Growing Up on the Edge: A Community-Based Mental Health Intervention for Children in Gaza

被引:0
|
作者
Wendy D’Andrea
Adjoa Aboagye
Kellie Ann Lee
Steven Freed
Brandon Joachim
Vivian Khedari-DePierro
Ellen H. Yates
Annedore Wilmes
Shoshana Krohner
Saaed Madhoun
Ahmed Hennawi
Lou Bergholz
机构
[1] The New School,Save the Children International
[2] Department of Psychology,undefined
[3] CARE Palestine (West Bank/Gaza),undefined
[4] Middle East,undefined
[5] North Africa,undefined
[6] and Eastern Europe Regional Office,undefined
[7] Edgework Consulting,undefined
关键词
Gaza; Child mental health; Psychiatric distress; Internalizing; Externalizing; Global mental health;
D O I
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The Gaza Strip is a notoriously high-conflict area, but few large-scale studies have examined the rates of psychiatric distress and emotional/behavioral problems among Gaza youth, and there are few trauma-informed, scaleable intervention options. Studies in existence have used smaller samples or have examined focal problems such as posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) or aggression. Here, we examine the mental health burden of young individuals (ages 8-13) in Gaza across a broad range of symptoms, and demonstrate the impact of a community-based, trauma-informed program, Eye to the Future. At the outset of this supportive youth program, over 2000 children and adolescent youth and their parents reported on child well-being using standardized measures with established global norms (the Child Behavior Checklist and Youth Self Report). These measures examine symptoms broadly (e.g. anxiety, depression, social problems, attention problems, aggression, etc.). Relative to U.S. population estimates, children in Gaza had between 2.5- and 17-times higher point prevalence of clinical mental health problems. The most significant clinical concern was anxiety, but overall, their symptoms were not confined to posttraumatic stress as a disorder and were instead broadly dispersed. However, these concerns were responsive to intervention: over the course of a six-month community psychosocial program, symptoms ameliorated, with approximately 50–70% showing reliable improvement at post-program (varying by measure). These gains were maintained in a 9-month follow-up. Future work should consider the broader mental health impact, beyond PTSD and aggression, and incorporate community supports into addressing mental health among children in the region.
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页码:833 / 848
页数:15
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