K. LE ROCH, France

Action contre la Faim Mental Health and Care Practices
Dr. Karine Le Roch is a clinical psychologist, holds a PhD in clinical psychology. She currently coordinates research project coordinator for Action Contre la Faim’s Mental Health and Care Practices Department. She has been coordinating and implementing programmes addressing MHPSS and child protection issues in the humanitarian field for the last 20 years in Europe, South-East Asia, South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. Since 2012, she has coordinated research projects on topics related to maternal mental health, Early Childhood Development and child undernutrition in humanitarian settings. Also, she develops guidance on tools, indicators, and methods for monitoring and evaluation of humanitarian programmes. She develops uptake and dissemination plans for research projects. Over the years, she has built strong relationships with experts in the MHPSS field in various contexts.

Presenter of 1 Presentation

Oral Communications (ID 1110) AS19. Mental Health Care

O166 - Improving maternal mental health through postnatal services use for South Sudanese mothers and their babies living in Nguynyel refugee camp in Gambella, Ethiopia

Date
Sat, 10.04.2021
Session Time
07:00 - 21:00
Room
On Demand
Lecture Time
08:00 - 08:12
Presenter

ABSTRACT

Introduction

Poor maternal mental health during the perinatal period leads to serious complications, especially in humanitarian settings where both mothers and children have often been exposed to multiple stressful events. In those contexts, culturally relevant mental health and psychosocial interventions are required to support mother-infant dyads and ultimately to alleviate potential negative outcomes on child’s health and development.

Objectives

This study aims at assessing the use of postnatal services by mothers and infants under 2 and its impact on maternal mental health.

Methods

A process evaluation of Baby Friendly Spaces (BFS) program was conducted in Nguynyel refugee camp (Ethiopia) and a prospective quantitative assessment was administered to lactating women at baseline and endline (2 months later) to measure maternal functional impairment (WHODAS 2.0), general psychological distress (Kessler scale-K6); depression symptoms (Patient Health Questionnaire-PHQ9) and post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSD Checklist-PCL-6).

Results

201 lactating women and their babies were enrolled between October 2018 and March 2019. Statistically significant reductions were observed in all mental health outcomes at follow-up. Total mean scores decrease by 19% (p<0.001) for general psychological distress and posttraumatic stress, by 23% (p<0.001) for the depression and by 15% (p<0.001) for the functional impairment. Examination of the compliance to the services revealed that mothers who dropped out early had statistically significantly lower depression scores (p=0.01), and functional impairment scores (p<0.001) than mothers who stayed in the program.

Conclusions

The integration of maternal mental health interventions within perinatal services is challenging but essential for identifying and treating maternal common mental disorders.

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