Department of Global Health and Population, François-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
J Child Psychol Psychiatry. 2013 Jan;54(1):17-36. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7610.2012.02620.x. Epub 2012 Oct 12.
This article reviews the available quantitative research on psychosocial adjustment and mental health among children (age <18 years) associated with armed forces and armed groups (CAAFAG)--commonly referred to as child soldiers.
PRISMA standards for systematic reviews were used to search PubMed, PsycInfo, JSTOR, and Sociological Abstracts in February 2012 for all articles on former child soldiers and CAAFAG. Twenty-one quantitative studies from 10 countries were analyzed for author, year of publication, journal, objectives, design, selection population, setting, instruments, prevalence estimates, and associations with war experiences. Opinion pieces, editorials, and qualitative studies were deemed beyond the scope of this study. Quality of evidence was rated according to the systematic assessment of quality in observational research (SAQOR).
According to SAQOR criteria, among the available published studies, eight studies were of high quality, four were of moderate quality, and the remaining nine were of low quality. Common limitations were lack of validated mental health measures, unclear methodology including undefined sampling approaches, and failure to report missing data. Only five studies included a comparison group of youth not involved with armed forces/armed groups, and only five studies assessed mental health at more than one point in time. Across studies, a number of risk and protective factors were associated with postconflict psychosocial adjustment and social reintegration in CAAFAG. Abduction, age of conscription, exposure to violence, gender, and community stigma were associated with increased internalizing and externalizing mental health problems. Family acceptance, social support, and educational/economic opportunities were associated with improved psychosocial adjustment.
Research on the social reintegration and psychosocial adjustment of former child soldiers is nascent. A number of gaps in the available literature warrant future study. Recommendations to bolster the evidence base on psychosocial adjustment in former child soldiers and other war-affected youth include more studies comprising longitudinal study designs, and validated cross-cultural instruments for assessing mental health, as well as more integrated community-based approaches to study design and research monitoring.
本文综述了有关武装部队和武装团体(简称儿童兵)中儿童(年龄<18 岁)心理社会适应和心理健康的现有定量研究。
使用 PRISMA 系统评价标准,于 2012 年 2 月在 PubMed、PsycInfo、JSTOR 和 Sociological Abstracts 上搜索了所有关于前儿童兵和儿童兵的文章。对来自 10 个国家的 21 项定量研究进行了分析,内容包括作者、发表年份、期刊、目标、设计、选择人群、地点、工具、流行率估计以及与战争经历的关联。意见文章、社论和定性研究不在本研究范围之内。根据系统评估观察性研究的质量(SAQOR)标准,对证据质量进行了评分。
根据 SAQOR 标准,在已发表的研究中,有 8 项研究质量较高,4 项研究质量中等,其余 9 项研究质量较低。常见的局限性包括缺乏经过验证的心理健康测量方法、方法学不明确,包括未定义的抽样方法,以及未报告缺失数据。只有 5 项研究包括了未参与武装部队/武装团体的青年对照组,只有 5 项研究在不止一个时间点评估了心理健康。在各项研究中,一些风险和保护因素与儿童兵的冲突后心理社会适应和社会重新融入有关。诱拐、入伍年龄、接触暴力、性别和社区耻辱感与内化和外化心理健康问题的增加有关。家庭接纳、社会支持和教育/经济机会与心理社会适应的改善有关。
关于前儿童兵的社会重新融入和心理社会适应的研究还处于起步阶段。现有文献中的一些空白需要进一步研究。为了加强前儿童兵和其他受战争影响青年心理社会适应的证据基础,提出以下建议:进行更多包含纵向研究设计的研究,以及评估心理健康的跨文化验证工具,以及更综合的基于社区的研究设计和研究监测方法。