为受乌克兰战争影响的家庭提供心理健康、育儿支持和暴力预防计划--希望小组的有效性:事后研究结果

IF 3.9 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Migration and Health Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jmh.2024.100251
Susan Hillis , Sydney Tucker , Nicole Baldonado , Evgenia Taradaika , Lyudmyla Bryn , Svitlana Kharchenko , Tetiana Machabelii , Roisin Taylor , Phil Green , Philip Goldman , Isang Awah , Joshua Baldonado , Praveen Gomez , Seth Flaxman , Oliver Ratmann , Jamie M. Lachman , Andres Villaveces , Lorraine Sherr , Lucie Cluver
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景2023年,近六分之一的儿童生活在战争地区。以证据为基础的社会心理和养育支持有可能减轻父母和儿童共同遭受战争和流离失所的负面影响,尤其是在心理健康和严厉的养育反应方面。在当前的乌克兰战争中,当地的心理健康专家与全球专家共同创建并评估了名为 "希望小组 "的社会心理和养育支持小组在改善心理健康、积极养育和暴力侵害儿童方面的效果。本文旨在采用前/后研究设计,评估名为 "希望小组 "的社会心理和养育支持小组在改善乌克兰受战争影响家庭的照顾者心理健康、积极养育和预防暴力侵害儿童方面的效果。方法参与者(n = 577)包括乌克兰照顾者,其中 66% (381 人)是 0-17 岁儿童的父母和共同居住照顾者,其余 34% 是非居住非正式照顾者。境内流离失所者、境外流离失所者和在战乱地区居住的人都应邀参加了由受过培训的乌克兰同伴促进者组织的小组活动。我们采用了前后期设计,比较了基线、中线和终点三个时间点的个人水平频率测量,以评估 4 项心理健康和 9 项养育子女及儿童健康结果的变化。我们使用配对 t 检验来分析这些结果,比较基线到中线(4 次疗程后)和基线到终点(10 次疗程后)的结果,从而估算出各时间段内每周天数的平均变化以及相关的百分比变化;我们使用偏差校正和加速(BCa)自引导法来量化不确定性,基线-中线和基线-终点估算值的不确定性范围为 95%。我们使用同样的方法进行分层分析,以评估流离失所状况和促进者类型对潜在效应的影响。与基线相比,每项心理健康、养育子女和儿童健康结果在中线和终点都有显著改善。心理健康评分显示,抑郁症状在终点线时减少了 56.8%(95% CI:-59.0,-54.3;-1.8 天/周),充满希望、应对悲伤和自我照顾的程度提高了 62.0%(95% CI:53.6,71.3;2.2 天/周)至 77.0%(95% CI:66.3,88.3;2.2 天/周)。在监督儿童、强化积极行为、支持儿童发展、保护儿童、非暴力管教和儿童用语言表达情绪等方面,养育子女和儿童健康状况均有显著改善。到终点线时,情绪暴力、身体暴力和儿童绝望情绪分别下降了 57.7%(95% CI:-63.0%,-51.9;-1.3 天/周)、64.0%(95% CI:-79.0,-39.5;-0.22 天/周)和 51.9%(95% CI:-45.1,-57.9;-1.2 天/周)。根据流离失所状况进行的分层结果在所有组别中都具有显著性,根据促进者类型(非专业人员与专业人员)进行的分层结果也具有显著性。这项研究采用了适合急性和早期持久性紧急状况环境的简短调查和前后期设计,初步证明了针对受战争影响的乌克兰照顾者的希望小组在改善心理健康、积极养育子女和减少暴力侵害儿童方面的可行性和有效性。
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The effectiveness of Hope Groups, a mental health, parenting support, and violence prevention program for families affected by the war in Ukraine: Findings from a pre-post study

Background

Nearly one in six children lived in war zones in 2023. Evidence-based psychosocial and parenting support has potential to mitigate negative impacts for parents and children co-exposed to war and displacement, especially in relation to mental health and harsh parenting reactions. In the current war in Ukraine, local mental health experts co-created and evaluated, with global experts, the effectiveness of psychosocial and parenting support groups, called ‘Hope Groups’ on improvements in mental health, positive parenting, and violence against children. This paper aimed to assess the effectiveness of psychosocial and parenting support groups, called 'Hope Groups,' on improvements in caregiver mental health, positive parenting, and prevention of violence against children, for families affected by the war in Ukraine, using a pre/post study design.

Methods

Participants (n = 577) included Ukrainian caregivers, 66% (381) of whom were parents and co-residing caregivers of children ages 0–17, while the remaining 34% were non-resident informal caregivers. Internally displaced, externally displaced, and those living at-home in war-torn regions were invited to groups by trained Ukrainian peer facilitators. Using a pre-post design, we compared individual level frequency measures at three time-points – baseline, midline, and endline, to assess changes in 4 mental health, and 9 parenting and child health outcomes. We analyzed these outcomes using paired t-tests to compare outcomes at baseline-to-midline (after 4-sessions) and baseline-to-endline (after 10-sessions), which estimated the mean changes in days per week and associated percent change, during the respective periods; we quantified uncertainties using bias-corrected and accelerated (BCa) bootstrapping with 95% uncertainty ranges for baseline-midline and baseline-endline estimates. We used this same approach for stratified analyses to assess potential effect modification by displacement status and facilitator type. We further used linear models to adjust for age and sex.

Findings

Compared to baseline, every mental health, parenting, and child health outcome improved significantly at midline and endline. Mental health ratings showed endline reductions in depressive symptoms of 56.8% (95% CI: -59.0,-54.3; -1.8 days/week), and increases in hopefulness, coping with grief, and self-care, ranging from 62.0% (95% CI: 53.6,71.3; 2.2 days/week) to 77.0% (95% CI: 66.3,88.3; 2.2 days/week). Significant improvements in parenting and child health outcomes included monitoring children, reinforcing positive behavior, supporting child development, protecting child, nonviolent discipline, and child verbalizing emotions. By endline, emotional violence, physical violence, and child despondency had dropped by 57.7% (95% CI: -63.0%,-51.9; -1.3 days/week), 64.0% (95% CI: -79.0,-39.5; -0.22 days/week), and 51.9% (95% CI: -45.1,-57.9; -1.2 days/week), respectively. Outcomes stratified by displacement status remained significant across all groups, as did those according to facilitator type (lay versus professional).

Interpretation

This study demonstrates preliminary evidence, using a brief survey and pre-post design as is appropriate for acute and early protracted emergency settings, of the feasibility and effectiveness of Hope Groups for war-affected Ukrainian caregivers, on improved mental health, positive parenting, and reduced violence against children.

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来源期刊
Journal of Migration and Health
Journal of Migration and Health Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.70%
发文量
65
审稿时长
153 days
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