EAWAG, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Environmental Social Sciences, Environmental and Health Psychology, Überlandstrasse 133, P.O. Box 611, CH-8600, Dübendorf, Switzerland.
BMC Psychol. 2019 Jul 8;7(1):44. doi: 10.1186/s40359-019-0320-1.
Mental disorders, particularly depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, are common long-term psychological outcomes in emergency contexts arising from conflicts, natural disasters, and other challenging environmental conditions. In emergencies, people suffer not only from the lack of external resources such as drinking water and food but also from poor mental health. Mental disorders can substantially impair daily activities in vulnerable individuals. However, water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) behaviors are daily activities that require effort, time, and strong internal motivation. Therefore, questions arise: whether there is a relationship between mental health and safe water behaviors, and if so, whether the motivational drivers of these behaviors are affected by mental health.
Our cross-sectional study conducted face-to-face interviews with 638 households in rural Malawi. We used a quantitative questionnaire based on the risks, attitudes, norms, abilities, and self-regulation (RANAS) approach to measure motivational psychosocial factors. Mental health was assessed using the validated Chichewa version of the Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ-20).
Almost a third of the respondents reported poor mental health. We found significant negative association between mental health and self-reported safe water collection (p = .01, r = -.104) but not between safe water transportation and storage behavior. The moderation analysis revealed significant interaction effects of mental health with some psychosocial factors and therefore on WASH behaviors. Poor mental health changed the influence of three psychosocial factors-perceived others' behavior, commitment, and remembering-on safe drinking water collection behavior. The influence on water transportation and storage behavior of the perceived severity of contracting a disease, the belief that transporting and storing water requires substantial effort, and others' approval depended on the mental health condition of the respondent.
These results imply that populations with a significant proportion of individuals with poor mental health will benefit from interventions to mitigate mental health before or parallel to behavioral change interventions for WASH. Specific population-level interventions have been shown to have a positive effect on mental well-being, and they have been successfully applied at scale. This research is especially relevant in emergency contexts, as it indicates that mental health measures before any WASH interventions will make them more effective.
精神障碍,尤其是抑郁症和创伤后应激障碍,是冲突、自然灾害和其他挑战性环境条件引发的紧急情况下常见的长期心理后果。在紧急情况下,人们不仅遭受缺乏外部资源(如饮用水和食物)的困扰,还遭受心理健康不佳的困扰。精神障碍会严重影响弱势群体的日常活动。然而,水、环境卫生和个人卫生(WASH)行为是需要付出努力、时间和强烈内在动力的日常活动。因此,人们不禁要问:心理健康与安全用水行为之间是否存在关系,如果存在,这些行为的动机驱动因素是否受到心理健康的影响。
我们在马拉维农村进行了一项横断面研究,对 638 户家庭进行了面对面访谈。我们使用了一种基于风险、态度、规范、能力和自我调节(RANAS)方法的定量问卷来衡量动机心理社会因素。心理健康使用经过验证的奇契瓦语版自我报告问卷(SRQ-20)进行评估。
近三分之一的受访者报告存在心理健康不佳的情况。我们发现心理健康与自我报告的安全集水行为之间存在显著的负相关关系(p=.01,r=-.104),但与安全水运输和储存行为之间没有关系。调节分析显示,心理健康与一些心理社会因素之间存在显著的交互作用,因此对 WASH 行为也有影响。心理健康不佳改变了三个心理社会因素(感知他人行为、承诺和记忆)对安全饮用水收集行为的影响。对感染疾病的严重程度的感知、运输和储存水需要大量努力的信念以及他人的认可对水运输和储存行为的影响取决于受访者的心理健康状况。
这些结果表明,在针对 WASH 行为进行行为改变干预之前或同时,对心理健康状况不佳的人群进行干预,将使那些存在大量心理健康状况不佳的人群受益。已经证明特定的人群干预措施对心理健康有积极影响,并且已经成功地大规模应用。这一研究在紧急情况下尤为重要,因为它表明在进行任何 WASH 干预之前采取心理健康措施将使这些干预更加有效。