| Literature DB >> 26965476 |
Linda Kaljee1, Liying Zhang2, Lisa Langhaug3, Kelvin Munjile4, Stephen Tembo5, Anitha Menon6, Bonita Stanton7, Xiaoming Li8, Jacob Malungo9.
Abstract
Orphaned and vulnerable children (OVC) experience poverty, stigma, and abuse resulting in poor physical, emotional, and psychological outcomes. The Teachers' Diploma Programme on Psychosocial Care, Support, and Protection is a child-centered 15-month long-distance learning program focused on providing teachers with the knowledge and skills to enhance their school environments, foster psychosocial support, and facilitate school-community relationships. A randomized controlled trial was implemented in 2013-2014. Both teachers (n=325) and students (n=1378) were assessed at baseline and 15-months post-intervention from randomly assigned primary schools in Lusaka and Eastern Provinces, Zambia. Multilevel linear mixed models (MLM) indicate positive significant changes for intervention teachers on outcomes related to self-care, teaching resources, safety, social support, and gender equity. Positive outcomes for intervention students related to future orientation, respect, support, safety, sexual abuse, and bullying. Outcomes support the hypothesis that teachers and students benefit from a program designed to enhance teachers' psychosocial skills and knowledge.Entities:
Keywords: Sub-Saharan Africa; orphaned and vulnerable children; psychosocial support; randomized controlled trial; schooling and education
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26965476 DOI: 10.1080/13548506.2016.1153682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Health Med ISSN: 1354-8506 Impact factor: 2.423