Table 1.
Item | N (%) | |
---|---|---|
Organization | Adult psychiatry care | 154(62.0%) |
Child and adolescent psychiatry care | 46(18.5%) | |
Addiction care | 5(2.0%) | |
Other | 42(16.9%) | |
Missing | 1(0.4%) | |
Occupation/employment | Medical doctors/med. Students | 15 (6.0%) (2 medical students) |
Social worker | 39 (15.7%) | |
Psychologist/psychotherapist | 76 (30.6%) | |
Nurses | 53 (21.3%) | |
Auxiliary/psychiatric nurse aide | 21 (8,5%) | |
Occupational therapist | 5 (2%) | |
Physiotherapist | 4(1.6%) | |
Midwife | 4(1.6%) | |
Management | 7(2.8%) | |
Administrative staff | 7(2.8%) | |
Missing | 14 (5.6%) | |
Frequency of professional encounters with refugeesa in the past month | 0 | 87 (35%) |
1–3 | 71 (28.6%) | |
3–5 | 26 (10.5%) | |
>5 | 44 (17.7%) | |
Missing | 20 (8.0%) | |
Frequency of using interpreters in the past month | 0 | 90 (36.3%) |
1–3 | 76 (30.6%) | |
4–10 | 41 (16.5%) | |
>10 | 22 (8.9%) | |
Missing | 19 (7.7%) | |
Attitudes towards working with refugees in comparison with non-refugee patients | More difficult | 148 (59.7%) |
The same | 27 (10.9%) | |
Easier | 4 (1.6%) | |
Missing | 69 (27.8%) | |
Previously attended training about migration, mental ill-health and trauma | Yes | 86 (34.7%) |
No | 144 (58.1%) | |
Missing | 18 (7.3%) |
aincluding asylum seekers and undocumented migrants