Background
A challenge in global mental health research is identifying research methods and statistical techniques to evaluate interventions in settings that may not be amenable to randomized control trials (RCTs). For example, RCTs may be difficult to implement in humanitarian crises, such as environmental disasters, political violence, and infectious disease outbreaks. Only a few RCTs have been conducted in humanitarian crises, and they have tended to focus on adults or have examined interventions that are not widely used in humanitarian crises (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Barbui, Galappatti, Silove, Betancourt, Souza, Golaz and van Ommeren2011); moreover, Tol and colleagues observed that the most frequently used interventions in humanitarian crises are unfortunately the least studied approaches. Ethical issues related to appropriateness of waitlist conditions and lack of acceptable treatment-as-usual alternatives may preclude conducting an RCT (Allden et al. Reference Allden, Jones, Weissbecker, Wessells, Bolton, Betancourt, Hijazi, Galappatti, Yamout, Patel and Sumathipala2009). Logistical issues related to blinding, randomization, and intervention contagion are also challenges for RCTs in humanitarian crises. In addition, there are limited funding mechanisms that can rapidly make research grants available to study mental health and psychosocial in these settings.
These factors have contributed to a lack of intervention research in humanitarian crises, leaving the field with a limited evidence-base for best practices to promote mental health and psychosocial well-being (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Barbui, Galappatti, Silove, Betancourt, Souza, Golaz and van Ommeren2011). Because humanitarian crises disproportionately affect low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Barbui, Galappatti, Silove, Betancourt, Souza, Golaz and van Ommeren2011) and children in LMICs bear the greatest burden of crises such as armed conflict (United Nations, 2014), addressing this gap between research and practice is an important area for global mental health.
Propensity score methods (PSMs) to evaluate humanitarian interventions
In context where it is not ethical or feasible to implement RCTs, one alternative is to use statistical methods to evaluate the impact of intervention components in contexts where a population is given non-randomized access to services. For example, play-interventions, safe spaces, and other activities are commonly provided to children in humanitarian psychosocial responses. In most contexts, these services will not be used by all children and families or at least not used to the same degree. While statistical approaches can be used to compare outcomes between children who did and did not use these services, there are likely multiple confounds that influence which children and families use these services; e.g. either more distressed or less distress children may be using the services thus precluding general comparison of mental health after participating in such an intervention.
PSMs are a set of statistical techniques that can be employed in such contexts because they can account for observed potential confounds between children who are low and high service users. PSMs provide an estimate of treatment effects in non-randomized intervention trials by identifying a control group that is similar to the intervention group with respect to the observed covariates (Rosenbaum & Rubin, Reference Rosenbaum and Rubin1985). The technique yields treatment and control groups that have similar distributions of observed covariates, thereby approximating one of the fundamental benefits of RCTs in an observational study (Stuart, Reference Stuart2010).
PSM approaches proceed using a two-step analytic approach: first, data are preprocessed (without reference to outcome data) in order to match or weight participants on a combination of observed covariates, with the aim of reducing the association between the treatment assignment and confounding variables. The method assumes that this preprocessing minimizes differences between treatment and control groups on factors that would be expected to affect outcomes (i.e. confounders). Second, after the propensity score model is finalized, matches and/or weighting are incorporated into outcome models as appropriate.
In addition to the philosophical appeal of separating decisions about controlling for confounding from outcome model development, PSMs have several advantages over standard regression techniques (Stuart, Reference Stuart2010): first, PSMs identify and help to account for areas in which covariate distributions do not overlap sufficiently. Insufficient overlap often leads to extrapolation and poor performance of standard regression techniques. Second, PSMs include more straightforward diagnostic approaches to check model assumptions. Third, PSMs can be used in combination with and improve the performance of other regression models. Finally, standard regression relies heavily on correct specification of the underlying model (of confounding), whereas PSMs are more flexible in the typical case in which the exact relationships between confounders and treatment assignments are unknown.
Therefore, PSMs have promise as a tool to improve evaluation for humanitarian programs. There is a growing precedent for the use of PSMs to evaluate ‘natural experiments’, e.g. the effects of remittances on disaster preparedness (Mohapatra et al. Reference Mohapatra, Joseph and Ratha2012), and domestic and international policies, e.g. the effects of foreign aid on civil conflict intensity (Strandow, Reference Strandow2014). PSMs have been used to evaluate planned interventions in humanitarian crises, such as food supplementation for children in Niger (Isanaka et al. Reference Isanaka, Roederer, Djibo, Luquero, Nombela, Guerin and Grais2010). In relation to demobilization and reintegration humanitarian programs for former combatants, studies in Burundi and Sierra Leone have employed PSMs to evaluate economic impacts (Humphreys & Weinstein, Reference Humphreys and Weinstein2007; Gilligan et al. Reference Gilligan, Mvukiyehe and Samii2013). PSMs have also been used to assess political, economic, and psychological consequences of child soldiering in Uganda (Blattman & Annan, Reference Blattman and Annan2010). In this paper, we apply PSMs to evaluate the impact of reintegration packages on child soldier mental health and psychosocial well-being in Nepal.
