'I Can't Concentrate': A feasibility study with young refugees in Sweden on developing science-driven interventions for intrusive memories related to trauma
'I Can't Concentrate': A feasibility study with young refugees in Sweden on developing science-driven interventions for intrusive memories related to trauma
Background: The number of refugees is the highest ever worldwide. Many have experienced trauma in home countries or on their escape which has mental health sequelae. Intrusive memories comprise distressing scenes of trauma which spring to mind unbidden. Development of novel scalable psychological interventions is needed urgently. Aims: We propose that brief cognitive science-driven interventions should be developed which pinpoint a focal symptom alongside a means to monitor it using behavioural techniques. The aim of the current study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the methodology required to develop such an intervention. Method: In this study we recruited 22 refugees (16–25 years), predominantly from Syria and residing in Sweden. Participants were asked to monitor the frequency of intrusive memories of trauma using a daily diary; rate intrusions and concentration; and complete a 1-session behavioural intervention involving Tetris game-play via smartphone. Results: Frequency of intrusive memories was high, and associated with high levels of distress and impaired concentration. Levels of engagement with study procedures were highly promising. Conclusions: The current work opens the way for developing novel cognitive behavioural approaches for traumatized refugees that are mechanistically derived, freely available and internationally scalable.
Holmes, E.A.
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Ghaderi, A.
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Eriksson, E.
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Lauri, K.O.
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Kukacka, O.M.
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Mamish, M.
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James, E.L.
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Visser, R.M.
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23 February 2017
Holmes, E.A.
a6379ab3-b182-45f8-87c9-3e07e90fe469
Ghaderi, A.
bde65e3a-f713-442c-877a-8eca104bc69a
Eriksson, E.
58c948f8-9d46-43c5-888c-02c40e28f86a
Lauri, K.O.
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Kukacka, O.M.
6dc18724-c877-4f3d-9d8d-d3b60d063936
Mamish, M.
fc79acc8-4676-42e9-a5b1-7870f4ddc5c0
James, E.L.
9b88254e-d15d-4b8d-a321-b80f5a7692ac
Visser, R.M.
1b1ff5ef-85bc-4e59-aa28-8cbc73101904
Holmes, E.A., Ghaderi, A., Eriksson, E., Lauri, K.O., Kukacka, O.M., Mamish, M., James, E.L. and Visser, R.M.
(2017)
'I Can't Concentrate': A feasibility study with young refugees in Sweden on developing science-driven interventions for intrusive memories related to trauma.
Behavioural and Cognitive Psychotherapy, 45 (2).
(doi:10.1017/S135246581600062X).
Abstract
Background: The number of refugees is the highest ever worldwide. Many have experienced trauma in home countries or on their escape which has mental health sequelae. Intrusive memories comprise distressing scenes of trauma which spring to mind unbidden. Development of novel scalable psychological interventions is needed urgently. Aims: We propose that brief cognitive science-driven interventions should be developed which pinpoint a focal symptom alongside a means to monitor it using behavioural techniques. The aim of the current study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the methodology required to develop such an intervention. Method: In this study we recruited 22 refugees (16–25 years), predominantly from Syria and residing in Sweden. Participants were asked to monitor the frequency of intrusive memories of trauma using a daily diary; rate intrusions and concentration; and complete a 1-session behavioural intervention involving Tetris game-play via smartphone. Results: Frequency of intrusive memories was high, and associated with high levels of distress and impaired concentration. Levels of engagement with study procedures were highly promising. Conclusions: The current work opens the way for developing novel cognitive behavioural approaches for traumatized refugees that are mechanistically derived, freely available and internationally scalable.
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Published date: 23 February 2017
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Local EPrints ID: 507895
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/507895
ISSN: 1352-4658
PURE UUID: e49205ee-8bf9-4e1d-bc02-83e16936776e
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Date deposited: 07 Jan 2026 17:45
Last modified: 10 Jan 2026 05:07
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Contributors
Author:
E.A. Holmes
Author:
A. Ghaderi
Author:
E. Eriksson
Author:
K.O. Lauri
Author:
O.M. Kukacka
Author:
M. Mamish
Author:
E.L. James
Author:
R.M. Visser
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