# Promoting resilience and sexual and reproductive health among adolescent migrants: a comprehensive approach

**Authors:** Alexios Georgalis, Robert Thomson

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2025.1719581 · Frontiers in Psychiatry · 2026-02-09

## TL;DR

Migrant adolescents in Italy face mental health risks and lack access to sexual and reproductive health resources, but integrating these services with life-skills education can improve resilience and mental wellbeing.

## Contribution

This study explores how integrating SRH literacy and life-skills education can enhance resilience among migrant adolescents in Italy.

## Key findings

- Adolescents showed significant gaps in SRH knowledge and limited awareness of available health services.
- Youth with higher SRH literacy reported better mental health and greater confidence in navigating services.
- Longer-settled adolescents showed more adaptive gender attitudes compared to newly arrived peers.

## Abstract

Migrant adolescents in Italy face intersecting risks that compromise mental health, including trauma exposure, legal precarity, and systemic barriers to care. Sexual and reproductive health (SRH) is a critical yet often overlooked determinant of adolescent wellbeing. Despite international guidelines endorsing adolescent SRH rights, such domains are rarely integrated into psychiatric care for displaced youth.

We conducted a cross-sectional exploratory survey involving 58 migrant adolescents aged 15–17 years, all residing in Italy for less than five years. Data collection was facilitated by trained cultural mediators in Italian, Arabic, Bengali, French, and Urdu. The questionnaire assessed SRH knowledge, service awareness, gender attitudes, and self-reported resilience. Descriptive statistics were used to analyze item-level responses, supported by a narrative synthesis of resilience-oriented, life-skills-based interventions developed by UNFPA and UNICEF. Interpretation was grounded in trauma-informed and rights-based frameworks.

Findings revealed substantial SRH knowledge gaps, limited awareness of adolescent-friendly services, and frequent communication barriers with formal health providers. While patriarchal gender norms remained prevalent, attitudes showed signs of adaptation in longer-settled youth. Moderate-to-high resilience was observed across domains of self-efficacy, future orientation, and social connectedness. Notably, adolescents with greater SRH literacy reported higher mental health self-ratings and more confidence navigating local services.

Integrating SRH literacy and culturally adapted life-skills education into migrant psychiatry offers a promising pathway to enhance adolescent resilience and reduce psychiatric vulnerability. Trauma-informed, participatory models—delivered through trusted mediators—can address both knowledge gaps and emotional distress, aligning psychiatric care with the complex lived realities of migrant youth in Italy.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Trauma (MESH:D014947), headaches (MESH:D006261), Sleep difficulties (MESH:D012893), Sexual violence (MESH:D050035), STI's (MESH:D012749), abuse (MESH:D019966), psychiatric (MESH:D001523), anxiety (MESH:D001007), SRH confusion (MESH:D003221), psychiatric distress (MESH:D012128), PTSD (MESH:D013313), SRH (MESH:D060737), displacement (MESH:D006617), abortion (MESH:D000026), cognitive distortions (MESH:D006311), depression (MESH:D003866), stomach pain (MESH:D013272), unintended pregnancy (MESH:D011254)
- **Chemicals:** LARCs (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

69 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12926357/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12926357