针对撒哈拉以南非洲青少年心理健康的促进性和预防性干预措施:综合范围界定和系统性审查

M. Seekles, Fantacy Twagira, Ali Alam, A. Obasi
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摘要

青少年心理健康状况不佳与以后生活中的心理、身体和社会问题有关。因此,青春期是促进精神健康和预防精神疾病的关键时期,特别是在撒哈拉以南非洲,那里的青少年面临许多导致精神健康状况不佳的风险因素。本综述旨在了解该地区促进/预防性青少年心理健康干预措施的当前使用情况、有效性和文化敏感性。使用Arksey和O 'Malley框架,通过检索MEDLINE、CINAHL、Global Health、PsycINFO和Cochrane系统评价数据库,对2000年1月至2021年12月进行了综合范围和系统评价。本综述确定了79篇论文,涉及61种独特的干预措施。只确定了五个普遍的、以学校为基础的课程;大多数研究的对象是孤儿或艾滋病毒阳性的青少年。旨在加强知识、表达和社会心理技能的社会心理干预产生了好坏参半的结果。结构性干预往往以社区为基础,社会心理规划有限。那些侧重于艾滋病毒预防、性别平等和养育子女的计划也产生了好坏参半的结果;经济生计方案的证据最为充分。很少有研究详细描述文化敏感性。一些人解释了干预如何符合当地的世界观/价值观;具有特定于上下文的内容;是基于对相关概念的探索;或整合精神/文化实践。在撒哈拉以南非洲,针对青少年心理健康的预防性/促进性干预措施就地理分布而言是有限的,但就干预类型而言是广泛的。有针对性的做法反映了该区域青少年在社会经济贫困、家庭破裂和身体健康状况不佳方面面临的现实。然而,以总体福祉为重点的普遍干预措施是有限的,并且缺乏对该地区社会媒体使用增加、自杀和肥胖等当代发展的考虑。经济生计干预措施显示出最一致的有效性证据。未来的研究可以更多地考虑/报告文化敏感性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Promotive and preventive interventions for adolescent mental health in Sub-Saharan Africa: a combined scoping and systematic review
Poor mental health in adolescence is associated with mental, physical and social problems in later life. Adolescence is, therefore, a critical time for promoting mental well-being and preventing mental illness, particularly in sub-Saharan Africa, where adolescents are exposed to a multitude of risk factors for poor mental health. This review aimed to map the current use, effectiveness and cultural sensitivity of promotive/preventive adolescent mental health interventions in the region.A combined scoping and systematic review was conducted using the Arksey and O’Malley framework through searches in MEDLINE, CINAHL, Global Health, PsycINFO and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, covering January 2000 to December 2021.This review identified 79 papers, related to 61 unique interventions. Only five universal, school-based programmes were identified; most studies targeted orphans or HIV positive adolescents. Psychosocial interventions—aimed at strengthening knowledge, expression and psychosocial skills—produced mixed results. Structural interventions were often community-based and had limited psychosocial programming. Those that focused on HIV prevention, gender equity and parenting also produced mixed results; evidence was strongest for economic-livelihood programmes. Few studies described cultural sensitivity in detail. Some explained how the intervention aligned with local worldviews/values; had context-specific content; were based on explorations of relevant concepts; or integrated spiritual/cultural practices.Preventive/promotive interventions for adolescent mental health in sub-Saharan Africa are limited in terms of geographical spread, but broad in terms of intervention types. Targeted approaches reflect realities that adolescents in the region face in relation to socioeconomic deprivation, family disruption and poor physical health. Yet, universal interventions that focus on general well-being are limited and lack a consideration of contemporary developments in the region such as increased social media use, suicide and obesity. Economic livelihood interventions showed most consistent evidence of effectiveness. Future studies could do more to consider/report cultural sensitivity.
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