| Literature DB >> 35805457 |
Michel Dückers1,2,3, Wera van Hoof1, Andrea Willems1, Hans Te Brake1.
Abstract
High quality mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) guidelines are indispensable for policy and practice to address the mental health consequences of disasters. This contribution complements a review that assessed the methodological quality of 13 MHPSS guidelines. We analyzed the content of the four highest-ranking guidelines and explored implications for disaster risk reduction (DRR). A qualitative explorative thematic analysis was conducted. The four guidelines proved largely similar, overlapping or at least complementary in their MHPSS definitions, stated purpose of the guidelines, user and target groups, terminology, and models used. Many recommended MHPSS measures and interventions were found in all of the guidelines and could be assigned to five categories: basic relief, information provision, emotional and social support, practical support, and health care. The guidelines stress the importance of monitoring needs and problems, evaluating the effect of service delivery, deliberate implementation and preparation, and investments in proper conditions and effective coordination across professions, agencies, and sectors. The MHPSS knowledge base embedded in the guidelines is comprehensive, coherent, and sufficiently universal to serve as the "overarching framework" considered missing yet vital for the integration of MHPSS approaches in DRR. Although application contexts differ geographically, this common ground should allow policymakers and practitioners globally to plan, implement, and evaluate MHPSS actions contributing to DRR, ideally together with target groups.Entities:
Keywords: DRR; guidelines; mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS); quality
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35805457 PMCID: PMC9265945 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19137798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Figure 1Disaster risk reduction through knowledge development and application. Shown here are two focal areas with series of steps that ideally influence each other. Knowledge about needs, problems, risks, and vulnerabilities, generated and shared in Focal area 1 can inform the activities in Focal area 2 to mitigate issues of concern. The exchange between stakeholders from science, policy, and practice is important to produce knowledge and tools (co-learning) based on scientific methods (verified, tested) and relevant for policy and practice (support, ownership).
MHPSS guidelines: definitions, purpose, user groups, and target groups.
| Guidelines | MHPSS Definition | Purpose | User Groups | Target Groups |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IASC, | A composite term to describe any type of local or outside support that aims to protect or promote psychosocial well-being and/or prevent or treat mental disorder. | Enable humanitarian actors and communities to plan, establish, and coordinate a set of minimum multi-sectoral responses to protect and improve people’s mental health and psychosocial well-being in the midst of an emergency. Additionally, list concrete strategies for mental health and psychosocial support to be considered, mainly before and after the acute emergency phase. | Humanitarian actors including community-based organizations, government authorities, United Nations organizations, NGOs, and donors operating in emergency settings at the local, national, and international levels. | Young children and care givers; people with severe physical, neurological, or mental disabilities or disorders; women (e.g., pregnant women, (single) mothers, widows, and, in some cultures, unmarried adult women and teenage girls); men (e.g., ex-combatants, young men at risk of detention, abduction, or being targets of violence); people exposed to extremely stressful events/trauma; people experiencing severe social stigma; people at specific risk of human rights violations (e.g., political activists, ethnic or linguistic minorities); helpers and staff; refugees; internally displaced persons; migrants in irregular situations; elderly; people in institutions (e.g., orphans, elderly, people with neurological/mental disabilities or disorders); extremely poor people. |
| Impact, | All support and care focused on the psychological well-being and the health of people affected, provided by the user group of the guideline, in the acute and recovery phase, for the individual as well as groups. | Offer a frame of reference and a tool for providing MHPSS. Facilitate quality improvement, optimize MHPSS, and professionalize the user group of the guidelines. | Governments and public services, aid workers (professionals and volunteers), and their organizations. | All relevant groups within the affected population including people with (a history of) psychiatric problems; adolescents; children; mothers with young children; ethnic minorities; migrants; refugees; people who previously experienced potentially shocking events; people affected with limited access to social support and resources; affected staff members. |
| OPSIC, | Providing a humanitarian response in ways that are beneficial to the mental health and psychosocial well-being of the beneficiaries. | Point users to relevant guidelines, resources, and tools for planning and implementing MHPSS programs at all phases of response and in all types of disasters, and with all possible target groups. | Decision-makers, crisis managers (including incident command and psychosocial crisis managers), mental health professionals in multi-agency coordination groups, and practitioners. | All relevant groups within the affected population; children and adolescents; elderly; disabled persons; refugees; helpers (staff and volunteers); people with severe mental disorders; marginalized people; women and girls. |
| Red Cross, | Encompass internationally recognized, evidence-based MHPSS standards and practices, combined with the expertise, experience, and views of mental health professionals who have worked in armed conflict and other violence. They are designed to be adapted and developed over time, and set out a framework of ethical principles, common definitions, and recommended procedures to be applied to the ICRC’s MHPSS activities. | Local, national, and international Red Cross organizations. | People affected by emergencies; victims of (sexual) violence; hospitalized weapon-wounded patients; families of victims/missing persons; helpers; people deprived of their liberty and former detainees; people with a physical or mental disability; children (e.g., separated from their families, associated with armed groups); elderly; marginalized social groups within the community. |
Frequency of Terminology in MHPSS guidelines.
