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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Components of Quality of Delivery in Task-Shared, Psychosocial Interventions: Fidelity and Competence of Nonspecialist Providers in Rwanda

Bond, Laura January 2024 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Theresa Betancourt / Families in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) face significant mental health and psychosocial care gaps. In recent years, researchers and practitioners have addressed these gaps by task-sharing evidence-based mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) interventions to nonspecialist community providers. Task-shared interventions have demonstrated effectiveness (improvements in MHPSS outcomes of intervention participants); however, quality of delivery (fidelity and competence) has rarely been examined as a factor associated with effectiveness despite implementation science models suggesting a causal link between quality of delivery and effectiveness. In this study, I apply a mixed methods approach to examine the quality of delivery by nonspecialists who are facilitating an evidence-based, early childhood development and family violence prevention program, known as Sugira Muryango, in Rwanda. Currently, Sugira Muryango is being expanded and implemented through the Promoting Lasting Anthropometric Change and Young Children’s Development (PLAY) Collaborative, which scales up Sugira Muryango to 10,000 households living in extreme poverty in Ngoma, Nyanza, and Rubavu districts. The program has strong ties to the Rwanda National Government and their social protection and policy goals. I find that nonspecialist age is significantly associated with higher initial fidelity and competence scores and smaller improvements in fidelity and competence over time. In addition, nonspecialists in Nyanza district were more likely to have higher initial fidelity and competence scores but also see smaller changes over time. Fidelity and competence were found to significantly co-vary. Multi-level growth models revealed that fidelity was not a significant predictor of changes in any child discipline outcomes or of any responsive caregiving outcomes. However, competence significantly predicted changes in some responsive caregiving practices, specifically acceptance and learning materials, and it predicted decreases in physical punishment. In semi-structured interviews, the nonspecialists provided examples of using skills such as rapport-building, empathy, and active listening to deliver Sugira Muryango effectively. Nonspecialists also provided examples of barriers to quality of delivery, including compensation and technology issues. Overall, this dissertation contributes empirical evidence to what we understand theoretically and moves towards development of best practices for monitoring and supervising nonspecialists in task-shared MHPSS interventions. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2024. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Social Work. / Discipline: Social Work.
2

Beyond cultural competence : How mental health and psychosocial support practitioners' perception of culture influence their work with Syrian refugees in Amman, Jordan.

Benson, Livia, Hedberg, Heléne January 2016 (has links)
Since the start of the Syrian war, Jordan has received many Syrian refugees with around 650,000 Syrians now residing in the country. As the state has received a lot of help from the international community, funding refugee camps and providing basic necessities, a lot of international humanitarian practitioners have come to Jordan to work alongside Jordanian and Middle Eastern practitioners. The situation therefore has brought practitioners from different academic, professional and geographical backgrounds together to work with people of a different cultural background than their own. Syrians represent a vast diversity in terms of ethnic, religious, linguistic and socio-economic backgrounds. Research have addressed that practitioners’ sensitivity to how cultural complexities may influence social problems can facilitate a better understanding of the client’s path to recovery. The purpose of our study was to increase the knowledge of mental health and psychosocial support practitioners’ understanding and experience of a culturally sensitive social work in Amman, Jordan and discuss how this affects their practice with Syrian refugees. Through qualitative interviews we found that the practitioners’ perception of Arab culture as one and the same makes culture a non-issue in terms of cultural diversity, and that this perception influence the practice with Syrian refugees in a number of ways.
3

Challenges and Opportunities for Culturally Sensitive Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in the African Context

Amigues, Amanda January 2022 (has links)
Mental Health and Psychosocial Support is a growing field of intervention in humanitarian assistance worldwide. The influence of culture and faith in individual and collective coping mechanisms and recovery processes has brought scholars to emphasize the need for MHPSS programming to adopt a cultural and faith sensitive approach to increase the cultural relevance and efficacity of interventions. However, despite official guidelines for humanitarian agencies to integrate cultural and faith sensitivity in their operations, there is an information gap on designing such an approach and its effects on the implementation and success of interventions. This qualitative study explores the opportunities and challenges encountered when adopting a cultural and faith sensitive approach within MHPSS interventions in the context of the Red Cross in Zambia, Ghana, Niger, and South Africa. Based on in-depth interviews with key informants from the Red Cross, the results provide insights into the strengths and opportunities of adapting to local cultural norms and practices and cooperating with faith-based and traditional community leaders during the implementation of MHPSS. The study concludes on the potential of such an approach to strengthen the local capacities of faith-based actors and reduce the stigmatization of mental illness.
4

Enduring trauma at a distance : A literature review of intergenerational trauma and community-based coping strategies among Palestinian youth in occupied Palestinian territories and its implications for sustainable peace

Naworska, Weronika January 2024 (has links)
Intergenerational trauma is increasingly prevalent among youth from generations that have endured collective trauma due to prolonged armed conflict. Existing research indicates that this trauma is often linked to an elevated risk of heightened violence within affected communities. However, there remains a lack of substantial research on effective interventions for humanitarian organisations to address this issue. Moreover, typical approaches tend to follow Western standards, which may not be suitable for the conditions faced by these communities. This research paper investigates the potential of incorporating community-based coping strategies into the Mental Health and Psychosocial Support (MHPSS) programs employed by humanitarian organisations. Moreover, it explores whether the integration could lead to more sustainable and positive outcomes for affected communities that align with the humanitarian-development-peace nexus. This paper achieves this through an extensive literature review and a case study examining intergenerational trauma and its impact on Palestinian youth in the occupied Palestinian territories of the Gaza Strip and West Bank (including East Jerusalem). It evaluates the community-based coping strategies in place and assesses their effectiveness. The findings of this research emphasise the importance of community engagement and the incorporation of existing coping strategies to effectively address intergenerational trauma among affected youth. This research also indicates a predominantly positive association between existing coping strategies and community resilience. Moreover, the existing coping strategies utilised by the affected communities have the potential to break the cycle of violence, which frequently results from intergenerational trauma. Finally, this research presents that these strategies foster a more sustainable peace process.

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