Gaps in evaluation of child soldier reintegration research
Child soldiers, also known as children associated with armed forces and armed groups, are defined as any person below 18 years of age who is or who has been recruited or used by an armed force or armed group in any capacity, including but not limited to fighters, cooks, porters, messengers, spies, or for sexual purposes. It does not only refer to a child who is taking or has taken a direct part in hostilities (UNICEF, 2007, p. 7).
Child soldiers commonly have adverse psychological and psychosocial outcomes following involvement in armed conflicts (Betancourt et al. Reference Betancourt, Borisova, Williams, Meyers-Ohki, Rubin-Smith, Annan and Kohrt2013). In studies using comparison groups, the burden of mental health and psychosocial problems is greater among child soldiers than among civilian children experiencing the conflict (Okello et al. Reference Okello, Onen and Musis2007; Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Speckman, Maharjan, Worthman and Komproe2008; Blattman & Annan, Reference Blattman and Annan2010; Betancourt et al. Reference Betancourt, Borisova, de la Soudiere and Williamson2011). In addition to greater exposure to traumatic wartime events, child soldiers often experience rejection and discrimination from families, teachers, peers, and other community members (Betancourt et al. Reference Betancourt, Borisova, Williams, Meyers-Ohki, Rubin-Smith, Annan and Kohrt2013).
The standard practice for international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and other institutions involved in humanitarian assistance for child soldiers is to conduct disarmament, demobilization, and reintegration (DDR) activities (Williamson, Reference Williamson2006; Humphreys & Weinstein, Reference Humphreys and Weinstein2007; Annan et al. Reference Annan, Brier and Aryemo2009). There are many schools of thought about the best approaches to improve psychosocial well-being and mental health among former child soldiers in DDR programs. For example, some practitioners and advocates have argued against mental health terminology and psychotherapeutic interventions because of concerns that they may be stigmatizing, unhelpful, and potentially harmful in non-Western cultural settings (Bracken et al. Reference Bracken, Giller and Ssekiwanuka1996; Bracken & Petty, Reference Bracken and Petty1998). Others have argued for the need to assure availability of psychiatric and psychological services because these have a strong evidence-base (in high resource settings) for reducing distress (Dyregrov et al. Reference Dyregrov, Gupta, Gjestad and Raundalen2002). The majority of the field, however, calls for a combination of services ranging from assuring basic economic and livelihood needs to community-based psychosocial care to specialized mental health services (Betancourt & Khan, Reference Betancourt and Khan2008a ; Betancourt & Williams, Reference Betancourt and Williams2008b ), as exemplified by the Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) Intervention pyramid for mental health and psychosocial support (MHPS) in emergencies (IASC, 2007, p. 12).
Unfortunately, there is a dearth of evidence on the mental health impact of these different types of services in humanitarian settings. Although there have been randomized trials of specific interventions for child soldiers (Ertl et al. Reference Ertl, Pfeiffer, Schauer, Elbert and Neuner2011) and other children affected by war (Jordans et al. Reference Jordans, Tol, Komproe and De Jong2009), the most commonly used general psychosocial services and reintegration support models have received little evaluation (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Barbui, Galappatti, Silove, Betancourt, Souza, Golaz and van Ommeren2011). The theory of change for education, economic, and social programs is that returning to normal activities will allow children to undergo natural processes of recovery. Moreover, education, economic, and social programs are believed to improve mental health by increasing likelihood of access to basic needs and other resources required for survival and well-being.
However, research on educational, economic, and social reintegration programs during DDR is lacking to determine if and how they impact mental health. From the studies that have been conducted, the benefits of some DDR programming is variable. For example, in Burundi, a retrospective tracer approach was used to compare child soldiers receiving socioeconomic reintegration support with civilian children, which revealed no differences in the groups approximately 3 years after the reintegration support (Jordans et al. Reference Jordans, Komproe, Tol, Ndayisaba, Nisabwe and Kohrt2012). In contrast, a prospective study in Nepal among child soldiers (referred to as verified minors) failed to identify a contribution of reintegration packages to changes in mental health, with the exception that vocational reintegration packages predicted poorer mental health outcomes in the domain of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms (Adhikari et al. Reference Adhikari, Kohrt, Luitel, Upadhaya, Gurung and Jordans2014). However, these studies are limited by potential confounds in the design and analysis.
