InterACT –Interprofessional Approaches for Conflict, Trauma & Torture Survivors

Can physiotherapy enhance physical, mental and social functioning in refugees and other torture survivors? This pilot maps Swiss trauma care models and co-develops a study protocol for integrated trauma rehabilitation.

Factsheet

  • Schools involved School of Health Professions
    School of Social Work
  • Institute(s) Physiotherapy
  • Strategic thematic field Thematic field "Caring Society"
  • Funding organisation BFH
  • Duration (planned) 01.01.2026 - 31.12.2026
  • Head of project Prof. Dr. Cornelia Anne Barth
  • Project staff Jessica Meyer
    Dr. Claske Dijkema
  • Partner Schweizer Netzwerk "Support for Torture Victims"
  • Keywords culturally sensitive care, displacement, diversity, forced-migration, functioning, gender sensitive care, integrated-care, interprofessional-care, migration, mixed-methods, participatory-research, physiotherapy, psychosocial-care, quality-of-life, peer-support, refugee-health, refugees, rehabilitation, torture-survivors, trauma, trauma-care, trauma-rehabilitation, violence

Situation

Chronic pain, depression, dissociation, social withdrawal and movement limitations are common symptoms after forced migration and violence. Swiss interprofessional care models offer psychosocial and medical support but do not systematically include physiotherapy as a defined core component. Our project explores the role of physiotherapy within integrated care and identifies requirements for its integration into existing care pathways.

Course of action

A participatory multicentre pilot study analyses Swiss models of trauma care with a focus on physiotherapy. Scoping reviews synthesise integrated care for refugees, trauma-informed physiotherapy competencies and relevant psychosocial components. Workshops in French- and German-speaking cantons inform a larger project on integrated trauma rehabilitation. Using mixed methods, we collaborate with stakeholders and affected persons to ensure inclusive design and outcomes.

Looking ahead

The pilot will prepare a larger multi-centre, multi-year and interprofessional study where we test diversity-sensitive combinations of onsite, digital, group and peer formats for feasibility, acceptability, impact and costs.

InterAct 2
Interprofessional Approaches for Conflict, Trauma and Torture Survivors

This project contributes to the following SDGs

  • 3: Good health and well-being
  • 10: Reduced inequalities
  • 16: Peace, justice and strong institutions