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Rates and predictors of mental stress in Rwanda : investigating the impact of gender, persecution, readiness to reconcile and religiosity via a structural equation model

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Heim_0-254267.pdf
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2014

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Heim, Lale

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Published

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International Journal of Mental Health Systems. 2014, 8, 37. eISSN 1752-4458. Available under: doi: 10.1186/1752-4458-8-37

Zusammenfassung

Background
As a consequence of the 1994 Rwandan genocide, prevalences of mental disorders are elevated in Rwanda. More knowledge about determinants of mental stress can help to improve mental health services and treatment in the east-central African country. The present study aimed to investigate actual rates of mental stress (posttraumatic stress disorder, syndromal depression and syndromal anxiety) in Rwanda and to examine if gender, persecution during the genocide, readiness to reconcile as well as importance given to religiosity and quality of religiosity are predictors of mental stress.

Methods
The study comprised a community sample of N?=?200 Rwandans from Rwanda?s capital Kigali, who experienced the Rwandan genocide. By conducting structured interviews, ten local Master level psychologists examined types of potentially lifetime traumatic events, symptoms of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression and anxiety, readiness to reconcile and religiosity. Applying non-recursive structural equation modeling (SEM), the associations between gender, persecution, readiness to reconcile, religiosity and mental stress were investigated.

Results
Respondents had experienced an average number of 11.38 types of potentially lifetime traumatic events. Of the total sample, 11% met diagnostic criteria for PTSD, 19% presented with syndromal depression and 23% with syndromal anxiety. Female sex, persecution and readiness to reconcile were significant predictors of mental stress. Twofold association was found between centrality of religion (which captures the importance given to religiosity) and mental stress, showing, that higher mental stress provokes a higher centrality and that higher centrality reduces mental stress. The variables positive and negative religious functioning (which determine the quality of religiosity) respectively had an indirect negative and positive effect on mental stress.

Conclusions
Study results provide evidence that rates of mental stress are still elevated in Rwanda and that female sex, persecution, readiness to reconcile, centrality and religious functioning are predictors of mental stress. Seventeen years after the genocide, there remains a large gap between the need for and provision of mental health services in Rwanda. Results underline the importance of improving the respective infrastructure, with a focus on the requirements of women and persons, who were persecuted during the genocide. They further highlight that the consideration of readiness to reconcile, centrality and religious functioning in therapeutic interventions can aid mental health in Rwanda.

Zusammenfassung in einer weiteren Sprache

Fachgebiet (DDC)
200 Religion, Religionsphilosophie

Schlagwörter

Rwanda, Genocide, Mental stress, Reconciliation, Religiosity

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ISO 690HEIM, Lale, Susanne SCHAAL, 2014. Rates and predictors of mental stress in Rwanda : investigating the impact of gender, persecution, readiness to reconcile and religiosity via a structural equation model. In: International Journal of Mental Health Systems. 2014, 8, 37. eISSN 1752-4458. Available under: doi: 10.1186/1752-4458-8-37
BibTex
@article{Heim2014Rates-29103,
  year={2014},
  doi={10.1186/1752-4458-8-37},
  title={Rates and predictors of mental stress in Rwanda : investigating the impact of gender, persecution, readiness to reconcile and religiosity via a structural equation model},
  volume={8},
  journal={International Journal of Mental Health Systems},
  author={Heim, Lale and Schaal, Susanne},
  note={Article Number: 37}
}
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