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Submission to the National Inquiry into Children in Immigration Detention from

the Australian Association for Infant Mental Health (AAIMH)


Prepared by Dr Rosalind Powrie, BMBS, FRANZCP.

Aims of AAIMH
Focus of this Submission
Recommendations
References
Acknowledgments


Aims of AAIMH

The Australian Association for Infant Mental Health (AAIMH) is the Australian Affiliate of the World Association for Infant Mental Health. It aims to improve professional and public recognition that infancy is a critical period in psychosocial development for infants and the family and to provide a focus for multidisciplinary interaction and co-operation for those who are involved and interested in working with infants and caregivers.

In carrying out its aims the Association prepares reports and submissions to governments, other authorities, organizations and individuals on matters relating to infant and family health and welfare. The Association is pleased to take the opportunity to present such a report to the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Inquiry into Children in Immigration Detention particularly in relation to infants and very young children.

Focus of this Submission

In keeping with the submission guidelines and the specific experience and expertise of AAIMH the following areas relating to immigration detention and children will be addressed:

1. The psychological and social well being and development of infants and young children and their families in immigration detention.

2. Specific services required for young children and pregnant women in detention and on their release into the community.

3. Culture and its influence on the psychosocial well being of infants and their parents.

4. The impact of detention on the well being of young children.

5. The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child in relation to child asylum seekers.

Recommendations


1. The psychological and social well being and development of infants and young children in immigration detention.

The following factors provide a context for understanding the impact of detention on young refugee children and their families as they are well recognized as critical for the healthy emotional and social development of young children.

With this general understanding of the importance of early care giving on the mental health and development of children, specific factors for young refugee children in detention need to be understood.

Mental health of refugee parents- impacts on young children

In general, refugees experience very high rates of mental ill health and psychological distress ( RANZCP College Statement #46).

Refugee parents may have experienced torture, imprisonment, persecution and institutional violence by the political regimes of their country of origin, or have witnessed a spouse or close family members undergoing such experiences.

Many families prior to detention in Australia have experienced long and perilous journeys and been in transit for months or years in refugee camps or in countries where they have had no citizenship rights, lived in very poor and overcrowded housing and where basic needs have been barely met. Children are conceived and born in such situations of deprivation, uncertainty and with minimal or no health care.

Psychological distress and poor mental health is often chronic and continues after re-settlement and acquisition of relative safety. This stems from a myriad of complex factors including the consequences of traumatic stress, enormous grief and loss, social and cultural dislocation, language barriers, ongoing fears for family and friends left behind, physical health problems, loss of status and acculturation stressors.

Refugees in detention experience, in addition, ongoing uncertainty regarding their immigration status. This, of course, impacts on their mental health more acutely.

The effects of these factors and forces will compromise many refugee parents' capacity to care for their children.

More specifically both parental depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (common in adult refugees) have direct effects on the development of infants and young children.

Parents experiencing post-traumatic symptoms are often extremely irritable, have unstable moods and poorer impulse control. Infants experience these moods and behaviours as frightening and in turn are unintentionally traumatised by the parents' symptoms. This sets in train a series of difficult interactions, which if not alleviated, can lead to an insecure attachment and poorer social, cognitive and emotional outcomes for the child.

It is well known that depressed mothers in turn are less sensitive to their infants and are less likely to talk and look at their infants. In extreme cases this can result in emotional and physical neglect resulting in the infant's failure to thrive.

In disadvantaged populations, depression in mothers (and mothers in immigration detention are profoundly disadvantaged) has been shown to produce severe disturbances in the mother-infant interaction (Murray et al 1996).

Parents who are emotionally unavailable and irritable will experience difficulty managing the normal oppositional behaviour of toddlers leading to an increased risk of coercive and abusive discipline. Boys are particularly at risk of later anti-social behaviour and cognitive impairment in this context (Sharp 1995).

The following anecdotes illustrate the difficulties in recognition and prompt treatment of mental health problems of families in detention and the adverse consequences for their children

"One mother I saw had a generalized anxiety disorder. Her two and a half year old was accidentally burnt by her when she spilt a cup of tea on his leg. The burn was minor but to reassure the mother they were both admitted to the local hospital. The mother then became even more anxious. The child refused to walk and would only lie curled up in the foetal position in the mother's lap. This situation went on for some weeks until eventually the mother was given counselling and things improved."
(Dr Simon Lockwood, G.P., Woomera Detention Centre)

"A mother with a 5 month old baby presented with concerns about harming her child. The baby was removed from her care by child protection services and placed with another family in detention. The mother was severely depressed and possibly psychotic. She was finally admitted to the local hospital with her baby and treated with medication. It was reported she recovered and is back in detention with her baby."
(Dr Fiona Hawker, Psychiatrist, Rural & Remote Mental Health Service)

In this case adult mental health services had recommended an admission to a specialised mother infant unit which did not occur.

