2022
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-058101
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Scalable psychological interventions for Syrian refugees in Europe and the Middle East: STRENGTHS study protocol for a prospective individual participant data meta-analysis

Abstract: IntroductionThe World Health Organization’s (WHO) scalable psychological interventions, such as Problem Management Plus (PM+) and Step-by-Step (SbS) are designed to be cost-effective non-specialist delivered interventions to reduce symptoms of common mental disorders, such as anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The STRENGTHS consortium aims to evaluate the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and implementation of the individual format of PM+ and its group version (gPM+), as well as of … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Favorable intervention effects remain significant during short‐term follow‐up periods. Future individual participant data meta‐analyses 62 may shed light on participant‐level moderators of intervention effects and help to clarify for whom PM+ and SbS are most effective. If further research provides support for the cost‐effectiveness of PM+ and SbS, and their suitability for stepped‐care programs, both WHO interventions can help to reduce the negative mental health consequences of current and future global crises.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Favorable intervention effects remain significant during short‐term follow‐up periods. Future individual participant data meta‐analyses 62 may shed light on participant‐level moderators of intervention effects and help to clarify for whom PM+ and SbS are most effective. If further research provides support for the cost‐effectiveness of PM+ and SbS, and their suitability for stepped‐care programs, both WHO interventions can help to reduce the negative mental health consequences of current and future global crises.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This may also point to the fact that a deeper understanding of effect modifiers for single interventions is needed. Recently registered traditional (Schäfer et al, 2022 ) and individual-participant data (IPD; [de Graaff et al, 2022 ]) meta-analysis projects on the WHO programmes PM + and Step-by-Step may point into this direction. However, such projects are also urgently needed for interventions delivered to children and adolescents like EASE (Brown et al, 2019 ; Dawson et al, 2019 ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The collapse of the Syrian state has yielded an abundance of literature on displaced Syrians' MH (166), including related interventions (167). Yet, however useful the resulting literature may be for understanding "refugee mental health" as a discipline, challenges exist in applying these learnings to the Afghan context.…”
Section: Applicability Of Prior Mental Health Work With Other Displac...mentioning
confidence: 99%