TY - JOUR
T1 - Afghan mental health and psychosocial well-being
T2 - Thematic review of four decades of research and interventions
AU - Alemi, Qais
AU - Panter-Brick, Catherine
AU - Oriya, Spozhmay
AU - Ahmady, Mariam
AU - Alimi, Abdul Qawi
AU - Faiz, Hafizullah
AU - Hakim, Nadia
AU - Sami Hashemi, Sayed A.
AU - Manaly, Muhammad Amin
AU - Naseri, Roman
AU - Parwiz, Khesraw
AU - Sadat, Sayed Javid
AU - Sharifi, Mohammad Zahid
AU - Shinwari, Zalmai
AU - Ahmadi, Sayed Jafar
AU - Amin, Rohullah
AU - Azimi, Sayed
AU - Hewad, Atal
AU - Musavi, Zeinab
AU - Siddiqi, Abdul Majeed
AU - Bragin, Martha
AU - Kashino, Wataru
AU - Lavdas, Michalis
AU - Miller, Kenneth E.
AU - Missmahl, Inge
AU - Omidian, Patricia A.
AU - Trani, Jean Francois
AU - Van Der Walt, Sarah Kate
AU - Silove, Derrick
AU - Ventevogel, Peter
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023.
PY - 2023/7/10
Y1 - 2023/7/10
N2 - Background Four decades of war, political upheaval, economic deprivation and forced displacement have profoundly affected both in-country and refugee Afghan populations. Aims We reviewed literature on mental health and psychosocial well-being, to assess the current evidence and describe mental healthcare systems, including government programmes and community-based interventions. Method In 2022, we conducted a systematic search in Google Scholar, PTSDpubs, PubMed and PsycINFO, and a hand search of grey literature (N = 214 papers). We identified the main factors driving the epidemiology of mental health problems, culturally salient understandings of psychological distress, coping strategies and help-seeking behaviours, and interventions for mental health and psychosocial support. Results Mental health problems and psychological distress show higher risks for women, ethnic minorities, people with disabilities and youth. Issues of suicidality and drug use are emerging problems that are understudied. Afghans use specific vocabulary to convey psychological distress, drawing on culturally relevant concepts of body-mind relationships. Coping strategies are largely embedded in one's faith and family. Over the past two decades, concerted efforts were made to integrate mental health into the nation's healthcare system, train cadres of psychosocial counsellors, and develop community-based psychosocial initiatives with the help of non-governmental organisations. A small but growing body of research is emerging around psychological interventions adapted to Afghan contexts and culture. Conclusions We make four recommendations to promote health equity and sustainable systems of care. Interventions must build cultural relevance, invest in community-based psychosocial support and evidence-based psychological interventions, maintain core mental health services at logical points of access and foster integrated systems of care.
AB - Background Four decades of war, political upheaval, economic deprivation and forced displacement have profoundly affected both in-country and refugee Afghan populations. Aims We reviewed literature on mental health and psychosocial well-being, to assess the current evidence and describe mental healthcare systems, including government programmes and community-based interventions. Method In 2022, we conducted a systematic search in Google Scholar, PTSDpubs, PubMed and PsycINFO, and a hand search of grey literature (N = 214 papers). We identified the main factors driving the epidemiology of mental health problems, culturally salient understandings of psychological distress, coping strategies and help-seeking behaviours, and interventions for mental health and psychosocial support. Results Mental health problems and psychological distress show higher risks for women, ethnic minorities, people with disabilities and youth. Issues of suicidality and drug use are emerging problems that are understudied. Afghans use specific vocabulary to convey psychological distress, drawing on culturally relevant concepts of body-mind relationships. Coping strategies are largely embedded in one's faith and family. Over the past two decades, concerted efforts were made to integrate mental health into the nation's healthcare system, train cadres of psychosocial counsellors, and develop community-based psychosocial initiatives with the help of non-governmental organisations. A small but growing body of research is emerging around psychological interventions adapted to Afghan contexts and culture. Conclusions We make four recommendations to promote health equity and sustainable systems of care. Interventions must build cultural relevance, invest in community-based psychosocial support and evidence-based psychological interventions, maintain core mental health services at logical points of access and foster integrated systems of care.
KW - Afghanistan
KW - Transcultural psychiatry
KW - conflict and war
KW - epidemiology
KW - refugees
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85165422841
U2 - 10.1192/bjo.2023.502
DO - 10.1192/bjo.2023.502
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85165422841
SN - 2056-4724
VL - 9
JO - BJPsych Open
JF - BJPsych Open
IS - 4
M1 - e125
ER -