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Communication difficulties and strategies in migrant mental healthcare: A European survey of health and social care professionals
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Communication difficulties and strategies in migrant mental healthcare: A European survey of health and social care professionals

Graham Hieke, Demi Krystallidou, Özlem Temizöz, Fang Wang, Cristina Álvaro Aranda, Łucja Biel, Agnieszka Biernacka, Antoon Cox, Katarzyna Czarnocka-Gołębiewska, Silviya Damianova Radeva, …
Health policy (Amsterdam), Vol.162, p.105453
12/2025
PMID: 41072231

Abstract

Interpreting healthcare interpreting Mental healthcare Communication Barriers language barriers Migrants Refugees

Background

Globally, one billion people suffer from mental health disorders. Migrant populations face high prevalence rates of some disorders and significant barriers in accessing mental healthcare, including language-related barriers. However, knowledge about specific communication difficulties arising from language barriers and mitigation strategies is limited, as is knowledge about country-specific differences.

Objective

This study explores health and social care providers’ (HSCPs’) perceptions of mental health service accessibility for migrants, language-related communication difficulties, mitigation strategies and their perceived effectiveness, and the effectiveness of HSCP training in working with migrants.

Methods

We conducted a cross-sectional survey of HSCPs in nine European countries (n = 629).

Results

HSCPs perceive mental health services as largely inaccessible for migrants facing language barriers. Cross-regional comparative analysis identified differences in the frequency of HSCPs’ interactions with migrants seeking support for their mental health where language barriers are present and in how often HSCPs’ reported experiencing communication difficulties when doing so. HSCPs report a lack of training in communicating with migrants across language barriers, with recent training associated with more positive perceptions of its usefulness. Communication difficulties were encountered throughout the care journey. Informal strategies, such as assistance from family and friends, and machine translation, are commonly used but seen as ineffective. Onsite professional/trained interpreters are deemed most effective, yet their availability is limited.

Conclusions

Findings highlight the urgent need for better communication strategies and awareness of the benefits and drawbacks of different strategies to enhance mental health service accessibility for migrants.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#3 Good Health and Well-Being
#10 Reduced Inequalities
#16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
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