services are a feasible intervention to address spiritual distress in immigrant and refugee patients.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Humans ; Refugees ; Pilot Projects ; Boston ; Emigrants and Immigrants ; Primary Health Care
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2022-04-27
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 2017250-3
    ISSN 1573-6571 ; 0022-4197
    ISSN (online) 1573-6571
    ISSN 0022-4197
    DOI 10.1007/s10943-022-01568-8
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  6. Artikel: Impact of September 11 on refugees and those seeking asylum.

    Piwowarczyk, Linda A / Keane, Terence M

    Transcultural psychiatry

    2007  Band 44, Heft 4, Seite(n) 566–580

    Abstract: September 11, 2001 profoundly affected the American public. We share the views of a cohort of refugees and those seeking asylum from the Boston Center for Refugee Health and Human Rights. Of the 63 individuals from 18 countries interviewed, many had ... ...

    Abstract September 11, 2001 profoundly affected the American public. We share the views of a cohort of refugees and those seeking asylum from the Boston Center for Refugee Health and Human Rights. Of the 63 individuals from 18 countries interviewed, many had concerns about their personal safety following September 11, as well as fears related to deportation, arrest, detention, imprisonment, discrimination, physical violence and the destruction of property, and war. Asylum seekers were more likely than refugees to have concerns about their safety before their departure and during flight, as well as fear deportation and arrest after September 11. In the wake of September 11, most common coping strategies utilized included prayer (77.8%), speaking with friends from their own social group (47.6%), family (44.4%), and belief in fate (42.9%).
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Adult ; Aged ; Ethnic Groups/ethnology ; Female ; Humans ; Male ; Middle Aged ; Refugees/statistics & numerical data ; September 11 Terrorist Attacks ; Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/ethnology ; United States/epidemiology
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2007-12
    Erscheinungsland England
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article
    ZDB-ID 1378978-8
    ISSN 1461-7471 ; 1363-4615
    ISSN (online) 1461-7471
    ISSN 1363-4615
    DOI 10.1177/1363461507083897
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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  7. Artikel ; Online: Oral health status of refugee torture survivors seeking care in the United States.

    Singh, Harpreet K / Scott, Thayer E / Henshaw, Michelle M / Cote, Susan E / Grodin, Michael A / Piwowarczyk, Linda A

    American journal of public health

    2008  Band 98, Heft 12, Seite(n) 2181–2182

    Abstract: We assessed the oral health status of 216 refugee torture survivors seeking care at an urban torture treatment center in the United States. Results showed that patients' dental health ranged from poor to fair; 76% had untreated cavities, and ... ...

    Abstract We assessed the oral health status of 216 refugee torture survivors seeking care at an urban torture treatment center in the United States. Results showed that patients' dental health ranged from poor to fair; 76% had untreated cavities, and approximately 90% required immediate or near-immediate dental care. Torture treatment centers, in addition to offering safe environments for educating and examining patients, are ideal settings to provide basic oral health services without the risk of retraumatization.
    Mesh-Begriff(e) Adolescent ; Adult ; Aged ; Boston ; DMF Index ; Dental Clinics ; Dental Health Surveys ; Emigration and Immigration/statistics & numerical data ; Female ; Health Status ; Humans ; Male ; Mass Screening ; Middle Aged ; Needs Assessment ; Oral Health ; Outpatient Clinics, Hospital ; Patient Acceptance of Health Care/statistics & numerical data ; Periodontal Index ; Refugees/statistics & numerical data ; Survivors/statistics & numerical data ; Torture/statistics & numerical data ; Young Adult
    Sprache Englisch
    Erscheinungsdatum 2008-12
    Erscheinungsland United States
    Dokumenttyp Journal Article ; Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural ; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    ZDB-ID 121100-6
    ISSN 1541-0048 ; 0090-0036 ; 0002-9572
    ISSN (online) 1541-0048
    ISSN 0090-0036 ; 0002-9572
    DOI 10.2105/AJPH.2007.120063
    Datenquelle MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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