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
  17. Shah S, Archiwal A, Hussain S. Journalism in Chains: A Field Theory Approach to Understanding the Lived Experiences of Afghan Journalists. Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 2025;102(3):642 View
  18. Liddell B, Murphy S, Byrow Y, O’Donnell M, Mau V, McMahon T, Bryant R, Specker P, Nickerson A. Longitudinal Associations Between Sources of Uncertainty and Mental Health Amongst Resettled Refugees During the COVID-19 Pandemic. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2025;22(6):855 View
  19. Aav K, Joao‐Hussar I, Hansson S, Orru K. Communication‐Related Vulnerability of War Refugees: The Case of Ukrainians Escaping Russia's Invasion. Risk, Hazards & Crisis in Public Policy 2025;16(3) View
  20. Han R. Visualization, Interaction and Evaluation, and Memory: How Social Media Parenting Practices Mediate the Relationship Between Authoritative Parenting and Mental Health of Young Adult. Psychology Research and Behavior Management 2025;Volume 18:2053 View