From: Harvard Medical School (Drs. Murphy and Jellinek); Departments of Psychiatry (Dr. Murphy) and Pediatrics (Dr. Jellinek), Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA; Clinical Child Psychology Program, University of Kansas (Ms. Abel); Department of Psychiatry, University of Maryland School of Medicine (Dr. Hoover); Department of Psychiatry, Oxford University, Warneford Hospital, Oxford, UK (Dr. Fazel).
Harv Rev Psychiatry. 2017 Sep/Oct;25(5):218-228. doi: 10.1097/HRP.0000000000000149.
Untreated mental health problems are among the most disabling, persistent, and costly health conditions. Because they often begin in childhood and continue into adulthood, there has been growing interest in preventive mental health programs for children. In recent years, several such programs have been implemented at regional, state, or national scale, and although many experimental studies have documented positive outcomes of individual programs, this article represents the first attempt to systematically compare the largest programs in terms of scope, scale, and dose. The school-based mental health programs discussed in this review appear to have reached more than 27 million children over the last decade, and many of these programs have collected systematic outcomes data. The role that such programs can play in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is a secondary focus of this article. Until recently, wide-scaled, preventive, mental health interventions for children have been studied almost exclusively in high-income countries even though around 80% of the global population of children reside in LMICs. Since a number of programs are now operating on a large scale in LMICs, it has become possible to consider child mental health programs from a more global perspective. With both the increasing diversity of countries represented and the growing scale of programs, data sets of increasing quality and size are opening up new opportunities to assess the degree to which preventive interventions for child mental health, delivered at scale, can play a role in improving health and other life outcomes.
未经治疗的心理健康问题是最具致残性、持续性和高成本的健康问题之一。由于它们通常始于儿童期并持续到成年期,因此人们越来越关注针对儿童的预防性心理健康计划。近年来,已经在地区、州或国家层面实施了几项此类计划,尽管许多实验研究已经记录了个别计划的积极成果,但本文代表了首次尝试从范围、规模和剂量方面系统比较最大的计划。本综述中讨论的基于学校的心理健康计划在过去十年中似乎已经覆盖了超过 2700 万名儿童,其中许多计划已经收集了系统的结果数据。此类计划可以在中低收入国家(LMICs)中发挥的作用是本文的次要重点。直到最近,针对儿童的广泛、预防性心理健康干预措施几乎仅在高收入国家进行了研究,尽管全球约 80%的儿童居住在 LMICs。由于现在有许多计划在 LMICs 大规模实施,因此可以从更全球的角度考虑儿童心理健康计划。随着越来越多的国家代表和计划规模的不断扩大,质量和规模不断提高的数据集为评估大规模提供的儿童心理健康预防干预在改善健康和其他生活结果方面可以发挥的作用提供了新的机会。