Department of Psychology, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon; Trinity Centre for Global Health, Trinity College Dublin, Republic of Ireland.
Department of Psychology, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon.
Compr Psychiatry. 2024 Jul;132:152483. doi: 10.1016/j.comppsych.2024.152483. Epub 2024 Apr 5.
Given the protective effect of nurturing caregivers and families for child and adolescent mental health, there is a need to review and synthesize research evidence regarding the effectiveness of parenting and family interventions in low and middle-income countries, including humanitarian settings. To advance practice, further understanding of the active ingredients of such interventions and implementation factors that lead to effectiveness are essential.
This systematic review, an update from a previous review, included studies on any parenting or family intervention for children and adolescents aged 0-24, living in a low- or middle-income country, that quantitatively measured child or adolescent mental health outcomes. We searched Global Health, PubMed, PsychINFO, PILOTS and the Cochrane Library databases on the 9th July 2020, and updated on the 12th August 2022. Risk of bias was assessed using an adapted version of the NIH Quality Assessment Tool. We extracted data on: effectiveness outcomes, practice elements included in effective interventions, and implementation challenges and successes.
We found a total of 80 studies (n = 18,193 participants) representing 64 different family or parenting interventions, 43 of which had evidence of effect for a child or adolescent mental health outcome. Only 3 studies found no effect on child, adolescent or caregiver outcomes. The most common practice elements delivered in effective interventions included caregiver psychoeducation, communication skills, and differential reinforcement. Key implementation strategies and lessons learned included non-specialist delivery, the engagement of fathers, and integrated or multi-sector care to holistically address family needs.
Despite a high level of heterogeneity, preliminary findings from the review are promising and support the use of parenting and family interventions to address the wider social ecology of children in low resource and humanitarian contexts. There are remaining gaps in understanding mechanisms of change and the empirical testing of different implementation models. Our findings have implications for better informing task sharing from specialist to non-specialist delivery, and from individual-focused to wider systemic interventions.
鉴于养育者和家庭对儿童和青少年心理健康的保护作用,有必要审查和综合低中等收入国家(包括人道主义环境)中育儿和家庭干预措施的有效性研究证据。为了推进实践,进一步了解此类干预措施的有效成分以及导致干预措施有效的实施因素至关重要。
本系统评价是对先前评价的更新,包括针对生活在低中等收入国家、年龄在 0-24 岁的儿童和青少年的任何育儿或家庭干预措施的研究,这些研究定量测量了儿童或青少年心理健康结果。我们于 2020 年 7 月 9 日在全球卫生、PubMed、PsychINFO、PILOTS 和 Cochrane 图书馆数据库中进行了检索,并于 2022 年 8 月 12 日进行了更新。使用 NIH 质量评估工具的改编版本评估偏倚风险。我们提取了以下数据:有效性结果、有效干预措施中包含的实践要素以及实施挑战和成功。
我们共发现了 80 项研究(n=18193 名参与者),代表了 64 种不同的家庭或育儿干预措施,其中 43 项研究对儿童或青少年心理健康结果具有积极影响。只有 3 项研究对儿童、青少年或照顾者的结果没有影响。在有效的干预措施中最常见的实践要素包括照顾者心理教育、沟通技巧和差异化强化。关键的实施策略和经验教训包括非专业人员提供服务、父亲的参与以及综合性或多部门护理,以全面满足家庭的需求。
尽管存在高度异质性,但本评价的初步结果令人鼓舞,支持使用育儿和家庭干预措施来解决资源匮乏和人道主义环境下儿童的更广泛社会生态问题。在理解干预措施变化的机制和检验不同实施模式的实证方面仍存在差距。我们的研究结果对更好地为从专业人员向非专业人员分配以及从以个人为中心向更广泛的系统性干预措施的任务共享提供信息具有重要意义。