Health Unit, International Committee of the Red Cross, Geneva, Switzerland.
Research Group on Emergency and Disaster Medicine, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium.
Front Public Health. 2020 Dec 11;8:591369. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2020.591369. eCollection 2020.
The International Committee of the Red Cross runs an increasing number of mental health and psychosocial programmes integrated into health facilities in conflict settings across Africa. This study looks at changes in symptoms of psychological distress and impaired functioning among patients supported through such programmes. Between January and December 2019, 5,527 victims of violence received mental health and psychosocial support in 29 health facilities in Burundi, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Mali, Nigeria and South Sudan. Symptoms of psychological distress (IES-R or DASS21) and daily functioning (ICRC scale) were assessed before and after the intervention. Logistical regression models were used to measure associations between these symptoms and the other variables. Factors associated with high distress prior to receiving support included age (peaking at 45-54 years), intervening within three months, rape, caretaker neglect, internal displacement, secondary education level and referral pathway. Anxiety levels in particular were higher among victims of violence committed by unknown civilians, the military or armed groups. Low functioning was associated with divorce, grief and violence committed by the military or armed groups. Following the intervention, the vast majority of patients reported reduced psychological distress (97.25% for IES-R and 99.11% for DASS21) and improved daily functioning (93.58%). A linear trend was found between number of individual sessions and reduction in symptoms of distress. Financial losses were associated with less reduction in symptoms of depression and stress. To further address the mental health and psychosocial needs of victims of violence, intervening quickly and increasing the number of individual sessions per patient is crucial. This requires proximity-being in the right place at the right time-which is challenging when working in stable health structures. Symptoms of depression should not be overlooked, and financial losses must be addressed in order to holistically meet the needs of victims of violence.
红十字国际委员会在非洲各地冲突环境中的卫生机构中越来越多地开展心理健康和心理社会方案。本研究着眼于通过这些方案得到支持的患者的心理困扰和功能受损症状的变化。2019 年 1 月至 12 月期间,在布隆迪、中非共和国、刚果民主共和国、马里、尼日利亚和南苏丹的 29 家卫生机构中,有 5527 名暴力受害者接受了心理健康和心理社会支持。在干预前后,对心理困扰症状(IES-R 或 DASS21)和日常功能(ICRC 量表)进行了评估。使用逻辑回归模型来衡量这些症状与其他变量之间的关联。在接受支持之前与高度困扰相关的因素包括年龄(45-54 岁达到峰值)、在三个月内干预、强奸、看护者忽视、国内流离失所、中等教育水平和转诊途径。与不知名的平民、军队或武装团体实施的暴力行为相比,焦虑水平尤其更高。功能低下与离婚、悲伤以及军队或武装团体实施的暴力行为有关。干预后,绝大多数患者报告心理困扰程度降低(IES-R 为 97.25%,DASS21 为 99.11%),日常功能改善(93.58%)。在症状困扰方面,发现就诊次数与症状减轻之间存在线性趋势。经济损失与抑郁和压力症状减轻较少有关。为了进一步满足暴力受害者的心理健康和心理社会需求,快速干预和增加每位患者的个体就诊次数至关重要。这需要接近性——在正确的时间出现在正确的地点——这在稳定的卫生结构中工作时具有挑战性。不应忽视抑郁症状,必须解决经济损失问题,以便全面满足暴力受害者的需求。