Non-clinical Psychosocial Mental Health Support Programmes for People with Diverse Language and Cultural Backgrounds: A Critical Rapid Review.

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 ANTHROPOLOGY
Nathalia Costa, Rebecca Olson, Karime Mescouto, Jenny Setchell, Stefanie Plage, Tinashe Dune, Jennifer Creese, Sameera Suleman, Rita Prasad-Ildes, Zheng Yen Ng
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Low accessibility to mainstream psychosocial services disadvantages culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) populations, resulting in delayed care and high rates of unsupported psychological distress. Non-clinical interventions may play an important role in improving accessibility to psychosocial support, but what characterises best practice in this space remains unclear. This critical rapid review addressed this gap by searching for, and critically analysing, existing research on non-clinical psychosocial support services, drawing from a critical realist framework and Brossard and Chandler's (Brossard and Chandler, Explaining mental illness: Sociological perspectives, Bristol University Press, 2022) taxonomy of positions on culture and mental health. We searched PubMed, PsycInfo, LILACS, Scopus and Sociological Abstracts to identify non-clinical psychosocial support interventions for first-generation immigrant CALD populations delivered by lay-health workers. Thirty-eight studies were included: 10 quantitative, 7 mixed-methods and 21 qualitative. Most studies were conducted in North America (n = 19) and Europe (n = 7), with few conducted in low-income countries (Tanzania and Lebanon, n = 3 each, Kenya [n = 1]). Studies often focussed on specific interventions (e.g. psychoeducation) for targeted populations (e.g. refugees, Latinx immigrants); multimodal interventions (e.g. psychological support and food distribution) for broad populations were less common. Thirty-five different outcome scales were identified across quantitative and mixed-methods studies, with most covering depression, stress and trauma. Most studies identified significant improvements for at least one psychosocial outcome despite interventions being relatively short in sessions. Findings from qualitative studies highlighted varied engagement with theory-informed models of service, and identified important barriers to non-clinical psychosocial support services, including precarious resourcing. Our analysis suggests most studies were underpinned by split-relativist frameworks and focussed on interventions aimed at helping clients navigate the eurocentricity and complexity of mainstream services. Recognising the eurocentrism of universalist frameworks, working from a culturally relativist position, prioritising social determinants of health and using models that centre clients, flexibility, context, culture and community are likely to ensure best practice for non-clinical psychosocial support interventions.

不同语言和文化背景人群的非临床心理社会心理健康支持计划:一个关键的快速回顾。
获得主流社会心理服务的机会较少,对文化和语言多样化(CALD)人群不利,导致护理延迟和得不到支持的心理困扰的高发率。非临床干预措施可能在改善获得社会心理支持方面发挥重要作用,但这方面最佳做法的特点尚不清楚。这种批判性的快速回顾通过搜索和批判性分析现有的非临床心理社会支持服务研究来解决这一差距,从批判现实主义框架和Brossard和Chandler (Brossard和Chandler,解释精神疾病:社会学观点,布里斯托尔大学出版社,2022)对文化和心理健康的立场分类。我们检索了PubMed、PsycInfo、LILACS、Scopus和社会学摘要,以确定由非专业卫生工作者提供的第一代移民CALD人群的非临床心理社会支持干预措施。共纳入38项研究:定量方法10项,混合方法7项,定性方法21项。大多数研究在北美(n = 19)和欧洲(n = 7)进行,很少在低收入国家进行(坦桑尼亚和黎巴嫩各n = 3,肯尼亚[n = 1])。研究往往侧重于针对目标人群(如难民、拉丁裔移民)的具体干预措施(如心理教育);针对广大人群的多模式干预措施(如心理支持和食品分发)不太常见。通过定量和混合方法研究确定了35种不同的结果量表,其中大多数涉及抑郁、压力和创伤。大多数研究发现,尽管干预时间相对较短,但至少有一种社会心理结果有显著改善。定性研究的结果强调了对基于理论的服务模式的不同参与,并确定了非临床社会心理支持服务的重要障碍,包括资源不稳定。我们的分析表明,大多数研究都以分裂相对主义框架为基础,并侧重于旨在帮助客户应对欧洲中心和主流服务的复杂性的干预措施。认识到普遍主义框架的欧洲中心主义,从文化相对主义立场出发,优先考虑健康的社会决定因素,并使用以客户、灵活性、背景、文化和社区为中心的模式,可能确保非临床社会心理支持干预措施的最佳做法。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.90%
发文量
49
期刊介绍: Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry is an international and interdisciplinary forum for the publication of work in three interrelated fields: medical and psychiatric anthropology, cross-cultural psychiatry, and related cross-societal and clinical epidemiological studies. The journal publishes original research, and theoretical papers based on original research, on all subjects in each of these fields. Interdisciplinary work which bridges anthropological and medical perspectives and methods which are clinically relevant are particularly welcome, as is research on the cultural context of normative and deviant behavior, including the anthropological, epidemiological and clinical aspects of the subject. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry also fosters systematic and wide-ranging examinations of the significance of culture in health care, including comparisons of how the concept of culture is operationalized in anthropological and medical disciplines. With the increasing emphasis on the cultural diversity of society, which finds its reflection in many facets of our day to day life, including health care, Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry is required reading in anthropology, psychiatry and general health care libraries.
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