Building Equitable Newcomer Crisis Help

The BENCH Research Project is an evaluative research study designed to identify a service model that bridges critical gaps between newcomers and crisis intervention supports.

Building Equitable Newcomer Crisis Help

The Building Equitable Newcomer Crisis Help (BENCH) Research Project is a mixed-methods study exploring crisis intervention service models being offered to newcomers. BENCH research will review academic studies, different models used internationally, and the perspectives of local stakeholders to assess which delivery frameworks may work best for newcomers needing crisis support in Calgary.

Project Information

What is the BENCH Research Project?

The BENCH Research Project is an evaluative research study designed to identify a service model that bridges critical gaps between newcomers and crisis intervention supports. As part of this project, we will develop recommendations based on mixed methods research that incorporates findings from an environmental scan, peer-reviewed literature, and stakeholder interviews. 

What are the aims of BENCH research?

BENCH research aims to:

  • Identify a model that effectively bridges settlement organizations with expertise in culturally-responsive services with crisis intervention organizations with expertise in crisis response.

Why is this important?

Newcomers face significant cultural and linguistic barriers when faced with a crisis. Past studies have shown that such barriers include varied cultural understandings of mental health, unclear pathways to appropriate support, miscommunications through untrained or biased interpreters, and difficulty in finding an interpreter or cultural broker when urgently needed.

Research Overview

Methods 

Investigate existing peer-reviewed research focused on relevant studies in English-speaking and high-immigration countries. 

In concert with a literature review, conduct an environmental scan to identify existing models deployed in Canada, United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, and other high-immigration countries. The environmental scan will identify models that: 

  • Leverage a collaborative approach between settlement and crisis intervention organizations.
  • Focus on community-based resources and responses.
  • Connect language and/or cultural resources with crisis response teams. 

Distribute surveys to volunteers and staff of participating organizations: TIES, Centre for Newcomers, Calgary Catholic Immigration Services, and Distress Centre Calgary. The survey’s purpose is to gather contextual information about staff and volunteers’ awareness of existing protocols for culturally-responsive client support, relevant training, and other perspective-based information. 

Conduct a series of phased semi-structured interviews and focus groups with stakeholders throughout the project’s duration. Stakeholders include members of the project’s steering committee and staff from participating organizations which include TIES, Centre for Newcomers, Calgary Catholic Immigration Services, and Distress Centre Calgary.

Research Partners

Funded/Supported by