Services

PRRA Immigration Evaluations - Ottawa, Ontario

Now providing virtual sessions all over Ontario

PRRA IMMIGRATION EVALUATIONS

When removal is imminent, a careful clinical evaluation can make a difference.

This service offers Immigration Evaluations for PRRA-related matters, conducted by a Registered Psychotherapist with extensive experience working with refugee and newcomer populations, in English, Arabic, and Armenian.

Immigration Evaluations

Trauma-Informed Interviewing

No Legal Advice

About this work

People referred for PRRA-related evaluations may be living with trauma, fear of return, family separation, and intense uncertainty. A clinical evaluation can help document that reality, clearly and with care, for potential use in a legal setting.
The role of this service is evaluative and clinical, not legal.

The Stakes of
a Pre-Removal Risk Assessment

A Pre-Removal Risk Assessment is one of the few formal protections available to someone facing removal from Canada. For people affected by recent changes in refugee law, it may be the primary pathway remaining.

Bill C-12 introduced new asylum ineligibility rules while preserving access to PRRA for affected individuals. For some people whose claims may not be referred to the IRB under the new rules, PRRA may remain an important protection pathway. This is why clear PRRA-related Immigration Evaluation services may now be especially relevant in certain cases.

This website describes an Immigration Evaluation service only. It does not offer legal services, legal eligibility advice, legal strategy, or representation. Those functions belong to authorized immigration lawyers or licensed consultants.

Clinical Documentation. Clear Boundaries.

Immigration Evaluations

Assessment and documentation of trauma-related symptoms, functioning, stressors, vulnerability, and relevant mental health or contextual factors connected to the referral question.

Trauma-Informed Interview Process

An assessment process built around your pace and your safety, designed to document your experience without retraumatizing you.

Clinical Documentation for Legal Context

A written evaluation report that may be shared with counsel when authorized by the client and when clinically appropriate, remaining clearly within clinical scope.

Clients and Counsel

This service may be appropriate for:
  • People whose trauma history and current mental health may be relevant to PRRA-related documentation.
  • Cases involving fear of return, psychological deterioration, family separation, or layered vulnerability.
  • Legal counsel seeking a clinically rigorous evaluation report that is clearly scoped, reproducible in its methodology, and prepared by a Registered Psychotherapist with direct experience in immigration evaluation contexts.
 
This service does not:
  • Advise whether someone should file a PRRA.
  • Complete legal forms or prepare legal arguments.
  • Guarantee protection, approval, or any immigration outcome.
  • Determine whether someone meets PRRA legal criteria.

Clinical Experience
That Is Specific to This Work

Immigration evaluations are a distinct clinical task. General mental health training does not automatically prepare a clinician to document trauma in the context of removal risk or humanitarian circumstances, to navigate the boundary between clinical opinion and legal analysis, or to produce reports that hold up in a legal setting. This work requires specific preparation.

Mego Nerses is a Registered Psychotherapist with fifteen years of clinical experience working specifically with refugee and newcomer populations. He has formal training in conducting immigration evaluations and has produced PRRA and H&C reports across a range of complex cases involving trauma, family separation, persecution history, and layered vulnerability.

He trains mental health clinicians in immigration evaluation practice through workshops delivered across Canada, a reflection of the depth of his engagement with this area of work.

In 2017, Mego Nerses received the Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association Humanitarian Award, in recognition of his clinical work with refugee and newcomer populations.

Evaluations are conducted in English, Arabic, and Armenian, removing a significant barrier for many of the people this work is designed to serve.

Trauma, PTSD, Refugees, LGBTQ, Sex therapy, relationship therapy, poly relationship, immigration Canada

Frequently Asked Questions

No. This page describes an Immigration Evaluation service only. It does not offer legal services or immigration representation.
Under new asylum ineligibility rules introduced by Bill C-12, affected individuals may still have access to PRRA. For some people facing removal, this makes PRRA especially significant.
The report distinguishes clearly between self-report, record review, clinical observations, and clinical opinion. It is scoped to the referral question and written for use in a legal context without crossing into legal analysis.
Evaluations are available in English, Arabic, and Armenian. Language needs are confirmed at the initial consultation.
Yes, where authorized by the client and clinically appropriate, the written evaluation may be shared with counsel as part of broader documentation.
No. This service provides clinical documentation. It cannot predict or guarantee any immigration outcome.

