Macau (SAR), People's Republic of China; Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Mental Health, 624 N. Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Mental Health, 624 N. Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2014 Aug;114:121-8. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.05.042. Epub 2014 May 27.
Little is known about the role of cognitive social capital among war-affected youth in low- and middle-income countries. We examined the longitudinal association between cognitive social capital and mental health (depression and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms), functioning, and received social support of children in Burundi. Data were obtained from face-to-face interviews with 176 children over three measurement occasions over the span of 4-months. Cognitive social capital measured the degree to which children believed their community was trustworthy and cohesive. Mental health measures included the Depression Self-Rating Scale (DSRS) (Birleson, 1981), the Child Posttraumatic Symptom Scale (Foa et al., 2001), and a locally constructed scale of functional impairment. Children reported received social support by listing whether they received different types of social support from self-selected key individuals. Cross-lagged path analytic modeling evaluated relationships between cognitive social capital, symptoms and received support separately over baseline (T1), 6-week follow-up (T2), and 4-month follow-up (T3). Each concept was treated and analyzed as a continuous score using manifest indicators. Significant associations between study variables were unidirectional. Cognitive social capital was associated with decreased depression between T1 and T2 (B = -.22, p < .001) and T2 and T3 (β = -.25, p < .001), and with functional impairment between T1 and T2 (β = -.15, p = .005) and T2 and T3 (β = -.14, p = .005); no association was found for PTSD symptoms at either time point. Cognitive social capital was associated with increased social support between T1 and T2 (β = .16, p = .002) and T2 and T3 (β = .16, p = .002). In this longitudinal study, cognitive social capital was related to a declining trajectory of children's mental health problems and increases in social support. Interventions that improve community relations in war-affected communities may alter the trajectories of resource loss and gain with conflict-affected children.
关于认知社会资本在中低收入国家受战争影响的青年中的作用,人们知之甚少。我们研究了认知社会资本与布隆迪儿童的心理健康(抑郁和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状)、功能和获得的社会支持之间的纵向关联。数据来自于在 4 个月的时间内,对 176 名儿童进行了三次面对面访谈。认知社会资本衡量了儿童对其社区的信任和凝聚力程度。心理健康测量包括抑郁自评量表(DSRS)(Birleson,1981)、儿童创伤后症状量表(Foa 等人,2001)和一个本地构建的功能障碍量表。儿童通过列出他们是否从自我选择的关键人员那里获得了不同类型的社会支持来报告获得的社会支持。交叉滞后路径分析模型分别评估了认知社会资本、症状和基线(T1)、6 周随访(T2)和 4 个月随访(T3)之间的关系。每个概念都作为一个连续分数使用显式指标进行处理和分析。研究变量之间的显著关联是单向的。认知社会资本与 T1 和 T2 之间的抑郁症状减少有关(B=-.22,p<.001),以及 T2 和 T3 之间的抑郁症状减少有关(β=-.25,p<.001),与 T1 和 T2 之间的功能障碍有关(β=-.15,p=.005)和 T2 和 T3 之间的功能障碍有关(β=-.14,p=.005);在任何时间点都没有发现 PTSD 症状的关联。认知社会资本与 T1 和 T2 之间的社会支持增加有关(β=16,p=.002),与 T2 和 T3 之间的社会支持增加有关(β=16,p=.002)。在这项纵向研究中,认知社会资本与儿童心理健康问题的下降轨迹和社会支持的增加有关。改善受战争影响社区社区关系的干预措施可能会改变冲突影响儿童资源损失和收益的轨迹。