Community perceptions about causes of suicide among young men in Botswana: an analysis based on fuzzy cognitive maps

IF 0.7 Q4 FAMILY STUDIES Vulnerable Children and Youth Studies Pub Date : 2023-10-11 DOI:10.1080/17450128.2023.2262941
Iván Sarmiento, Leagajang Kgakole, Puna Molatlhwa, Indu Girish, Neil Andersson, Anne Cockcroft
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The maps depicted risk and protective factors as nodes connected by arrows to show causal relationships. Participants also ranked the strength of each link on a scale of one (weakest) to five (strongest). Fuzzy transitive closure calculated the maximum influence of each factor, taking into account all other influences on the map. We combined maps by different stakeholders and grouped the 130 unique factors across the maps into 17 broader categories which emerged from an inductive thematic analysis of all the node labels. Financial difficulties, relationship problems, and family issues were the strongest categories of perceived causes of suicide by young men. Mental health problems played an intermediary role between more distal causes and suicide. There were differences in maps of different gender and age groups, but the strongest influences were consistent across groups. Young women, but not young men, identified men’s lack of self-esteem as a strong cause of suicide. The FCM findings offer a starting point for community discussions to seek local solutions to youth suicide.KEYWORDS: Southern Africamental healthself-harmcommunity interventionsparticipatory researchviolence AcknowledgmentsWe thank the men and women who contributed their time and knowledge in the FCM sessions. Sandra Cano checked the digitised maps.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementThe data supporting this study’s findings are available on request from the corresponding author. According to agreements with participating communities and to ensure the protection of participants and data governance, the requester will need to present a plan for data analysis, and participating communities must authorise their use for the specified purposes.Ethics reviewThis study is part of a Grand Challenges Canada project (Grant number R-ST-POC-1909–28463), which received ethical approval from the Botswana Ministry of Health under the Health Research and Development Division IRB (Reference HPDME 13/18/1).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by Grand Challenges Canada under Grant number R-ST-POC-1909-28463Notes on contributorsIván SarmientoIván Sarmiento is an independent researcher at CIET, a member of the Groups of Studies in Traditional Health Systems, and the program administrator of Participatory Research @ McGill (PRAM). He has over two decades of experience collaborating with local and Indigenous groups in Colombia. 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She has a particular interest in the prevention of violence against young women.Indu GirishIndu Girish brings over 25 years of experience as a training and project management specialist in the education and NGO sectors. Her work in Botswana and India has centred on community development, education for women and children in remote areas, health communication, and economic empowerment.Neil AnderssonNeil Andersson is a Professor of Family Medicine, director of the amalgamated CIET and Participatory Research at McGill (PRAM) and co-director of the McGill Institute of Human Development and Well-being. His main focus is on method development for large scale participatory approaches that address different health issues. He is particularly concerned about reproducible and culturally safe techniques to build stakeholder voices into systematic reviews, research conceptualization and co-design, intervention development, implementation and analysis. Dr. Andersson’s current interest is in community-led randomized trials of older adult participation in dementia prevention.Anne CockcroftAnne Cockcroft is a professor of family medicine in CIET-Participatory Research at McGill (PRAM) with a background in respiratory and occupational medicine. Over the last 25 years, she has undertaken large scale community-based participatory research projects in some 20 countries. She works with vulnerable populations to document their access to and experience of health and other services, and with service providers and policy makers to use evidence to develop equitable and effective services. In the last decade, her work has focussed on co-designing interventions, implementing them, and measuring the impact. Her current work includes participatory research to improve adolescent sexual and reproductive health and community responses to the impacts of COVID-19 pandemic in Bauchi State, Nigeria, and a study of community-based interventions to reduce youth personal and interpersonal violence in Botswana.","PeriodicalId":46101,"journal":{"name":"Vulnerable Children and Youth Studies","volume":"31 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Vulnerable Children and Youth Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/17450128.2023.2262941","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"FAMILY STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACTSuicide is common in Botswana, particularly among young men. Fuzzy cognitive mapping (FCM) can support participatory research by depicting local stakeholder knowledge about causes of health outcomes. This study used FCM to explore local perceptions about causes of suicide among young men in rural communities close to the capital, Gaborone. In nine sessions, groups of young men, young