Improving access to psychological intervention in low-middle income settings: Results from a waitlist-controlled, proof-of-concept trial of the MemFlex intervention for trauma-exposed Afghan youth.

IF 3.8 3区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Vida Mirabolfathi, Mohammad H Choobin, Ali Reza Moradi, Fatemeh Sanambari, Shahryar Naeini, Mohamad Mahdavi, Caitlin Hitchcock
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Abstract

Background: Low-intensity interventions targeting a range of mental health issues offer a scalable approach for young trauma survivors in low-middle income countries.

Aims: Here, we present results from a proof-of-concept, randomized, waitlist-controlled trial evaluating MemFlex, an autobiographical memory-based intervention, for trauma-exposed Afghan youth residing in Iran. MemFlex seeks to reduce the negative and overgeneral memory biases which maintain and predict poor mental health.

Materials and methods: Young people aged 12-18 years (N = 40) with parents who had experienced forced migration from Afghanistan were recruited from high schools in Karaj City in Iran. All had experienced a traumatic event in the last year. Participants were randomized to receive four weeks of a group-based delivery of MemFlex or Waitlist. Our primary cognitive outcome was autobiographical memory flexibility, that is, the ability to deliberately retrieve any memory type on demand. Primary clinical outcome was emotional distress, measured on the Farsi version of the Hopkins Symptom Checklist.

Results: Results indicated that MemFlex participants demonstrated large effect sizes for pre-to-post improvement in memory flexibility (d = 2.04) and emotional distress (d = 1.23). These improvements were significantly larger than Waitlist (ds < .49), and were maintained at three-month follow-up.

Discussion: Positive benefits were observed for completion of MemFlex, and future comparison against an active intervention appears warranted.

Conclusion: Further evaluation of MemFlex in this context may offer a low-cost, and low-resource intervention to improve access to psychological intervention for young migrants in low-middle income countries.

改善在中低收入环境中获得心理干预的机会:针对受创伤影响的阿富汗青少年的 MemFlex 干预概念验证试验的候选名单对照结果。
背景:针对一系列心理健康问题的低强度干预措施为中低收入国家的年轻创伤幸存者提供了一种可推广的方法。目的:在此,我们介绍了一项概念验证、随机、候选名单对照试验的结果,该试验评估了基于自传体记忆的干预措施 MemFlex,针对居住在伊朗的受创伤影响的阿富汗青年。MemFlex旨在减少维持和预测不良心理健康的负面和过度的记忆偏差:从伊朗卡拉杰市的高中招募了年龄在 12-18 岁的青少年(N=40),他们的父母都曾被迫从阿富汗移民到伊朗。所有人在过去一年中都经历过创伤事件。参与者被随机分配接受为期四周的 MemFlex 或 Waitlist 小组授课。我们的主要认知结果是自传体记忆的灵活性,即根据需要有意检索任何记忆类型的能力。主要临床结果是情绪困扰,采用霍普金斯症状检查表的波斯语版本进行测量:结果表明,MemFlex 参与者在记忆灵活性(d = 2.04)和情绪困扰(d = 1.23)方面的前后改善效果非常明显。这些改善明显大于候补名单(ds 讨论):在完成 MemFlex 后观察到了积极的益处,今后似乎有必要与积极干预进行比较:在这种情况下对 MemFlex 的进一步评估可能会提供一种低成本、低资源的干预方法,以改善中低收入国家年轻移民获得心理干预的机会。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
3.20%
发文量
57
期刊介绍: The British Journal of Clinical Psychology publishes original research, both empirical and theoretical, on all aspects of clinical psychology: - clinical and abnormal psychology featuring descriptive or experimental studies - aetiology, assessment and treatment of the whole range of psychological disorders irrespective of age group and setting - biological influences on individual behaviour - studies of psychological interventions and treatment on individuals, dyads, families and groups
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