Find Out Whether an Evaluation Is the Right Step

To find out whether an Immigration Evaluation is appropriate for your situation or your client's case, request a confidential consultation. Fees are discussed at the initial consultation. Response time is typically within [X] business days.

The consultation determines whether an Immigration Evaluation is appropriate. It is not a consultation for legal advice.

Mego Nerses, RP

Registered Psychotherapist (CRPO)

Ottawa and Toronto, Ontario | Virtual services across Ontario
Languages: English, Arabic, Armenian
Tel: (613) 266.6203

Immigration Evaluations and clinical documentation for PRRA-related matters.

Self-Assessment Quiz
Is Therapy Right for Me?

You’re not broken. You’re carrying a lot. Let’s check in

Answer these 5 short questions to see if therapy might help you right now.

I often feel like I’m carrying more than I can say.
It’s hard for me to truly unwind, even during quiet moments.
I’ve been through things that others don’t understand.
I repeat the same patterns all the time.
I want to feel more like myself again.
Results:
(No storage or data collected):
If you answered “yes” to 2 or more:
You might benefit from speaking with a therapist. Let’s talk.
If you answered “no” to most:
That’s okay. Therapy isn’t only for crisis. If you’re curious or uncertain, I’d still be honoured to meet.

IMPORTANT NOTICE

For the time being, we will be conducting appointments exclusively through virtual means.

Thank you for your understanding.

Experience You Can Count On

About MEGO NERSES

I am an Ottawa-based Registered Psychotherapist and have a full-time private practice. In the past, I worked in social service agencies for many years. I offer individual, relationship, and sex therapy in English, Arabic, and Armenian to adults 18+, and I do not work with minors.

In 2011, I earned a master’s degree in Counselling from the University of Ottawa. I am a Registered Psychotherapist in Ontario (CRPO#001132) with the College of Registered Psychotherapists of Ontario. In addition, I am a Certified Counsellor with the Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association (CCPA#3058). My clinical training focuses on relationship and sex therapy and trauma/PTSD. Since 2013, I have been at Algonquin College as a seasonal professor, teaching courses in mental health and addiction.

I feel privileged to have had the opportunity to publish peer-reviewed articles and contribute chapters concerning Counselling, coming out, and trauma related explicitly to LGBTQ+ refugees and newcomers to Canada. I have presented numerous workshops and continue to offer trainings nationally and internationally on the mental health of LGBTQI+ and SOGIE refugees and asylum seekers.

 

Professional Work

Early in my professional career, I specialized in individual therapy and served clients with depression, anxiety, PTSD, and grief. Since then, I have taken my clinical work to a higher level and gained more experience in four areas: PTSD and Trauma, Sexuality and Gender Identity, Sex and Relationship Therapy, and Refugee mental health issues. I have received various trainings in these areas since choosing to specialize. As an example, I received training from Division 56, Trauma Psychology, Physicians for Human Rights, and the Global Institute of Forensic Research in writing immigration evaluations for immigration courts. Furthermore, I have completed multiple trainings in trauma/PTSD therapy and relationship therapy (Poly. Kink). I have participated in numerous training opportunities in the field of sex therapy, sexuality, and gender identity. 

I am a LGBTQI+/poly/kink/CNM supportive and informed therapist.

Therapeutic approaches
In addition to Narrative Exposure Therapy for PTSD (NET), I have also been trained in Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) for PTSD and Experiential Therapy and Focusing. I integrate social justice and rights-based principles into my work as a trauma-informed therapist.

Awards
In recognition of my dedication to helping LGBTQ+ refugees and asylum seekers in Canada, I received the 2017 Humanitarian Award from the Canadian Counselling and Psychotherapy Association (CCPA).

AffiliationsI have an international affiliate membership with Division 56, Trauma Psychology, the American Psychological Association (APA), and the Global Institute of Forensic Research.

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