PSMs can address some of these limitations. Therefore, the goal of this study was to address the gap in research literature regarding benefits of reintegration packages on mental health. We used PSMs to study the impact of reintegration packages v. no treatment on psychosocial and mental health outcomes of child soldiers in Nepal.
Methods
Setting: child soldiers in Nepal
Nepal is a landlocked country north of India and south of the Tibetan autonomous region of China, with a population of approximately 28 million. Nepal is a low development country with a rank of 157 out of 186 countries, a life expectancy of 69.1 years, a mean of 3.2 years of education, and a gross national income per capita of US$1,137 (UNDP, 2013). Nepal's population comprises more than 60 ethnic and caste groups (Whelpton, Reference Whelpton2005). The society traditionally has been categorized according to a Hindu caste system with Bahun (priest caste) and Chhetri (warrior/royalty caste) at the top of the hierarchy. Dalit/Nepali (untouchables) are the lowest strata of castes. Other ethnic groups (referred to as Janajati), which include other Hindu groups, Buddhists, Muslims, and Kirantis, have different positions in the social hierarchy based on their degree of Hindu purity. The caste stratification influences society heavily with Bahun and Chhetri dominating institutions of government, education, and business (Kohrt, Reference Kohrt2009). Dalit/Nepali castes bear the greatest burden of common mental disorders in adult community populations (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Speckman, Kunz, Baldwin, Upadhaya, Acharya, Sharma, Nepal and Worthman2009).
In 1996, the Communist Party of Nepal [Maoists, CPN (M)] presented demands to the government of Nepal to address economic and social injustices, abolish the monarchy, end caste- and gender-based discrimination, and establish a constituent assembly. When the government refused to address these demands, the CPN (M) began an agrarian revolution. Government security forces and Maoists killed over 17,000 people during the People's War, which lasted 11 years; with the majority of deaths at the hands of the Royal Nepal Army and the government's police force (INSEC, 2008). The war ended in November of 2006, when the CPN (M) signed a peace treaty with the government. During 2008 elections, the CPN (M) won a two-thirds majority but later abandoned their top government positions (Adhikari, Reference Adhikari2014).
During the war, the CPN (M)'s People's Liberation Army (PLA) and the Royal Nepal Army conscripted children as soldiers, sentries, spies, cooks, and porters (United Nations, 2006; Human Rights Watch, 2007). Local groups estimate that at the conclusion of the war approximately 9000 members – one-third of the PLA – comprised 14–18 year old with 40% being girls (Human Rights Watch, 2007). An estimated 10% of the Royal Nepal Army during the conflict was below the age of 18 (Singh, Reference Singh2004).
Our prior research demonstrated that child soldiers in Nepal showed a higher burden of depression, PTSD, and functional impairment than civilian children who were not associated with armed groups at the conclusion of the war (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Speckman, Maharjan, Worthman and Komproe2008). In 2007, a few months after signing peace accords, 55% of child soldiers had PTSD compared with 20% of matched civilian children (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Speckman, Maharjan, Worthman and Komproe2008).
While differences in war trauma exposure (i.e. the greater exposure among child soldiers compared with civilian children) explains some of the difference between child soldiers and civilian children, there was still a significant difference between the two groups even after controlling for war-related exposures (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Speckman, Maharjan, Worthman and Komproe2008). After the war, discrimination against child soldiers in their homes, schools, and communities contributed to mental health and psychosocial problems (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Perera, Karki, Koirala and Upadhaya2010a , Reference Kohrt, Tol, Pettigrew, Karki, Singer and Hodge c ). This is consistent with findings regarding stigma and discrimination affecting mental health of former child soldiers in other conflicts (Betancourt et al. Reference Betancourt, Borisova, Williams, Meyers-Ohki, Rubin-Smith, Annan and Kohrt2013). Reintegration packages represent one commonly used approach to improve former child soldiers’ education, economic, and psychosocial status, as well as a technique used in hopes of decreasing re-recruitment into armed groups or involvement in other violent activities.
Reintegration packages
In 2007–2008, Transcultural Psychosocial Organization (TPO) Nepal conducted a study of child soldiers before and after participating in psychosocial and reintegration services provided by UNICEF Partner NGOs in eight districts of Nepal (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Perera, Jordans, Koirala, Karki, Karki, Shrestha, Tol and Upadhaya2010b ). Child soldiers in program districts could select among different reintegration packages. The main packages were education, vocational training, apprenticeship, and income-generating activities.