It is not known what, if any, after-care this mother and her infant were offered. Post-partum depression with intent to harm oneself or the infant is a medical emergency.

It usually requires immediate hospitalisation preferably in a specialised mother infant facility to ensure safety of both, treatment of the mother's illness and also to prevent separation of mother and child which can be detrimental to the attachment relationship. In addition, specific treatment for the mother-infant relationship is usually required, or at least needs to be monitored.

The Effect of Detention on Parenting

The effects of institutional living on parents in detention undermines and significantly limits their already compromised capacity to nurture and protect their children. There is little privacy for families, individuals are identified by numbers not name, parents lose their roles and responsibilities, there is regimentation, constant surveillance and in at least some detention centres, sparse recreation facilities for families.

"In detention parents of young children become completely disempowered…. They cannot cook for their children or do anything for their kids. They lose their self-esteem… they stop caring. Most of the parents I see have mental health problems, many of the mothers are depressed. Mothers of toddlers often don't care if they turn up for meals or if they wander off….mothers and children housed outside detention in the community housing project in Woomera do better. These children are better fed, and clothed, mothers are able to look after them better."
(Dr Simon Lockwood, G.P., Woomera Detention Centre)

Parents feel helpless, despairing and enormously guilty because they are unable to help improve their children's situation. Pregnant women in isolated centres such as Woomera experience further trauma and loss through the accepted practice of transferring women at 36 weeks gestation to regional hospitals for delivery. This vignette describes one such experience for a mother and her family with young children

A couple with a 2 year old and a baby aged 5 months repeatedly begged, "Please take our children, find a place for them away from here. He will change to a savage not a human. Please do something for a family to adopt him until we can care for him again. He doesn't trust in us anymore. He can't play, he won't eat, he can't sleep well".

This family had spent 9 months in detention and had recently had their application for refugee status refused. Mrs Z had her first child in the Middle East, in a normal, uncomplicated delivery and had breastfed him for 12 months. She was too distressed to tell me about the second child's birth so the story came from her husband. During the interview she was expressionless and almost mute, occasionally tears coursing down her face. She cared for her infant in a mechanically adequate way with no animation. She appeared helpless in the face of her older son's behaviour.

Her second child was born in a hospital 200 kms away by caesarian section that she says she did not understand or consent to. This occurred after a period of 4 weeks enforced bed rest, away from her husband and son, under guard in the hospital. She did not see her baby for some days and could not breast feed when she was returned to her. She was returned to the centre one week after delivery and given no follow up, apart from occasional visits to the detention centre nurse, who gave her panadol and wound dressings but did not help Mrs Z dress or clean her wound. The wound continued to weep for 6 weeks and remains painful. She feels violated and disenfranchised. The 2 year olds behaviour deteriorated during and after his separation from her. The parent's relationship was also clearly under stress, "He says I should be getting better everyday, instead I am getting worse".

The toddler was indeed angry and disruptive. He threw any offered toys away and spat at people, he attempted to eat bits of foam that lay on the floor. He repeatedly tried to leave the room and when he succeeded, wandered quite far until returned by a guard. His father said " You see his behaviour ? It is because we are sad and weeping all the time. He has lost his trust in us…..

His wife had an air of despair. She attempted to limit her son's behaviour but soon gave up. She asked to leave the interview to take him back to the compound. She remained quiet and withdrawn occasionally weeping throughout the interview, initially placing the baby in his pram in the corner of the room, facing the wall. She fed her without eye contact… The infant (at a developmental stage when most babies interact socially at every opportunity), made no attempt at eye contact and looked profoundly sad. She made little sound or complaint, but later became more animated when direct attempts were made by the interviewer to smile at and talk with her.

Mr Z feels unable to protect his children, impotent and trapped, reduced to less than human himself and unable to fulfill his role as father and husband. I asked whether his desire to have the children placed with another family came out of fear that he might hurt his child, and he said, partly this was true, relating an attempt to cut his own and his son's throat when their refugee application was rejected after 8 months of waiting. He says he was only stopped from hurting himself and his child by other detainees."

(This vignette submitted by Dr Sarah Mares, Child and Adolescent Psychiatrist )

Safety of infants and young children in detention

Clearly parents who are disempowered and depressed are less able to protect their children. In addition, events in the Woomera Detention Centre and to a lesser extent other centres have demonstrated without any doubt that detention is a dangerous place for children. Children of all ages have been exposed directly to adult violence, riots, hunger strikes, self mutilation and attempted suicide by other detainees. As there is no separate accommodation for families children are exposed to the extreme acting out and despair of adult detainees including in some cases their own parents.

