AI Article Synopsis

  • Research on MHPSS interventions in refugee and migrant communities is focusing on improving participant retention and evaluating implementation effectiveness.
  • This study analyzes factors affecting completion rates among 225 women in a community-based intervention in Ecuador and Panama, finding that older participants and those with specific migration backgrounds were more likely to complete the program.
  • The research highlights the importance of tailoring interventions to participant needs and suggests strategies like flexible scheduling and providing childcare to engage younger, newly arrived women who have lower completion rates.

Article Abstract

Research on mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) interventions within refugee and migrant communities has increasingly focused on evaluating implementation, including identifying strategies to promote retention in services. This study examines the relationship between participant characteristics, study setting, and reasons for intervention noncompletion using data from the Entre Nosotras feasibility trial, a community-based MHPSS intervention targeting refugee, migrant, and host community women in Ecuador and Panama that aimed to promote psychosocial wellbeing. Among 225 enrolled women, approximately half completed the intervention, with varying completion rates and reasons for nonattendance across study sites. Participants who were older, had migrated for family reasons, had spent more time in the study community, and were living in Panamá (vs. Ecuador) were more likely to complete the intervention. The findings suggest the need to adapt MHPSS interventions to consider the duration of access to the target population and explore different delivery modalities including the role of technology and cellular devices as reliable or unreliable source for engaging with participants. Engaging younger, newly arrived women is crucial, as they showed lower completion rates. Strategies such as consulting scheduling preferences, providing on-site childcare, and integrating MHPSS interventions with other programs could enhance intervention attendance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11049853PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21040397DOI Listing

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