| Term | IASC | Impact | OPSIC | Red Cross | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focal area 1 | Resilience | 9 | 35 | 197 | 5 |
| Vulnerable/Vulnerability/Vulnerabilities | 26 | 11 | 71 | 35 | |
| Risk/Risks (Risk factors) | 133 (2) | 17 (30) | 209 (15) | 19 (5) | |
| Needs | 56 | 66 | 271 | 376 | |
| Problem/Problems | 102 | 84 | 80 | 57 | |
| Disorder/Disorders | 111 | 13 | 82 | 69 | |
| Trauma/Traumatic | 12 (20) | 11 (10) | 145 (138) | 34 (20) | |
| PTSD * | 11 | 14 | 211 | 2 | |
| Focal area 2 | Prevent/Preventive/Prevention | 75 | 17 | 194 | 28 |
| Assessment/Assessments | 153 | 1 | 270 | 80 | |
| Needs assessment/assessments | 2 | 1 | 28 | 34 | |
| Screening/Screened | 4 | 11 | 50 | 5 | |
| Monitoring | 52 | 3 | 93 | 37 | |
| Evaluation/Evaluations | 36 | 28 | 115 | 19 | |
| Monitoring and evaluation/evaluating | 27 | 0 | 14 | 28 | |
| Coordination | 100 | 4 | 74 | 4 | |
| Preparation/Prepare/Prepared/Preparedness | 35 | 29 | 278 | 8 | |
| Implementation | 24 | 12 | 31 | 32 | |
| Training | 121 | 3 | 211 | 78 | |
| Resources | 147 | 7 | 268 | 57 | |
| Conditions ** | 32 | 5 | 29 | 21 | |
| Focal areas 1 and 2 | Circumstances | 2 | 11 | 20 | 12 |
| Context/Contexts | 40 | 25 | 84 | 18 | |
| Phase/Phases | 47 | 66 | 182 | 2 | |
| Culturally appropriate/sensitive/specific | 52 | 4 | 24 | 4 | |
| Ethics/Ethical | 29 | 0 | 63 | 15 | |
| Human rights | 91 | 0 | 38 | 3 |
* Post-traumatic stress disorder; ** Health conditions excluded. Dutch translation in Appendix A.
Figure 2Six Models (Ungar 2011 [51], Hobfoll et al. 2007 [52], IASC 2007 [17], Gersons 2005 [55], Dückers & Thormar 2015 [47], Nolan et al. 1996 [56]).
Five Categories of Recommended Measures and Interventions.
| Basic Aid | Information | Emotional and Social Support | Practical Support | Health Care |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Shelter 1,2,3,4 Evacuation 1,3 Basic medical assistance and (continuation of) medication 1,2,3,4 Food and water (nutrition) 1,2,3,4 Hygiene/Sanitation 1,2,3,4 Family reunification 1,2,3,4 Host families 1,2,3 Replacement housing 1,3,4 |
Psychoinformation/Psychoeducation 1,2,3,4 Sensitization to MHPSS issues 2,3 Information about the emergency situation, relief efforts, and status of the affected (e.g., family members) 1,2,3,4 Information meetings (e.g., for affected population, care givers) 1,2,3,4 Local/national referral information website/telephone services (e.g., also for other service providers incl. MHPSS workers) 3,4 Written leaflets 1,2,3,4 (Social) Media (e.g., radio, TV) 1,2,3,4 |
Psychological first aid (PFA) 1,2,3,4 Peer support 1,2,3,4 Support after (ambiguous) loss/grief 1,2,3,4 Office consultations (when home visits are not feasible) 2 (Pre-)School interventions 1,3 Group-based interventions 1,2,3
Family-based interventions 1,2,3 Religious, cultural, and spiritual supports 1,2,3,4 Humanitarian assistance center/Reception center/One-stop shop (physical or virtual) 3,4 Telephone helpline 3 Commemorative activities 2,3,4 |
Provision of means of communication 4 Transport 2,3,4 Legal support and testimony services 1,2,3,4 Financial support 2,3,4 Compensation 4 Education 1,2,3 Rehabilitation services: e.g., employment services 1,2,3 Administrative support 2,4 Help with household chores 4 Family tracing services 1,2,3 Insurance policy/Reimbursement for MHPSS volunteers 1,3 |
Ensure access to more specialized (mental) health care 1,2,3,4 Mental health triage 1,2,3,4 Screening (risk and vulnerability factors) 1,2,3,4 Comprehensive mental health assessment (surveys based on cross-culturally validated standardized instruments) 1,2,3,4 Clinical counselling 1,2,3,4 Psychotherapy 1,2,3,4 (e.g., Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) 3,4,* and Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) 3,4) Interventions in case of substance use/addiction 1,3,4 Pharmacological treatment 1,2,3 |
1 IASC guidelines; 2 Red Cross guidelines; 3 OPSIC guidelines; 4 Impact guidelines; * Not recommended for acute stress disorder.
Dutch version of terminology used to fill Table 2.
| Focal area 1 | Veerkracht (17) Zelfredzaamheid (18) |
| Kwetsbaar/Kwetsbaarheid/Kwetsbaarheden/Kwetsbare (11) | |
| Risico/Risico’s (17) Risicofactoren (30) | |
| Behoeften (66) | |
| Probleem/Problemen (84) | |
| Stoornis/Stoornissen (13) | |
| Trauma/Traumatisch (21) | |
| PTSS (14) | |
| Focal area 2 | Preventie/Preventief/Preventieve (17) |
| [no translation for Assessment/Assessments] (-) | |
| Behoeftepeilingen (1) | |
| Screening (10) Screeningonderzoek (1) | |
| Monitor/Monitoring (3) | |
| Evaluatie/Evaluaties (28) | |
| Monitoring and evaluatie (0) | |
| Coördinatie/Coördinatietaak/Coördinatietaken (4) | |
| Preparatie (9) Voorbereiden/Voorbereiding (20) | |
| Implementatie (12) | |
| Training (3) | |
| Middelen (7) | |
| Condities (1) Randvoorwaarden (4) | |
| Focal areas 1 and 2 | Omstandigheden (11) |
| Context (25) | |
| Fase/Fasen (66) | |
| Cultuurspecifiek/Cultuurspecifieke (4) | |
| Ethiek/Ethisch (0) | |
| (Mensen)rechten (0) |