"Three schools have been burnt down in 18 months, there is no pre-school- any equipment supplied to younger children is destroyed by the adolescent or adult male detainees…women and children need to be moved out….they cannot be protected in detention.
(Dr Simon Lockwood, G.P., Woomera Detention Centre)

Toddlers and pre-schoolers are exhibiting phobias and other forms of traumatic anxiety when exposed to reminders of violence in Woomera such as fire trucks and tractors. These anxieties continue on release into the community and cause disability. For instance, a three year old has, since his family's release to Adelaide, continued to exhibit phobias from his detention experience - even cyclone fencing causes him distress. (personal communication, Steve Thompson, Psychologist, STTARS - Survivors of Torture, Trauma and Rehabilitation Service).

While symptoms of trauma and distress may be more obvious in older children, infants only present with global problems in physical functioning- settling, feeding or sleeping difficulties, listlessness, apathy or irritability ( Schwartz et al 1994) which is likely to go unrecognised by staff in detention centres.

2. How is trauma and developmental harm detected and what services are required to treat infants and young children

Assessing young children for trauma related developmental harm and attachment difficulties requires specialised skills. Prompt access to child mental health services which can assist and support primary health workers or provide a direct service to refugee families is essential for such assessment.

Assessments of the parent's capacity to provide consistent protection, nurturing and stimulation appropriate to the developmental level of the child need to occur through direct observation of carer and infant and by assessing the mental health problems of parents. Parents require prompt access to mental health services to identify and treat these problems, and support in parenting their children whilst this occurs.

The child's family is central to the child's recovery from developmental harm. Refugee families will require continuing and high level support to assist with the many and ongoing environmental stressors they experience during detention and on release to enable the child's safety to be ensured over time.

Interventions targeting refugee parents and their infants should follow best practice guidelines in infant mental health this means high quality ante-natal and peri-natal care including screening for ante-natal and post-natal depression, parenting education, appropriate language and cognitive stimulation for children, regular visitation in their place of residence, family support, and the gamut of well baby care offered in the community.

All of these interventions must be delivered by services and persons who are culturally sensitive and inclusive of the values and beliefs of refugee families. Specialist refugee services, bilingual and bicultural workers should be utilised and work in collaboration with mainstream health services.

However a fundamental condition which must be met in order for any intervention to work is the child's safety. Detention poses, by its very nature ongoing threats to the physical and emotional health of children and therefore will undermine any therapeutic interventions and efforts.

3. Culture and its influence on the mental health of families

Infants begin learning about their culture from birth through the daily caregiving they receive. Cultural beliefs and practices give meaning to everyday life. Refugee families experience enormous cultural loss and bereavement on arrival in Australia and invariably experience "culture shock", the disorientation and confusion associated with attempts to understand new lifestyles, social structures, the geography, and the educational, health, welfare, legal and government systems which they must negotiate in order to re-settle.

A strong sense of cultural identity and maintaining access to one's cultural and religious community (religious figures, schools, education and other resources) can enhance resilience and coping in the face of these tumultuous changes.

Detention, by its institutional nature must severely reduce the opportunities for families to practise their culture and religion because they simply do not have access to like communities, places of worship, rituals and activities of cultural significance.

4. Impact of Immigration Detention on the well being of children

The evidence previously cited and the vignettes discussed show that the policy of mandatory detention of families who seek asylum in Australia has direct and harmful consequences for families of all children- infants and young children being especially vulnerable. In summary

5. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and children in Immigration Detention

The rights of child detainees in Australia are far from being met under the Convention for reasons already outlined in this submission. These include the right to

Recommendations

References

Kowalenko, N., Barnett, B., Fowler, C., Matthey, S., (2000) The Perinatal Period Early Interventions for Mental Health. Vol 4 in R Kosky,A Hanlon, G Martin& C Davis (Series Eds.), Clinical Approaches to early intervention in child and adolescent mental health. Adelaide: Australian Early Intervention Network for Mental Health in Young People

Murray, L.,Hipwell, A., Hooper, R., Stein, A, and Cooper, P., (1996) The cognitive development of 5-year-old children of post-natally depressed mothers. Journal of Child Psychology & Psychiatry & Related Disciplines, 37(8).927-935

Perry, B., Pollard, R., Blakley, T., Baker, W., Vigilante, D. (1995) Childhood Trauma, the Neurobiology of Adaptation and Use-dependant Development of the Brain:How states become Traits, Infant Mental Health Journal 16 (4) 271 - 291.

RANZCP (2000) Position Statement #46 Principles on the provision of mental health services to asylum seekers

Sharp, D., Hay, D., Pawlby, S., Schmucker, G., Allen, H.& Kumar, R.(1995) The impact of post-natal depression on boy's intellectual development. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 36, 1315-1336

Schwarz, E., Perry, B.,(1994) The Post-traumatic response in children and adolescents. Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 17(2): 311-326

Wolff, S., (1994) The Scope of Infant Mental Health: Pointers to helpful interventions Newsletter of the Australian Association of Infant Mental Health, Vol 6,4, December 1994.

Acknowledgments

On behalf of AAIMH I would like to thank Dr. Sarah Mares and Dr. Louise Newman for their helpful comments and contributions in the preparation of this submission.

Last Updated 9 January 2003.