| Literature DB >> 32884581 |
Theresa S Betancourt1, Katrina Keegan1, Jordan Farrar1, Robert T Brennan1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Globally, one in four children lives in a country affected by armed conflict or disaster often accompanied by exposure to a range of adversities including violent trauma and loss. Children involved with armed groups (often referred to as "child soldiers") typically exhibit high levels of mental health needs linked to their experiences. The Longitudinal Study of War-Affected Youth (LSWAY) in Sierra Leone is a seventeen-year prospective longitudinal study of the long-term effects of children's experiences in the country's eleven-year (1991-2002) civil war on their adult mental health and functioning in addition to exploring the potential mechanisms by which intergenerational transmission of emotional and behavioral disruptions due to war trauma may operate. LSWAY illuminates how war-related and post-conflict experiences shape long-term adult functioning, family dynamics, and developmental outcomes in offspring. DISCUSSION: The LSWAY study utilizes mixed methodologies that incorporate qualitative and quantitative data to unpack risk and protective factors involved in social reintegration, psychosocial adjustment, parenting, and interpersonal relationships. To date, study findings demonstrate striking levels of persistent mental health problems among former child soldiers as adults with consequences for their families, but also risk and protective patterns that involve family- and community-level factors. This case study examines the course of LSWAY from inception through implementation and dissemination, including building on the study results to design and evaluate several intervention models.Entities:
Keywords: Child soldiers; Ebola virus disease; Ethics; Global adversity; Humanitarian crisis; Implementation science; Intergenerational trauma; Longitudinal research; Post-conflict; Risk and protective factors
Year: 2020 PMID: 32884581 PMCID: PMC7461150 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-020-00308-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Fig. 1Research design and respondents by wave of data collection
Summary of research challenges and strategies in humanitarian contexts
| Challenge | Strategies | |
|---|---|---|
| Ethical | Dismantling power differentials between researchers and vulnerable populations | ▪CBPR to ensure community engagement, co-learning, and involvement |
| ▪Community advisory boards to reinforce and enrich investigation | ||
| Ensuring appropriateness, sensitivity and relevance in local contexts | ▪Employ an ecological approach to investigate individual, family, and community influences | |
| ▪Mixed-methods to establish culturally meaningful and valid assessments | ||
| ▪Focus group discussions to refine items and determine cultural appropriateness | ||
| ▪Develop locally derived measures in close consultation with local staff and community members | ||
| Addressing risk of harm cases | ▪Anticipate risk of harm cases and develop rigorous protocols to ensure participant safety, appropriate referrals, and follow-up | |
| Capacity/Sustainability | Developing long-term, stable partnerships | ▪Develop a capacity-building core to develop and deliver innovative, locally relevant training and technical assistance programs |
| Establishing systems of follow-up | ||
| Supporting rather than overburdening professionals | ||
| Logistical | Adapting to unforeseen, adverse circumstances | ▪Anticipate and plan for them. When that fails, accept the challenge presented, make appropriate adaptations to the research process and consider opportunities |
| Conceptualizations and Assessment of Mental Health in Diverse Cultures and Contexts | Assessing mental health problems, especially in the absence of validated screening tools | ▪Involve local teams in qualitative data collection to understand stigma and co- morbidity and to examine protective processes linked to resilient outcomes |
| Addressing stigma around mental health | ▪Use mixed methods models to select, adapt, or create measures of mental health and related constructs | |
| Addressing co-morbidity | ||
| ▪Use psychometric methods to subject tools to rigorous validation, testing and refinement | ||
Fig. 2Model for designing and evaluating mental health services in diverse cultural settings