Community-level mental health and psychosocial support during armed conflict : a cohort study from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mali, and Nigeria / Ida Andersen, Rodolfo Rossi and Ives Hubloue
Community-level mental health and psychosocial support during armed conflict : a cohort study from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mali, and Nigeria
Author zone:
Ida Andersen, Rodolfo Rossi and Ives Hubloue
Host item entries:
Frontiers in public health, Vol. 10, March 2022, 16 p.
Physical description:
graph., tabl.
Languages:
English
General Note:
Bibliography : p. 15-16
Abstract:
Community-level mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) was the first type of MHPSS program launched by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) back in 2004. Standardized beneficiary-level monitoring was put in place in late 2018. This is the first study to explore whether this type of program correlates, as intended, with reduced psychological distress and increased daily functioning. Between December 2018 and June 2020, 6,413 victims of violence received MHPSS through 32 community-level projects in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Mali and Nigeria. Symptoms of psychological distress (IES-R or DASS21) and daily functioning (ICRC scale) were assessed before and after the intervention and logistical regression models were used to identify predictors of these symptoms. The study concluded that receiving community-level MHPSS is associated with increased wellbeing among the vast majority of beneficiaries. To further enhance the intended health outcomes, it is recommended to increase the length of treatment per beneficiary (30 days minimum) and address, where relevant, the financial consequences of violence.
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