Psychological therapies for the treatment of mental disorders in low- and middle-income countries affected by humanitarian crises

No SJR dataJul 6, 2018The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Psychological therapies for mental health problems in low- and middle-income countries during humanitarian crises

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Abstract

A total of 36 studies involving 3523 participants were analyzed to compare psychological therapies and control conditions for mental disorders in humanitarian settings.

  • Psychological therapies may substantially reduce PTSD symptoms in adults at endpoint (SMD -1.07) but show smaller effects at follow-up (SMD -0.49 at 1-4 months, SMD -0.37 at 6 months).
  • These therapies also appear to reduce depression symptoms significantly at endpoint (SMD -0.86), with smaller effects noted at follow-up (SMD -0.42).
  • Anxiety symptoms may be moderately reduced by psychological therapies at endpoint (SMD -0.74) and at follow-up (SMD -0.53).
  • Dropout rates were similar between those receiving psychological therapies and control conditions (19.5% vs. 19.1%).
  • In children and adolescents, very low quality evidence suggests that CBT may lower PTSD symptoms (SMD -1.56), but the findings are uncertain with limited data on other conditions.

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