Education reintegration packages (ERPs) were designed to address the lost years of education experienced by child soldiers during their association with an armed group. In Nepal, education reintegration programs were supported through block grants to schools or materials support through School Management Committees, i.e. individual children and families were not given money to send child soldiers back to school. Funds provided in block grants can be used to waive tuition fees for former child soldiers, to buy supplies for target children such as stationery and uniforms, and to support activities such as hiring new teachers and building classrooms to address the influx of children in post-war context. In addition, educational grants can be used to design and implement accelerated 6- or 9-month curriculums that allow former child soldiers to master material from multiple grades in a brief period so that they can then mainstream with same-age peers. Without accelerated programs, former child soldiers in their late teens may join classroom cohorts 5–6 years younger than them.
Vocational training reintegration packages are an alternative to formal education. Former child soldiers who are unable to meet acceptance standards for schools or choose not to rejoin school select vocational training reintegration packages. Vocational training programs for boys tended to focus on radio repair and for girls the skill was typically tailoring. Local NGOs that facilitated vocational training were encouraged to provide certification of vocational training that may help the child soldiers find employment after the training. Vocational training grants included materials (e.g. sewing machines and radio repair kits), in some programs.
Apprenticeship reintegration packages were also available. As opposed to vocational training structured courses, apprenticeship comprised pairing a former soldier with an employer in the community and having them learn a trade. For example, child soldiers entered apprenticeships with truck drivers and other professionals. A reintegration programs subsidized these learning and training opportunities by providing a stipend to the trainee and materials for teaching to the master trainer. Apprenticeship and on-the-job training should reflect the local market demand to ensure sustainability.
Income generation reintegration packages were provided in instances where former child soldiers had an opportunity to pursue a business endeavor and required start-up funds in the form of micro-grants or loans. For example, some former child soldiers received micro-grants to raise poultry or goats. Others used micro-grants to start small businesses such as roadside stalls for tea and household goods.
Each child soldier participated in only one reintegration package. Those in school did not participate in the vocational training, apprenticeship, or income-generating programs. Selection of reintegration packages was based on preferences reported by the child soldier. From an evaluation standpoint, this thus represented an equipoise condition in which beneficiaries selected among interventions available to them. In addition to participation in one reintegration package, all child soldiers were in communities with post-war psychosocial support programs that were made available to both former child soldiers and other children impacted by war. For a description of the psychosocial program, see Kohrt et al. (Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Koirala and Worthman2015).
Our objective was to evaluate the impact of the reintegration packages on mental health. Specifically, we were most interested in evaluating the impact of the formal ERP, which was the most commonly selected package, v. no reintegration package on mental health. We were also interested in evaluating the impact of ORPs (i.e. vocational, apprenticeship, and income generation) v. no reintegration package on mental health outcomes. We hypothesized that the ERP would have the largest effect on mental health outcomes, specifically on depression. We hypothesized this because our qualitative work suggested that education was the most prioritized resource of returning child soldiers (Morley & Kohrt, Reference Morley and Kohrt2013); moreover, referral to programs such as vocational training was often seen as secondary option for former child soldiers who were assumed by parents or NGO staff to not be capable of succeeding in school (Adhikari et al. Reference Adhikari, Kohrt, Luitel, Upadhaya, Gurung and Jordans2014). Therefore, education was expected to be the highest priority support and have the greatest benefit to those who could obtain the package from a mental health and psychosocial perspective.
However, there are a number of pathways in which mental health may have influenced selection choice and participation that would bias interpretation of mental health outcomes. In prior samples of child soldiers in Nepal, low educational achievement prior to reintegration associated with poor mental health outcomes (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Speckman, Maharjan, Worthman and Komproe2008). Because limited prior educational achievement may bias against participation in the formal education reintegration program, the impact of education may be over-estimated in standard comparisons. Other factors such as low caste and female gender are associated with poor mental health outcomes (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Speckman, Maharjan, Worthman and Komproe2008, Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Perera, Karki, Koirala and Upadhaya2010a ). These demographic characteristics are also associated with educational barriers in Nepal. Thus, numerous socioeconomic and demographic factors may associate with poor mental health and lack of participation in ERPs. One way to address such potential confounding factors is by using propensity score weighting to account for differences in the distribution of these demographic characteristics between those who received the ERP compared with those who did not.
