Stigma and Acceptance of Sierra Leone’s Child Soldiers: A Prospective Longitudinal Study of Adult Mental Health and Social Functioning

To investigate the associations of war and postconflict factors with mental health among Sierra Leone’s former child soldiers as adults. In 2002, we recruited former child soldiers from lists of soldiers (aged 10–17 years) served by Disarmament, Demobilization, Reintegration centers and from a rando...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry 2020-06, Vol.59 (6), p.715-726
Hauptverfasser: Betancourt, Theresa S., Thomson, Dana L., Brennan, Robert T., Antonaccio, Cara M., Gilman, Stephen E., VanderWeele, Tyler J.
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container_end_page 726
container_issue 6
container_start_page 715
container_title Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
container_volume 59
creator Betancourt, Theresa S.
Thomson, Dana L.
Brennan, Robert T.
Antonaccio, Cara M.
Gilman, Stephen E.
VanderWeele, Tyler J.
description To investigate the associations of war and postconflict factors with mental health among Sierra Leone’s former child soldiers as adults. In 2002, we recruited former child soldiers from lists of soldiers (aged 10–17 years) served by Disarmament, Demobilization, Reintegration centers and from a random door-to-door sample in 5 districts of Sierra Leone. In 2004, self-reintegrated child soldiers were recruited in an additional district. At 2016/2017, 323 of the sample of 491 former child soldiers were reassessed. Subjects reported on war exposures and postconflict stigma, family support, community support, anxiety/depression, and posttraumatic stress symptoms. Of the subjects, 72% were male, with a mean age of 28 years. In all, 26% reported killing or injuring others; 67% reported being victims of life-threatening violence; 45% of female subjects and 5% of male subjects reported being raped; and 32% reported death of a parent. In 2016/2017 (wave 4), 47% exceeded the threshold for anxiety/depression, and 28% exceeded the likely posttraumatic stress disorder threshold. Latent class growth analysis yielded 3 trajectory groups based on changes in stigma and family/community acceptance; “Improving Social Integration” (n = 77) fared nearly as well as the “Socially Protected” (n = 213). The “Socially Vulnerable” group (n = 33) had increased risk of anxiety/depression above the clinical threshold and possible PTSD, and were around 3 times more likely to attempt suicide. Former child soldiers had elevated rates of mental health problems. Postconflict risk and protective factors related to outcomes long after the end of conflict. Targeted social inclusion and family interventions could benefit the long-term mental health of former child soldiers.
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Latent class growth analysis yielded 3 trajectory groups based on changes in stigma and family/community acceptance; “Improving Social Integration” (n = 77) fared nearly as well as the “Socially Protected” (n = 213). The “Socially Vulnerable” group (n = 33) had increased risk of anxiety/depression above the clinical threshold and possible PTSD, and were around 3 times more likely to attempt suicide. Former child soldiers had elevated rates of mental health problems. Postconflict risk and protective factors related to outcomes long after the end of conflict. 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Latent class growth analysis yielded 3 trajectory groups based on changes in stigma and family/community acceptance; “Improving Social Integration” (n = 77) fared nearly as well as the “Socially Protected” (n = 213). The “Socially Vulnerable” group (n = 33) had increased risk of anxiety/depression above the clinical threshold and possible PTSD, and were around 3 times more likely to attempt suicide. Former child soldiers had elevated rates of mental health problems. Postconflict risk and protective factors related to outcomes long after the end of conflict. 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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Child
child soldiers
conflict
Female
global mental health
Humans
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Mental Health
Military Personnel
Prospective Studies
Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone - epidemiology
Social Interaction
stigma
Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic - epidemiology
Warfare
title Stigma and Acceptance of Sierra Leone’s Child Soldiers: A Prospective Longitudinal Study of Adult Mental Health and Social Functioning
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