Hello, I'm Suzan Song, Director of the Division of Child, Adolescent, and Family Psychiatry of George Washington University, and a Humanitarian Protecting Advisor for survivors of forced displacement globally and domestically. There has been an unprecedent surge in the number of displaced people worldwide, including refugees, asylum seekers, undocumented immigrants and unaccompanied minors. Around the world, more than 65 million people are currently displaced by war, armed conflict or persecution. As of early 2018, almost 31 million children worldwide were displaced by violence and conflict. If these current trends continue, one in one hundred people will be a refugee in the near future. Unfortunately, most refugees and survivors of force-displacement will not receive needed mental health care. due to discrecy of services, lack of access to qualified care, and stigma against mental disorders. Refugees are those who've fled their country of origin due to well-founded fears of persecution based on race, religion, nationality, political opinion or membership in a particular social group. Where as refugees request protection while overseas and they're given permission to enter the US, People seeking asylum also have a well-founded fear of persecution. But they seek protection while inside the US. Refugees and other conflict affected persons are reported to have a 15 to 30 percent prevalence of PTSD and depression, compared to the 3.5% prevalence of PTSD among non-refugee populations. The strongest predictors of poor mental health are exposure to torture and a cumulative number of traumatic events. But torture, separation from family, stressful asylum processes, isolation and disadvantage in the host country all worsen mental health. The post-migration environment, mainly prolonged detention, insecure immigration status, poor access of services and limitations on work and education can worsen mental health. These do not provide the full scope of emotional issues that many conflict defected person face including complicated grief, complex trauma, despair, isolation, anger and lack of trust. Many people are experiencing normal responses to very abnormal experiences. Over time, most refugees show low or no symptoms. A small number show a pattern of gradual recovery and a small minority remain chronic. So we need to evaluate the distinction between situational forms of distress and a clear mental disorder for refugees. We do this by focusing on a dynamic interplay of exposure to past traumatic experiences, ongoing daily stressors and the core psycho social systems that one is embedded in. Psychiatrists can help these populations with culturally competent clinical work with refugees and asylum seekers. At a policy level by conducting asylum evaluations and at the advocacy level by promoting equity of access, sustainability of services for refugees and forcibly displaces people, and by partnering with inter-disciplinary community members such as lawyers, educators and policy makers to provide a safe system for which refugees and survivors of forced displacement can rely on.