Artwork by a former child soldier in Sierra Leone.
Nearly two decades removed from a brutal civil war that made them both captives and combatants, many of the former child soldiers of Sierra Leone have gradually earned greater acceptance from families and communities as they try to overcome their childhood trauma, according to a sweeping new report on their adult lives from a team led by Boston College researchers.
Former child soldiers experience mental health problems as a result of their experiences, but earning acceptance from families and communities shapes the lives of these men and women and shows promise to help them to continue to improve emotionally and socially, according to the groundbreaking study, published in the online edition of Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.
It may take a greater focus on family- and community-based approaches to help former child soldiers achieve social reintegration, according to the co-authors, a group of professors and researchers from Boston College, the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Harvards T. H. Chan School of Public Health, and Child Trends of Bethesda, Md.
During the 11-year civil war in Sierra Leone, several warring factions abducted children and forced their involvement in armed groups. The scenes above are depictions by a former child soldier.
Nearly half the respondents detailed symptoms of anxiety and depression, with 28 percent suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, according to the recent report, titled Stigma and Acceptance of Sierra Leone's Child Soldiers: A Prospective Longitudinal Study of Adult Mental Health and Social Functioning.
A deeper examination of the respondents lives particularly the stigma they are subject to and the level of acceptance by family and community led to the classification of three groups:
¬油 油The Socially Protected group, nearly two-thirds of the respondents, reported they were not heavily stigmatized for their war involvement and had high levels of acceptance from their families and communities. This group reported largely that they had lower levels of exposure to wartime violence.
¬油 油The Improving Social Integration group included respondents who in 2002 reported high levels of stigmatization and low rates of acceptance. This group, largely female and more likely to have been raped, have since reported a decrease in stigma and increase in acceptance by families and communities.
¬油 油The Socially Vulnerable group roughly 10 percent of the respondents report adverse mental health outcomes and only slight improvements from 2002, when they were highly stigmatized and had low family and community acceptance. This group is largely male, spent more time in fighting forces and were more likely to have killed or injured others during the war.
Those in the Improving Social Integration group made gains, though they reported problems such as getting in trouble with local police. However, members of the socially vulnerable group were about twice as likely as those in the socially protected group to experience high levels of anxiety and depression. They were three times more likely to have attempted suicide and over four times more likely to have been in trouble with the police.
The authors concluded that efforts to address family and community relationships with particular attention to improving social supports and reducing stigma remain critical ingredients of interventions to help former child soldiers adapt to post-conflict life.
There is healing power in the relationships young people build within their families and communities, said Betancourt, who directs the Research Program on Children and Adversity at 51画鋼. What these latest findings show is that just as much attention should be paid to family and community relationships as to the traumatic events of their past. Efforts to alleviate mental health problems and improve life outcomes for former child soldier need to focus much more on family and community relationships.
Participants in the study have been interviewed four times in 2002, 2004, 2008, and 2016 to 2017 about their involvement with armed groups, exposure to violence in the war, and about their family and community relationships after the war. Interviewers also asked questions assessing their mental health status and their psychological adjustment at multiple time points.
Conducting a study like this over so many years in Sierra Leone is a real challenge, said co-author and Research Program on Children and Adversity statistician Robert T. Brennan. Addresses are approximate, birthdays, even ages, are often unknown, and natural disasters displace whole communities. We even had to postpone data collection due to the Ebola outbreak of 2014 to 2015.
Because this study follows a single cohort of former child soldiers some as young as 10 years old into young adulthood, it is certain to be a landmark in the study of the exploitation of children by armed groups, said Boston College School of Social Work Dean Gautam N. Yadama.
Ed Hayward | University Communications