| Literature DB >> 29163666 |
M Claire Greene1, Mark J D Jordans2,3, Brandon A Kohrt4,5, Peter Ventevogel6, Laurence J Kirmayer7,8, Ghayda Hassan9, Anna Chiumento10, Mark van Ommeren11, Wietse A Tol1,12.
Abstract
Delivery of effective mental health and psychosocial support programs requires knowledge of existing health systems and socio-cultural context. To respond rapidly to humanitarian emergencies, international organizations often seek to design programs according to international guidelines and mobilize external human resources to manage and deliver programs. Familiarizing international humanitarian practitioners with local culture and contextualizing programs is essential to minimize risk of harm, maximize benefit, and optimize efficient use of resources. Timely literature reviews on traditional health practices, cultural beliefs and attitudes toward mental health and illness, local health care systems and previous experiences with humanitarian interventions can provide international practitioners with crucial background information to improve their capacity to work efficiently and with maximum benefit. In this paper, we draw on experience implementing desk review guidance from the World Health Organization (WHO) and UNHCR, the United Nations Refugee Agency (2012) in four diverse humanitarian crises (earthquakes in Haiti and Nepal; forced displacement among Syrians and Congolese). We discuss critical parameters for the design and implementation of desk reviews, and discuss current challenges and future directions to improve mental health care and psychosocial support in humanitarian emergencies.Entities:
Keywords: Context; Culture; Desk review; Emergency; Humanitarian; Mental health; Psychosocial
Year: 2017 PMID: 29163666 PMCID: PMC5686886 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-017-0123-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Sample Table of Contents for a Desk Review [18]
| 1. Introduction |
| 2. General Context |
| 3. Mental health and psychosocial context |
| 4. Humanitarian context |
| 5. Conclusion |
| 6. References |
Summary of desk review methods used in four case examples
| When | Where | What | Why | Who | How | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Haiti (2010) | 3 weeks | Persons living in Haiti affected by the earthquake | Haitian mental health and services | To inform immediate and long-term efforts to improve mental health services in post-earthquake Haiti | 19 experts and student volunteers | Rapid review of academic databases to retrieve peer-reviewed and non-academic literature; Hand search of key resources |
| Nepal (2015) | 8 weeks | Persons living in Nepal affected by the earthquake | Mental health and psychosocial wellbeing in Nepal | To serve as a resource for humanitarian actors responding to the 2015 earthquakes in Nepal | 98 experts and volunteers | Rapid review of academic literature, agency websites and expert recommended resources; WHO/UNHCR MHPSS Toolkit Desk Review methods and structure; “Crowd writing” |
| Syria (2015) | 96 weeks | Persons residing within Syria and Syrian refugees affected by armed conflict | Cultural aspects of mental health and psychosocial wellbeing | To serve as a resource for MHPSS staff working with conflict-affected Syrians to assist in design and delivery of interventions | 68 experts | Review of academic and non-academic literature and reports; Hand search of key resources |
| Tanzania (2016) | 52 weeks | Adult female refugees from Eastern DRC with a history of SGBV affected by armed conflict | Mental health and psychosocial wellbeing in the context of SGBV in Congolese populations | To inform the development of a mental health and psychosocial intervention and the protocol for a randomized trial for Congolese survivors of SGBV in Nyarugusu refugee camp, Tanzania | 5 researchers/study investigators and staff | Review of academic literature and agency websites; Iterative drafting and revision process among investigators |
Abbreviations: DRC, Democratic Republic of the Congo; IASC, Inter-Agency Standing Committee; MHPSS, mental health and psychosocial support; SGBV, sexual and gender-based violence; UNHCR, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees; WHO, World Heath Organization
Access to desk reviews: Haiti (http://www.who.int/mental_health/emergencies/culture_mental_health_haiti_eng.pdf); Nepal (https://interagencystandingcommittee.org/system/files/20150622_nepal_earthquakes_mhpss_desk_review_150619.pdf); Syria: (http://www.unhcr.org/55f6b90f9.pdf); Tanzania (http://mhpss.net/?get=294/mental-health-and-psychosocial-wellbeing-in-congolese-refugee-survivors-of-gender-based-violence.pdf
Considerations for developing and conducting desk reviews
| For whom: Dissemination | |
| 1.1 | What is your plan for dissemination? Who is the primary end-user of the desk review and how will you ensure that they receive it? |
| 1.2 | What language is most commonly spoken by the end-users? Will the desk review need to be translated? Who will do the translation and who will check it? |
| 1.3 | What is your plan for evaluating the application and utility of the desk review in informing humanitarian response? |
| When: Determining the timeline | |
| 2.1 | When does this desk review need to be available to be useful for reasonably informing humanitarian response? |
| Where: Defining the target population and context | |
| 3.1 | Where is the target population and how are they defined in terms of geographic, social, and cultural characteristics? |
| 3.2 | Which sociocultural factors require particular attention? |
| Why: Defining the rationale and purpose | |
| 4.1 | Why has the particular agency or stakeholder requested the review at this time? |
| 4.2 | What is the purpose/objective(s)? How will it be used? |
| 4.3 | What gaps in knowledge among humanitarian responders will this desk review fill? |
| What: Defining the question and scope | |
| 5.1 | What aspects of mental health and psychosocial wellbeing, socio-cultural context and humanitarian response are most relevant to the context and purpose of the desk review? |
| 5.2 | Information from which populations (person, place and time) and issues might provide relevant data to inform mental health and psychosocial practices in the target population? |
| Who: Selection of the research team | |
| 6.1 | How many people are needed to achieve the objectives/purpose within the timeline? |
| 6.2 | Are there experts on mental health and psychosocial support from the specified target population/context available and able to contribute? |
| 6.3 | If the conduct of the desk review requires a large team(s), how will communication and tasks be coordinated? |
| 6.4 | What regional experts and stakeholders will review the report? |
| How: Selection of data collection and synthesis methods | |
| 7.1 | What data sources (e.g., academic, websites, agency reports, news sources, etc.) are relevant to the scope of the desk review? |
| 7.2 | What languages need to be included in the search? |
| 7.3 | What (combination of) search terms will identify the relevant literature? |
| 7.4 | Does the search strategy produce an adequate and manageable number of results (maximize sensitivity and specificity) relative to the resources available to conduct the review? |
| 7.4 | How will search results be documented? |
| 7.5 | How will literature be literature be reviewed to extract and synthesize relevant information? (e.g. use of structured recording forms) |
| 7.6 | How will reading and writing tasks be organized among team members. How will the final report be edited and formatted? |
| 7.7 | What level of detail is important for each section of the desk review? |
| 7.8 | Who will edit the final report for accuracy and consistent style? |