Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King's College London, London, UK
Department of Population Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, UK.
BMJ Glob Health. 2021 Dec;6(12). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2021-005388.
Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) experienced a burden of organised violence within 18 low-income and middle-income countries and hosted over 33 million displaced persons in 2019. Community-centred mental health and psychosocial support (cc-MHPSS) programmes may provide insights to address the psychosocial well-being of conflict-affected individuals, though literature is mixed on community impact. This review aimed to synthesise qualitative evidence to understand the kind of experiences conflict-affected participants have and how these experiences occur during cc-MHPSS programme engagement in SSA.
We searched Global Health, MEDLINE, Psychological Information Database, Embase Classic+Embase, Social Policy and Practice, Web of Science, Africa-Wide Information, PubMed and Global Index Medicus databases. Eligible publications qualitatively reported on conflict-affected participants' experiences of engagement in cc-MHPSS programmes. Data were extracted to summarise publication characteristics. The results were synthesised using a thematic synthesis analysis.
The search yielded 953 records, of which 20 publications were included in the review. Included publications were located in Rwanda (n=8), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (n=3), Mozambique (n=3), Sierra Leone (n=1), Ghana (n=1), Uganda (n=1), Zimbabwe (n=1) and South Sudan (n=1); one publication included three countries (Sierra Leone, Liberia and Uganda). Findings include the themes of (1) the experience of change in time and space, and (2) the sharing and silence of participants' experiences. Findings demonstrate that elements transferred by participants from a cc-MHPSS programme to a natural community, and vice versa, contribute to participants' healing. Elements' transfer, or non-transfer, was often related to participants' disclosure, or non-disclosure, of experiences.
Findings suggest that there are elements from a cc-MHPSS programme and a wider community which aid participant engagement and work therapeutically. More rigorous research is needed concerning how participants experience change during cc-MHPSS programme engagement in proximity to their relationship with the wider community.
CRD42020197300.
撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)在 18 个低收入和中等收入国家经历了有组织暴力的负担,并在 2019 年收容了超过 3300 万流离失所者。以社区为中心的心理健康和社会心理支持(cc-MHPSS)计划可能为解决受冲突影响的个人的社会心理福祉提供了一些思路,尽管文献对社区的影响存在分歧。本综述旨在综合定性证据,以了解受冲突影响的参与者的经历,以及这些经历在 SSA 中参与 cc-MHPSS 计划时是如何发生的。
我们在全球健康、MEDLINE、心理信息数据库、Embase Classic+Embase、社会政策和实践、Web of Science、非洲广泛信息、PubMed 和全球索引医学数据库中进行了搜索。符合条件的出版物定性报告了受冲突影响的参与者参与 cc-MHPSS 计划的经历。提取数据以总结出版物的特点。结果使用主题综合分析进行综合。
搜索产生了 953 条记录,其中 20 篇出版物被纳入综述。纳入的出版物分别位于卢旺达(n=8)、刚果民主共和国(n=3)、莫桑比克(n=3)、塞拉利昂(n=1)、加纳(n=1)、乌干达(n=1)、津巴布韦(n=1)和南苏丹(n=1);一篇出版物包含三个国家(塞拉利昂、利比里亚和乌干达)。研究结果包括(1)时间和空间上的变化体验,以及(2)参与者体验的分享和沉默。研究结果表明,参与者从 cc-MHPSS 计划转移到自然社区的元素,反之亦然,有助于参与者的康复。元素的转移或不转移通常与参与者的经历披露或不披露有关。
研究结果表明,cc-MHPSS 计划和更广泛的社区中存在一些元素,可以帮助参与者参与并进行治疗。需要进行更严格的研究,了解参与者在与更广泛的社区关系密切的情况下参与 cc-MHPSS 计划时的体验变化。
CRD42020197300。