women, older men, and older women separately mapped their knowledge of factors related to suicide among young men (46 people in total). Two trained facilitators, fluent in the local language, led the group sessions. The maps depicted risk and protective factors as nodes connected by arrows to show causal relationships. Participants also ranked the strength of each link on a scale of one (weakest) to five (strongest). Fuzzy transitive closure calculated the maximum influence of each factor, taking into account all other influences on the map. We combined maps by different stakeholders and grouped the 130 unique factors across the maps into 17 broader categories which emerged from an inductive thematic analysis of all the node labels. Financial difficulties, relationship problems, and family issues were the strongest categories of perceived causes of suicide by young men. Mental health problems played an intermediary role between more distal causes and suicide. There were differences in maps of different gender and age groups, but the strongest influences were consistent across groups. Young women, but not young men, identified men’s lack of self-esteem as a strong cause of suicide. The FCM findings offer a starting point for community discussions to seek local solutions to youth suicide.KEYWORDS: Southern Africamental healthself-harmcommunity interventionsparticipatory researchviolence AcknowledgmentsWe thank the men and women who contributed their time and knowledge in the FCM sessions. Sandra Cano checked the digitised maps.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementThe data supporting this study’s findings are available on request from the corresponding author. According to agreements with participating communities and to ensure the protection of participants and data governance, the requester will need to present a plan for data analysis, and participating communities must authorise their use for the specified purposes.Ethics reviewThis study is part of a Grand Challenges Canada project (Grant number R-ST-POC-1909–28463), which received ethical approval from the Botswana Ministry of Health under the Health Research and Development Division IRB (Reference HPDME 13/18/1).Additional informationFundingThis work was supported by Grand Challenges Canada under Grant number R-ST-POC-1909-28463Notes on contributorsIván SarmientoIván Sarmiento is an independent researcher at CIET, a member of the Groups of Studies in Traditional Health Systems, and the program administrator of Participatory Research @ McGill (PRAM). He has over two decades of experience collaborating with local and Indigenous groups in Colombia. His main interest is in promoting intercultural dialogue between Indigenous traditional medicine and Western medicine, particularly for primary health care. He has contributed to developing procedures for participatory modelling of health issues using fuzzy cognitive mapping, applying these methods in over 20 projects across eight countries.Leagajang KgakoleLeagajang Kgakole is an experienced fieldwork coordinator working with CIET in Botswana since 2007. He has a profound knowledge of local communities and their cultural ways, which has been pivotal for their engagement in participatory research.Puna MolatlhwaPuna Molatlhwa has worked with CIET in Botswana since 2010. She has coordinated CIET training in evidence-based planning for researchers and planners in 14 countries in the Southern Africa Development Community (SADC). As a seasoned fieldworker, she has trained and supervised fieldworkers for both quantitative and qualitative data collection in Botswana communities. She has a particular interest in the prevention of violence against young women.Indu GirishIndu Girish brings over 25 years of experience as a training and project management specialist in the education and NGO sectors. Her work in Botswana and India has centred on community development, education for women and children in remote areas, health communication, and economic empowerment.Neil AnderssonNeil Andersson is a Professor of Family Medicine, director of the amalgamated CIET and Participatory Research at McGill (PRAM) and co-director of the McGill Institute of Human Development and Well-being. His main focus is on method development for large scale participatory approaches that address different health issues. He is particularly concerned about reproducible and culturally safe techniques to build stakeholder voices into systematic reviews, research conceptualization and co-design, intervention development, implementation and analysis. Dr. Andersson’s current interest is in community-led randomized trials of older adult participation in dementia prevention.Anne CockcroftAnne Cockcroft is a professor of family medicine in CIET-Participatory Research at McGill (PRAM) with a background in respiratory and occupational medicine. Over the last 25 years, she has undertaken large scale community-based participatory research projects in some 20 countries. She works with vulnerable populations to document their access to and experience of health and other services, and with service providers and policy makers to use evidence to develop equitable and effective services. In the last decade, her work has focussed on co-designing interventions, implementing them, and measuring the impact. Her current work includes participatory research to improve adolescent sexual and reproductive health and community responses to the impacts of COVID-19 pandemic in Bauchi State, Nigeria, and a study of community-based interventions to reduce youth personal and interpersonal violence in Botswana.
