Cargando…

Assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their children in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh

INTRODUCTION: Despite the well-recognized risk poor maternal mental health poses to early child development, it is still rarely addressed in global health programming, especially in humanitarian settings where access to health and mental health infrastructures may be limited. Recognizing the critica...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Le Roch, K., Nguyen, A. J., Rahaman, K. S., Lasater, M., Barua, S., Lee, C., Schojan, M., Clouin, L., Murray, S. M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10434538/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2023.776
_version_ 1785091916939919360
author Le Roch, K.
Nguyen, A. J.
Rahaman, K. S.
Lasater, M.
Barua, S.
Lee, C.
Schojan, M.
Clouin, L.
Murray, S. M.
author_facet Le Roch, K.
Nguyen, A. J.
Rahaman, K. S.
Lasater, M.
Barua, S.
Lee, C.
Schojan, M.
Clouin, L.
Murray, S. M.
author_sort Le Roch, K.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Despite the well-recognized risk poor maternal mental health poses to early child development, it is still rarely addressed in global health programming, especially in humanitarian settings where access to health and mental health infrastructures may be limited. Recognizing the critical role of maternal psychosocial wellness in addressing the health and development of children in conflict, Action contre La Faim/Action Against Hunger (ACF) developed the Baby Friendly Spaces (BFS) program. BFS is a holistic, evidenced-based psychosocial support program that aims to enhance mothers’ wellbeing, internal resources, and child caring skills in order to create a buffer against the deleterious health and developmental impacts of conflict on children. OBJECTIVES: In Bangladesh, we sought to evaluate the effectiveness of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their malnourished children under two years old living in Cox’s Bazar’s camps. METHODS: For this study, we used a matched pair randomization, where ten BFS program sites were allocated to either continue providing services “as usual” or to an “enhanced BFS program” after re-training and providing continuous supportive supervision of the BFS staff throughout the trial period. 600 mothers and their children were enrolled in the study and attended psychosocial stimulation activities related to child care practices and care for women. Data were collected at baseline and 8-week follow-up. Primary outcomes included maternal distress and wellbeing, functioning, and coping. For implementation purpose, a survey was administered on confidence at work for all BFS staff and a fidelity observation assessment was conducted. RESULTS: Relative to “as usual” sites, mothers in enhanced implementation sites reported greater reductions in distress (B=-.30) and improvement in wellbeing (B=.58). These differences were small, but marginally significant (p=.058; p=.038) with standard estimation; There was no significant difference between the two groups for daily functioning and coping. BFS providers in “enhanced BFS program” reported higher confidence in service delivery than their colleagues (p=.01). Fidelity varied widely across different components, with some very high and some very low adherence. There tended to be better adherence to procedures in group versus individual sessions and for some specific activities across domains, for enhanced versus standard BFS. CONCLUSIONS: Findings highlight the value of innovative study approaches for real-world evidence generation. Small but feasible adjustments to implementation can both improve program delivery for maximizing impact. Consequently, low-intensity psychosocial support activities holds potential for reducing distress and improving subjective well-being of conflict affected mothers. DISCLOSURE OF INTEREST: None Declared
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10434538
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Cambridge University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-104345382023-08-18 Assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their children in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh Le Roch, K. Nguyen, A. J. Rahaman, K. S. Lasater, M. Barua, S. Lee, C. Schojan, M. Clouin, L. Murray, S. M. Eur Psychiatry Abstract INTRODUCTION: Despite the well-recognized risk poor maternal mental health poses to early child development, it is still rarely addressed in global health programming, especially in humanitarian settings where access to health and mental health infrastructures may be limited. Recognizing the critical role of maternal psychosocial wellness in addressing the health and development of children in conflict, Action contre La Faim/Action Against Hunger (ACF) developed the Baby Friendly Spaces (BFS) program. BFS is a holistic, evidenced-based psychosocial support program that aims to enhance mothers’ wellbeing, internal resources, and child caring skills in order to create a buffer against the deleterious health and developmental impacts of conflict on children. OBJECTIVES: In Bangladesh, we sought to evaluate the effectiveness of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their malnourished children under two years old living in Cox’s Bazar’s camps. METHODS: For this study, we used a matched pair randomization, where ten BFS program sites were allocated to either continue providing services “as usual” or to an “enhanced BFS program” after re-training and providing continuous supportive supervision of the BFS staff throughout the trial period. 600 mothers and their children were enrolled in the study and attended psychosocial stimulation activities related to child care practices and care for women. Data were collected at baseline and 8-week follow-up. Primary outcomes included maternal distress and wellbeing, functioning, and coping. For implementation purpose, a survey was administered on confidence at work for all BFS staff and a fidelity observation assessment was conducted. RESULTS: Relative to “as usual” sites, mothers in enhanced implementation sites reported greater reductions in distress (B=-.30) and improvement in wellbeing (B=.58). These differences were small, but marginally significant (p=.058; p=.038) with standard estimation; There was no significant difference between the two groups for daily functioning and coping. BFS providers in “enhanced BFS program” reported higher confidence in service delivery than their colleagues (p=.01). Fidelity varied widely across different components, with some very high and some very low adherence. There tended to be better adherence to procedures in group versus individual sessions and for some specific activities across domains, for enhanced versus standard BFS. CONCLUSIONS: Findings highlight the value of innovative study approaches for real-world evidence generation. Small but feasible adjustments to implementation can both improve program delivery for maximizing impact. Consequently, low-intensity psychosocial support activities holds potential for reducing distress and improving subjective well-being of conflict affected mothers. DISCLOSURE OF INTEREST: None Declared Cambridge University Press 2023-07-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10434538/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2023.776 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Le Roch, K.
Nguyen, A. J.
Rahaman, K. S.
Lasater, M.
Barua, S.
Lee, C.
Schojan, M.
Clouin, L.
Murray, S. M.
Assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their children in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh
title Assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their children in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh
title_full Assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their children in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh
title_fullStr Assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their children in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their children in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh
title_short Assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for Rohingya refugee mothers and their children in Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh
title_sort assessing the effectiveness and observing fidelity of a psychosocial support program for rohingya refugee mothers and their children in cox’s bazar, bangladesh
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10434538/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2023.776
work_keys_str_mv AT lerochk assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh
AT nguyenaj assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh
AT rahamanks assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh
AT lasaterm assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh
AT baruas assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh
AT leec assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh
AT schojanm assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh
AT clouinl assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh
AT murraysm assessingtheeffectivenessandobservingfidelityofapsychosocialsupportprogramforrohingyarefugeemothersandtheirchildrenincoxsbazarbangladesh