Conflict and Health (Oct 2020)

Improving mental health and psychosocial wellbeing in humanitarian settings: reflections on research funded through R2HC

  • Wietse A. Tol,
  • Alastair Ager,
  • Cecile Bizouerne,
  • Richard Bryant,
  • Rabih El Chammay,
  • Robert Colebunders,
  • Claudia García-Moreno,
  • Syed Usman Hamdani,
  • Leah E. James,
  • Stefan C.J. Jansen,
  • Marx R. Leku,
  • Samuel Likindikoki,
  • Catherine Panter-Brick,
  • Michael Pluess,
  • Courtland Robinson,
  • Leontien Ruttenberg,
  • Kevin Savage,
  • Courtney Welton-Mitchell,
  • Brian J. Hall,
  • Melissa Harper Shehadeh,
  • Anne Harmer,
  • Mark van Ommeren

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13031-020-00317-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract Major knowledge gaps remain concerning the most effective ways to address mental health and psychosocial needs of populations affected by humanitarian crises. The Research for Health in Humanitarian Crisis (R2HC) program aims to strengthen humanitarian health practice and policy through research. As a significant portion of R2HC’s research has focused on mental health and psychosocial support interventions, the program has been interested in strengthening a community of practice in this field. Following a meeting between grantees, we set out to provide an overview of the R2HC portfolio, and draw lessons learned. In this paper, we discuss the mental health and psychosocial support-focused research projects funded by R2HC; review the implications of initial findings from this research portfolio; and highlight four remaining knowledge gaps in this field. Between 2014 and 2019, R2HC funded 18 academic-practitioner partnerships focused on mental health and psychosocial support, comprising 38% of the overall portfolio (18 of 48 projects) at a value of approximately 7.2 million GBP. All projects have focused on evaluating the impact of interventions. In line with consensus-based recommendations to consider a wide range of mental health and psychosocial needs in humanitarian settings, research projects have evaluated diverse interventions. Findings so far have both challenged and confirmed widely-held assumptions about the effectiveness of mental health and psychosocial interventions in humanitarian settings. They point to the importance of building effective, sustained, and diverse partnerships between scholars, humanitarian practitioners, and funders, to ensure long-term program improvements and appropriate evidence-informed decision making. Further research needs to fill knowledge gaps regarding how to: scale-up interventions that have been found to be effective (e.g., questions related to integration across sectors, adaptation of interventions across different contexts, and optimal care systems); address neglected mental health conditions and populations (e.g., elderly, people with disabilities, sexual minorities, people with severe, pre-existing mental disorders); build on available local resources and supports (e.g., how to build on traditional, religious healing and community-wide social support practices); and ensure equity, quality, fidelity, and sustainability for interventions in real-world contexts (e.g., answering questions about how interventions from controlled studies can be transferred to more representative humanitarian contexts).