Adapting culturally appropriate mental health screening tools for use among conflict-affected and other vulnerable adolescents in Nigeria.

Journal: Global mental health (Cambridge, England)

Volume: 6

Issue: 

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  Department of Anthropology, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, USA. Gede Foundation, Abuja, Nigeria. Catholic Relief Services, Abuja, Nigeria. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA.

Abstract summary 

The Boko Haram insurgency has brought turmoil and instability to Nigeria, generating a large number of internally displaced people and adding to the country's 17.5 million orphans and vulnerable children. Recently, steps have been taken to improve the mental healthcare infrastructure in Nigeria, including revamping national policies and initiating training of primary care providers in mental healthcare. In order for these efforts to succeed, they require means for community-based detection and linkage to care. A major gap preventing such efforts is the shortage of culturally appropriate, valid screening tools for identifying emotional and behavioral disorders among adolescents. In particular, studies have not conducted simultaneous validation of screening tools in multiple languages, to support screening and detection efforts in linguistically diverse populations. We aim to culturally adapt screening tools for emotional and behavioral disorders for use among adolescents in Nigeria, in order to facilitate future validation studies.We used a rigorous mixed-method process to culturally adapt the Depression Self Rating Scale, Child PTSD Symptom Scale, and Disruptive Behavior Disorders Rating Scale. We employed expert translations, focus group discussions ( = 24), and piloting with cognitive interviewing ( = 24) to achieve semantic, content, technical, and criterion equivalence of screening tool items.We identified and adapted items that were conceptually difficult for adolescents to understand, conceptually non-equivalent across languages, considered unacceptable to discuss, or stigmatizing. Findings regarding problematic items largely align with existing literature regarding cross-cultural adaptation.Culturally adapting screening tools represents a vital first step toward improving community case detection.

Authors & Co-authors:  Kaiser B N BN Ticao C C Anoje C C Minto J J Boglosa J J Kohrt B A BA

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations :  Abdulmalik J, Kola L, Gureje O (2016). Mental health system governance in Nigeria: challenges, opportunities and strategies for improvement. Global Mental Health 3, e9.
Authors :  6
Identifiers
Doi : e10
SSN : 2054-4251
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
Behavioral disorders;Nigeria;PTSD;cultural adaptation;depression
Study Design
Case Study,Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Country of Study
Niger
Publication Country
England