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The dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of Syrian refugees in Lebanon

AIMS: Children's responses to war and displacement are varied; many struggle, while others appear resilient. However, research into these outcomes disproportionately focuses on cross-sectional data in high-income countries. We aimed to (1) investigate change in resilience across two timepoints...

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Autores principales: Popham, C. M., McEwen, F. S., Karam, E., Fayyad, J., Karam, G., Saab, D., Moghames, P., Pluess, M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9228593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35702899
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796022000191
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author Popham, C. M.
McEwen, F. S.
Karam, E.
Fayyad, J.
Karam, G.
Saab, D.
Moghames, P.
Pluess, M.
author_facet Popham, C. M.
McEwen, F. S.
Karam, E.
Fayyad, J.
Karam, G.
Saab, D.
Moghames, P.
Pluess, M.
author_sort Popham, C. M.
collection PubMed
description AIMS: Children's responses to war and displacement are varied; many struggle, while others appear resilient. However, research into these outcomes disproportionately focuses on cross-sectional data in high-income countries. We aimed to (1) investigate change in resilience across two timepoints in a highly vulnerable sample of Syrian refugee children in Lebanon, and (2) explore predictors of their mental health problems across time. METHODS: In total, 982 Syrian child–caregiver dyads living in refugee settlements in Lebanon completed questionnaires via interview at baseline and follow-up one year later. We categorised children into groups based on their risk for mental health problems across both timepoints (stable high risk/SHR, deteriorating, improving, stable low risk) according to locally validated cut-offs on measures of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression and behavioural problems. Analyses of covariance identified how the groups differed on a range of individual and socio-environmental predictors, followed up by cross-lagged panel models (CLPMs) to investigate the directionality of the relationships between significantly related predictors and symptoms. RESULTS: The sample showed a meaningful amount of change in mental health symptoms from baseline to follow-up. Over half (56.3%) of children met SHR criteria and 10.3% deteriorated over time, but almost one-quarter (24.2%) showed meaningful improvement, and 9.2% were consistently at low risk for mental health problems at both timepoints. Several predictors differentiated the groups, particularly social measures. According to CLPMs, maternal acceptance (β = −0.07) predicted child mental health symptoms over time. Self-esteem (β = −0.08), maternal psychological control (β = 0.10), child maltreatment (β = 0.09) and caregiver depression (β = 0.08) predicted child symptoms and vice versa (β(se) = −0.11, β(b) = 0.07, β(mpc) = 0.08, β(cm) = 0.1, β(cd) = 0.11). Finally, child symptoms predicted loneliness (β = 0.12), bullying (β = 0.07), perceived social support (β = −0.12), parent–child conflict (β = 0.13), caregiver PTSD (β = 0.07), caregiver anxiety (β = 0.08) and the perceived refugee environment (β = −0.09). CONCLUSIONS: Our results show risk and resilience are dynamic, and the family environment plays a key role in children's response to war and displacement. Conversely, children also have a significant impact on the family environment and caregiver's own mental health. Interventions to promote resilience in refugee children should therefore consider family-wide mechanisms.
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spelling pubmed-92285932022-07-01 The dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of Syrian refugees in Lebanon Popham, C. M. McEwen, F. S. Karam, E. Fayyad, J. Karam, G. Saab, D. Moghames, P. Pluess, M. Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci Original Article AIMS: Children's responses to war and displacement are varied; many struggle, while others appear resilient. However, research into these outcomes disproportionately focuses on cross-sectional data in high-income countries. We aimed to (1) investigate change in resilience across two timepoints in a highly vulnerable sample of Syrian refugee children in Lebanon, and (2) explore predictors of their mental health problems across time. METHODS: In total, 982 Syrian child–caregiver dyads living in refugee settlements in Lebanon completed questionnaires via interview at baseline and follow-up one year later. We categorised children into groups based on their risk for mental health problems across both timepoints (stable high risk/SHR, deteriorating, improving, stable low risk) according to locally validated cut-offs on measures of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression and behavioural problems. Analyses of covariance identified how the groups differed on a range of individual and socio-environmental predictors, followed up by cross-lagged panel models (CLPMs) to investigate the directionality of the relationships between significantly related predictors and symptoms. RESULTS: The sample showed a meaningful amount of change in mental health symptoms from baseline to follow-up. Over half (56.3%) of children met SHR criteria and 10.3% deteriorated over time, but almost one-quarter (24.2%) showed meaningful improvement, and 9.2% were consistently at low risk for mental health problems at both timepoints. Several predictors differentiated the groups, particularly social measures. According to CLPMs, maternal acceptance (β = −0.07) predicted child mental health symptoms over time. Self-esteem (β = −0.08), maternal psychological control (β = 0.10), child maltreatment (β = 0.09) and caregiver depression (β = 0.08) predicted child symptoms and vice versa (β(se) = −0.11, β(b) = 0.07, β(mpc) = 0.08, β(cm) = 0.1, β(cd) = 0.11). Finally, child symptoms predicted loneliness (β = 0.12), bullying (β = 0.07), perceived social support (β = −0.12), parent–child conflict (β = 0.13), caregiver PTSD (β = 0.07), caregiver anxiety (β = 0.08) and the perceived refugee environment (β = −0.09). CONCLUSIONS: Our results show risk and resilience are dynamic, and the family environment plays a key role in children's response to war and displacement. Conversely, children also have a significant impact on the family environment and caregiver's own mental health. Interventions to promote resilience in refugee children should therefore consider family-wide mechanisms. Cambridge University Press 2022-06-15 /pmc/articles/PMC9228593/ /pubmed/35702899 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796022000191 Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Popham, C. M.
McEwen, F. S.
Karam, E.
Fayyad, J.
Karam, G.
Saab, D.
Moghames, P.
Pluess, M.
The dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of Syrian refugees in Lebanon
title The dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of Syrian refugees in Lebanon
title_full The dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of Syrian refugees in Lebanon
title_fullStr The dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of Syrian refugees in Lebanon
title_full_unstemmed The dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of Syrian refugees in Lebanon
title_short The dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of Syrian refugees in Lebanon
title_sort dynamic nature of refugee children's resilience: a cohort study of syrian refugees in lebanon
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9228593/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35702899
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S2045796022000191
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