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社区对博茨瓦纳年轻男子自杀原因的看法:基于模糊认知地图的分析
自杀在博茨瓦纳很常见,尤其是年轻男性。模糊认知映射(FCM)可以通过描述当地利益相关者关于健康结果原因的知识来支持参与性研究。本研究使用FCM探讨了当地对首都哈博罗内附近农村社区年轻男性自杀原因的看法。在9次会议中,年轻男性、年轻女性、老年男性和老年女性分别绘制了他们对年轻男性自杀相关因素的了解情况(总共46人)。两名训练有素、能说流利当地语言的主持人主持小组会议。这些地图将风险和保护因素描绘成由箭头连接的节点,以显示因果关系。参与者还将每个环节的强度按1(最弱)到5(最强)进行排序。模糊传递闭包计算每个因素的最大影响,考虑到地图上的所有其他影响。我们结合了不同利益相关者的地图,并将地图上的130个独特因素分组为17个更广泛的类别,这些类别来自对所有节点标签的归纳主题分析。经济困难、关系问题和家庭问题是年轻男性认为自杀的最主要原因。心理健康问题在远端原因和自杀之间起中介作用。不同性别和年龄组的地图存在差异,但最强烈的影响在各组之间是一致的。年轻女性,而不是年轻男性,认为男性缺乏自尊是自杀的主要原因。FCM的调查结果为社区讨论寻求当地解决青年自杀问题的办法提供了一个起点。关键词:南非精神健康、自我伤害、社区干预、参与式研究、暴力致谢我们感谢在FCM会议上贡献时间和知识的男性和女性。桑德拉·卡诺查看了数字化地图。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。数据可用性声明支持本研究结果的数据可向通讯作者索取。根据与参与社区的协议,并确保对参与者和数据治理的保护,请求者将需要提交数据分析计划,参与社区必须授权将其用于指定目的。本研究是加拿大大挑战项目(授权号R-ST-POC-1909-28463)的一部分,已获得博茨瓦纳卫生部卫生研究与发展部IRB(参考文献HPDME 13/18/1)的伦理批准。本研究由加拿大大挑战资助,资助号为r - st - poc - 1909.28463 contributorsIván SarmientoIván上的说明Sarmiento是CIET的独立研究员,是传统卫生系统研究小组的成员,也是麦吉尔参与式研究(PRAM)的项目管理员。他有20多年与哥伦比亚当地和土著群体合作的经验。他的主要兴趣是促进土著传统医学与西方医学之间的文化间对话,特别是在初级保健方面。他利用模糊认知映射为健康问题的参与式建模程序做出了贡献,并将这些方法应用于8个国家的20多个项目。Leagajang Kgakole是一名经验丰富的实地工作协调员,自2007年以来一直在博茨瓦纳与CIET合作。他对当地社区及其文化方式有着深刻的了解,这对他们参与参与式研究至关重要。Puna Molatlhwa自2010年以来一直在博茨瓦纳与CIET合作。她为南部非洲发展共同体(SADC) 14个国家的研究人员和规划人员协调了CIET的循证规划培训。作为一名经验丰富的实地工作者,她在博茨瓦纳社区培训和监督实地工作者进行定量和定性数据收集。她对防止针对年轻妇女的暴力行为特别感兴趣。作为教育和非政府组织部门的培训和项目管理专家,Indu Girish拥有超过25年的经验。她在博茨瓦纳和印度的工作重点是社区发展、偏远地区妇女和儿童教育、卫生通讯和经济赋权。Neil Andersson是一名家庭医学教授,麦吉尔大学CIET和参与研究中心(PRAM)的主任,以及麦吉尔大学人类发展与福祉研究所的联合主任。他的主要工作重点是为解决不同健康问题的大规模参与性方法开发方法。 他特别关注可重复和文化安全的技术,将利益相关者的声音纳入系统审查,研究概念化和共同设计,干预开发,实施和分析。Andersson博士目前的兴趣是社区主导的老年人参与痴呆症预防的随机试验。Anne Cockcroft是麦吉尔大学(PRAM) CIET-Participatory Research的家庭医学教授,拥有呼吸和职业医学背景。在过去的25年里,她在大约20个国家开展了大规模的社区参与性研究项目。她与弱势群体合作,记录他们获得卫生和其他服务的情况和经验,并与服务提供者和决策者合作,利用证据制定公平有效的服务。在过去的十年里,她的工作主要集中在共同设计干预措施,实施它们,并衡量其影响。她目前的工作包括参与研究,以改善尼日利亚包奇州青少年的性健康和生殖健康,以及社区应对COVID-19大流行的影响,以及研究博茨瓦纳以社区为基础的干预措施,以减少青少年个人和人际暴力。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Vulnerable Children and Youth Studies is an essential peer-reviewed journal analyzing psychological, sociological, health, gender, cultural, economic, and educational aspects of children and adolescents in developed and developing countries. This international publication forum provides a much-needed interdisciplinary focus on vulnerable children and youth at risk, specifically in relation to health and welfare issues, such as mental health, illness (including HIV/AIDS), disability, abuse, neglect, institutionalization, poverty, orphanhood, exploitation, war, famine, and disaster.
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