Published on in Vol 21, No 9 (2019): September

Preprints (earlier versions) of this paper are available at https://preprints.jmir.org/preprint/14171, first published .
Family Separation and the Impact of Digital Technology on the Mental Health of Refugee Families in the United States: Qualitative Study

Family Separation and the Impact of Digital Technology on the Mental Health of Refugee Families in the United States: Qualitative Study

Family Separation and the Impact of Digital Technology on the Mental Health of Refugee Families in the United States: Qualitative Study

Journals

  1. Marlowe J, Bruns R. Renegotiating family: Social media and forced migration. Migration Studies 2021;9(3):1499 View
  2. Röhr S, Jung F, Pabst A, Grochtdreis T, Dams J, Nagl M, Renner A, Hoffmann R, König H, Kersting A, Riedel-Heller S. A Self-Help App for Syrian Refugees With Posttraumatic Stress (Sanadak): Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR mHealth and uHealth 2021;9(1):e24807 View
  3. Cronin C, Hungerford C, Wilson R. Using Digital Health Technologies to Manage the Psychosocial Symptoms of Menopause in the Workplace: A Narrative Literature Review. Issues in Mental Health Nursing 2021;42(6):541 View
  4. Dasuki S, Effah J. Mobile phone use for social inclusion: the case of internally displaced people in Nigeria. Information Technology for Development 2022;28(3):532 View
  5. Jauhiainen J, Eyvazlu D, Junnila J, Virnes A. Digital divides,the Internet and social media uses among Afghans in Iran. Technology in Society 2022;70:102057 View
  6. Anna Seidel F, Hettich N, James S. Transnational family life of displaced unaccompanied minors – A systematic review. Children and Youth Services Review 2022;142:106649 View
  7. Tang J, Wang K, Luo Y. The bright side of digitization: Assessing the impact of mobile phone domestication on left-behind children in China's rural migrant families. Frontiers in Psychology 2022;13 View
  8. Siddiq H, Elhaija A, Wells K. An Integrative Review of Community-Based Mental Health Interventions Among Resettled Refugees from Muslim-Majority Countries. Community Mental Health Journal 2023;59(1):160 View
  9. Magan I, Benson O, Banya M. Mental Health Care With Refugee Families: A Transnational Collectivist Approach. Families in Society: The Journal of Contemporary Social Services 2023;104(1):47 View
  10. Mattar S, Gellatly R. Refugee mental health: Culturally relevant considerations. Current Opinion in Psychology 2022;47:101429 View
  11. Greene R, Hess J, Soller B, Amer S, Lardier D, Goodkind J. Expanding Social Network Conceptualization, Measurement, and Theory: Lessons from Transnational Refugee Populations. Journal of Applied Social Science 2023;17(3):355 View
  12. Dahya N, Garrido M, Wedlake S, Yefimova K, Iqbal M. Learning Technology Systems in Everyday Life: Women’s Experiences Navigating Refugee Resettlement in the United States. Journal of Immigrant & Refugee Studies 2023:1 View
  13. Mabil‐Atem J, Gumuskaya O, Wilson R. Digital mental health interventions for the mental health care of refugees and asylum seekers: Integrative literature review. International Journal of Mental Health Nursing 2024;33(4):760 View
  14. Wang J, Leong I, Johnson M, Pei Y, Lee K, Mittelman M, Epstein C, Cho S, Wu B. What Matters to Chinese and Korean American Dementia Caregivers: Navigating Cultural Influences in Dementia Care from Caregivers’ Perspectives. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease 2024;98(2):519 View
  15. Mendez Murillo R, Kam J. Relational Maintenance for Separated Latina/o/x/e Immigrant Parents and Their Children: A Focus on Primary Caregivers as Communication Gatekeepers. Communication Research 2024 View
  16. Shah S, Murphy B, Joyce T, Cunningham B. “I don’t get sick leave”: Small-market newspaper journalists’ perceptions of the impact of occupational stressors and organizational support on their mental well-being. Newspaper Research Journal 2024;45(4):472 View