Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Yale University School of Public Health , New Haven, CT, USA.
Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED), Institute of Health and Society, Université Catholique de Louvain , Brussels, Belgium.
Glob Health Action. 2020 Dec 31;13(1):1783957. doi: 10.1080/16549716.2020.1783957.
The effects of disasters and conflicts are widespread and heavily studied. While attention to disasters' impacts on mental health is growing, mental health effects are not well understood due to inconsistencies in measurement.
The purpose of this study is to review mental health assessment tools and their use in populations affected by disasters and conflicts.
Tools that assess posttraumatic stress disorder, depression, substance use disorder, and general mental health were examined. This review began with a search for assessment tools in PubMed, PsycINFO, and Google Scholar. Next, validation studies for the tools were obtained through snowball sampling. A final search was conducted for scientific studies using the selected tools in humanitarian settings to collect the data for analysis. The benefits and limitations described for each tool were compiled into a complete table.
Twelve assessment tools were included, with 88 studies using them. The primary findings indicate that half of the studies used the Impact of Events Scale-Revised. The most common limitation discussed is that self-report tools inaccurately estimate the prevalence of mental health problems. This inaccuracy is further exacerbated by a lack of cultural appropriateness of the tools, as many are developed for Western contexts.
It is recommended that researchers and humanitarian workers reflect on the effectiveness of the mental health assessment tool they use to accurately represent the populations under study in emergency settings. In addition, mental health assessment should be coupled with action.
灾害和冲突的影响广泛且受到深入研究。尽管人们越来越关注灾害对心理健康的影响,但由于测量方法不一致,心理健康影响仍未得到充分理解。
本研究旨在回顾用于评估灾害和冲突影响人群心理健康的评估工具及其使用情况。
研究人员检查了评估创伤后应激障碍、抑郁、物质使用障碍和一般心理健康的工具。本综述首先在 PubMed、PsycINFO 和 Google Scholar 中搜索评估工具。然后,通过滚雪球抽样获取这些工具的验证研究。最后,针对在人道主义环境中使用选定工具进行的科学研究进行了搜索,以收集用于分析的数据。将每个工具的优点和局限性描述汇总到一个完整的表格中。
共纳入 12 种评估工具,其中 88 项研究使用了这些工具。主要发现表明,半数研究使用了修订后的事件影响量表。讨论最多的局限性是,自我报告工具不准确地估计了心理健康问题的流行率。由于这些工具缺乏文化适宜性,因为它们大多是为西方背景开发的,因此进一步加剧了这种不准确。
建议研究人员和人道主义工作者反思他们在紧急情况下用于准确代表研究人群的心理健康评估工具的有效性。此外,心理健康评估应与行动相结合。