Program on Forced Migration and Health, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, 60 Haven Avenue, New York City, NY, 10032, USA.
International Center for Research on Women, New York City, USA.
BMC Psychiatry. 2017 Dec 19;17(1):405. doi: 10.1186/s12888-017-1566-x.
Family-level predictors, including caregiver depression, are considered important influences on adolescent mental health. Adolescent depression and anxiety in refugee settings is known to be a significant public health concern, yet there is very limited literature from humanitarian settings focusing on the relationship between caregiver mental health and adolescent mental health. In the context of a larger study on child protection outcomes in refugee settings, researchers explored the relationship between caregiver depression and adolescent mental health in two refugee settlements, Kiryandongo and Adjumani, in Uganda.
Adolescents between 13 and 17 and their caregivers participated in a household survey, which included measures of adolescent anxiety and depression, and caregiver depression. Analysis was conducted using multiple logistic regression models, and results were reported for the full sample and for each site separately.
In Kiryandongo, a one-unit increase in a caregiver's depression score tripled the odds that the adolescent would have high levels of anxiety symptoms (AOR: 3.0, 95% CI: 1.4, 6.1), while in Adjumani, caregiver depression did not remain significant in the final model. Caregiver depression, gender and exposure to violence were all associated with higher symptoms of adolescent depression in both sites and the full sample, for example, a one unit increase in caregiver depression more than tripled the odds of higher levels of symptoms of adolescent depression (AOR: 3.6, 95% CI: 2.0, 6.2). Caregiver depression is a consistently significantly associated with adverse mental health outcomes for adolescents in this study.
Adolescent well-being is significantly affected by caregiver mental health in this refugee context. Child protection interventions in humanitarian contexts do not adequately address the influence of caregivers' mental health, and there are opportunities to integrate child protection programming with prevention and treatment of caregivers' mental health symptoms.
家庭层面的预测因素,包括照顾者的抑郁,被认为是影响青少年心理健康的重要因素。在难民环境中,青少年抑郁和焦虑是一个重大的公共卫生问题,但来自人道主义环境的关注照顾者心理健康与青少年心理健康之间关系的文献非常有限。在一项关于难民环境中儿童保护结果的更大研究中,研究人员在乌干达的基里安达戈和阿朱马尼两个难民营中探讨了照顾者抑郁与青少年心理健康之间的关系。
年龄在 13 至 17 岁之间的青少年及其照顾者参加了一项家庭调查,该调查包括青少年焦虑和抑郁以及照顾者抑郁的测量。使用多逻辑回归模型进行分析,并报告了全样本和每个地点的结果。
在基里安达戈,照顾者抑郁评分增加一个单位,青少年出现高度焦虑症状的几率增加两倍(优势比:3.0,95%置信区间:1.4,6.1),而在阿朱马尼,照顾者抑郁在最终模型中不再显著。在两个地点和全样本中,照顾者抑郁、性别和暴露于暴力都与青少年抑郁症状升高相关,例如,照顾者抑郁增加一个单位,青少年抑郁症状升高的几率增加两倍以上(优势比:3.6,95%置信区间:2.0,6.2)。在这项研究中,照顾者抑郁与青少年不良心理健康结果始终显著相关。人道主义背景下的儿童保护干预措施没有充分解决照顾者心理健康的影响,有机会将儿童保护方案与预防和治疗照顾者的心理健康症状相结合。
在这种难民背景下,青少年的幸福受到照顾者心理健康的显著影响。人道主义环境中的儿童保护干预措施没有充分解决照顾者心理健康的影响,有机会将儿童保护方案与预防和治疗照顾者的心理健康症状相结合。