Psychological and social interventions for the prevention of mental disorders in people living in low- and middle-income countries affected by humanitarian crises

Sep 8, 2020The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Psychological and social support to prevent mental health problems in people facing humanitarian crises in low- and middle-income countries

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Abstract

A total of 2398 participants were involved across seven randomized controlled trials comparing psychosocial interventions in low- and middle-income countries affected by humanitarian crises.

  • None of the studies assessed whether prevention interventions reduced the incidence of mental disorders.
  • There may be no evidence of a difference in acceptability between psychological and social interventions and control conditions for both children and adolescents (RR 0.93) and adults (RR 0.96).
  • For children and adolescents, secondary outcomes showed no significant differences in reducing PTSD symptoms (SMD -0.16), depressive symptoms (SMD -0.01), or anxiety symptoms (SMD 0.11).
  • In adults, psychological counseling may be effective in reducing depressive (MD -7.50) and anxiety symptoms (MD -6.10).
  • Evidence quality for most outcomes was rated low to very low, limiting confidence in the findings.

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