Dana Chow, Dunstan J Matungwa, Elizabeth R Blackwood, Paul Pronyk, Dorothy Dow
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Youth living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) have an increased vulnerability to mental illnesses, with many lacking access to adequate treatment. There has been a growing body of interventions using task sharing with trained peer leaders to address this mental health gap. This scoping review examines the characteristics, effectiveness, components of peer delivery and challenges of peer-led mental health interventions for youth aged 10-24 in LMICs. A key term search strategy was employed across MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, Global Health and Global Index Medicus. Eligibility criteria included young people aged 10-24 and a peer-led component delivered in any setting in an LMIC. Study selection and extraction were conducted independently by the first and second authors, with discrepancies resolved by the senior author. Study characteristics were summarised and presented descriptively. The search identified 5,358 citations, and 19 studies were included. There were 14 quantitative, four qualitative and one mixed methods study reporting mental health outcomes. Types of interventions were heterogenous but fell within three broad categories: (1) peer education and psychoeducation, (2) peer-led psychotherapy and counselling and (3) peer support. All studies reported improved mental health outcomes as a result of the peer-led interventions. Peer-led interventions are versatile in terms of both the types of interventions and mode of delivery. Lived experience, mutual respect and reduced stigma make this method a highly unique and effective way to engage this age group. However, implementing peer-led youth interventions is not without challenges. Adequate training, supervision, cultural appropriateness and support from established institutions are critical to safeguarding and ensuring the sustainability of such programs. Our findings suggest that peer-led models are a valuable intervention strategy that policymakers can leverage in current and future efforts to address youth mental health in LMICs. Future areas of research should expand to include the perspectives of other key stakeholders involved in the implementation of peer-led mental health interventions, focusing on factors including fidelity, feasibility and acceptability to enhance implementation insights.
生活在低收入和中等收入国家的青年更容易患精神疾病,许多人无法获得适当的治疗。越来越多的干预措施通过与训练有素的同伴领导分担任务来解决这一心理健康差距。本范围审查审查了中低收入国家10-24岁青年同伴主导的心理健康干预措施的特点、有效性、组成部分和挑战。在MEDLINE、Embase、Web of Science、Global Health和Global Index Medicus中采用了关键词搜索策略。资格标准包括10-24岁的年轻人和在低收入和中等收入国家的任何环境中提供的同龄人主导的组成部分。研究选择和提取由第一作者和第二作者独立进行,差异由资深作者解决。对研究特征进行了总结和描述。该搜索确定了5358条引用,包括19项研究。有14项定量研究、4项定性研究和1项混合方法研究报告了心理健康结果。干预措施的类型各不相同,但可分为三大类:(1)同伴教育和心理教育;(2)同伴主导的心理治疗和咨询;(3)同伴支持。所有研究都报告了同伴主导的干预措施对心理健康结果的改善。同伴主导的干预措施在干预类型和实施方式方面都是多种多样的。生活经验、相互尊重和减少耻辱使这种方法成为吸引这一年龄组的一种非常独特和有效的方法。然而,实施同伴主导的青年干预并非没有挑战。充分的培训、监督、文化适宜性和来自现有机构的支持对于保障和确保此类项目的可持续性至关重要。我们的研究结果表明,同伴主导模式是一种有价值的干预策略,决策者可以在当前和未来的努力中利用它来解决中低收入国家的青少年心理健康问题。未来的研究领域应扩大,包括参与实施同伴主导的心理健康干预的其他关键利益攸关方的观点,重点关注包括保真度、可行性和可接受性在内的因素,以提高实施的洞察力。
期刊介绍:
lobal Mental Health (GMH) is an Open Access journal that publishes papers that have a broad application of ‘the global point of view’ of mental health issues. The field of ‘global mental health’ is still emerging, reflecting a movement of advocacy and associated research driven by an agenda to remedy longstanding treatment gaps and disparities in care, access, and capacity. But these efforts and goals are also driving a potential reframing of knowledge in powerful ways, and positioning a new disciplinary approach to mental health. GMH seeks to cultivate and grow this emerging distinct discipline of ‘global mental health’, and the new knowledge and paradigms that should come from it.