Sample size
The sample size for this study was 258 child soldiers who were all offered enrollment in their choice of reintegration packages, in addition to being offered psychosocial support activities provided by TPO-Nepal and partner NGOs. Community-wide psychosocial support activities (e.g. awareness raising, psychosocial support for teachers, and non-religious child activities) were delivered in all target communities [see Kohrt et al. (Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Koirala and Worthman2015)] regardless of individual former child soldiers’ decisions to participate in specific reintegration packages. All subjects were included in subsequent analyses. Missing data (less than 15% on all variables and less than 6% on all variables except 3) was imputed using single imputation in the Amelia II package in R, which utilizes random sampling from a distribution calculated from observed values on each variable (Honaker et al. Reference Honaker, King and Blackwell2011). Table 1 indicates the baseline characteristics observed in the full sample, prior to and after weighting.
ASMD, absolute standardized mean difference; DSRS, depression self-rating scale; CPSS, child PTSD symptom scale; CFI, child functional impairment scale.
a Maximum ASMD is reported as the highest ASMD across all pairwise comparisons (i.e. between treatment groups).
Independent/treatment variable
Participation in the formal reintegration packages was the independent or treatment variable of interest. We evaluated three treatment conditions: (1) ERPs, (2) ORPs (i.e. vocational, apprenticeship, or income generation), and (3) no treatment. The reintegration packages were implemented by local NGOs partnering with UNICEF and are described in detail above. Participants in the two active treatment arms (ERPs and ORPs) were compared with those who did not participate in any reintegration packages.
Propensity score variables
Weighting variables were selected based on anticipated and observed association with both the outcome of interest and treatment assignment. Age in years was measured at the time of enrollment in the study. Sex was self-reported as male or female. Total number of traumatic events at baseline was a count of traumatic events derived from previous ethnographic research and had a possible range from 0 to 13 (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Speckman, Maharjan, Worthman and Komproe2008). Baseline depression self-rating scale (DSRS) for children, child PTSD symptom scale (CPSS), and child functional impairment (CFI) scale scores measured by self-report at the time of study enrollment were also used as weighting variables. The DSRS for children is an 18-item scale assessing depression symptoms on a ‘Mostly’, ‘Sometimes’, or ‘Never’ scale that corresponded with item scores of 2, 1, or 0 (Birleson, Reference Birleson1981), with a range of possible scores on the DSRS is from 0 to 36. The DSRS has been transculturally translated and validated in Nepal (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Luitel, Maharjan and Upadhaya2011). The CPSS (Foa et al. Reference Foa, Johnson, Feeny and Treadwell2001) is a 17-item scale corresponding to DSM-IV-TR symptoms of PTSD with a range of 0–68 and has previously been transculturally translated and validated in Nepal (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Luitel, Maharjan and Upadhaya2011). The CFI is a 10-item scale (range: 0–30) assessing impairment in daily functional role expectations of children in Nepal (Kohrt et al. Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Tol, Perera, Karki, Koirala and Upadhaya2010a ).
Outcome variables
The primary outcomes assessed were the changes in DSRS, CPSS, and CFI scores from baseline to 1-year follow-up assessment. That is, positive values represented an increase in depression, PTSD, and functional impairment scores from baseline to follow-up, whereas negative values represented a decrease in symptom and impairment scores.
Details of PSMs
Propensity scores for the three treatment groups were estimated using the mnps (multinomial propensity score) function in the twang statistical package in R (McCaffrey et al. Reference McCaffrey, Griffin, Almirall, Slaughter, Ramchand and Burgette2013; Burgette et al. Reference Burgette, Griffin and McCaffrey2014). Propensity score weighting to estimate the average treatment effect (ATE) yielded good balance on the measured covariates (see Table 1) and allowed pairwise comparisons between all three treatment arms (Stuart, Reference Stuart2010). ATE refers to the difference in the outcome comparing a (hypothetical) condition where the whole sample received education (or other) reintegration to a (hypothetical) condition where the whole sample received no reintegration package. We applied the absolute standardized mean difference (ASMD) balance metric as the stopping rule in twang. Weights were assigned by twang to individuals in order to achieve maximum balance across the set of observed covariates in the propensity score model. A given individual's weight is the inverse probability of their being in the treatment group they were in. After this weighting, the covariate distributions in all three groups are more similar to that in the original full sample. The calculated weights were then incorporated into the final outcome models (below).
Measures of effectiveness of weighting procedures
In order to evaluate the effectiveness of the weighting procedures, we examined the covariate balance in the weighted treatment groups. ASMDs were used to evaluate the similarity of the treatment groups. Both numerical and visual inspection (see Fig. 1 and Table 1) were used to assess covariate balance, with standardized mean differences below 0.25 indicating good balance (Rubin, Reference Rubin2001; Stuart, Reference Stuart2010).
Estimation of treatment effects
Following weighting procedures (above), treatment effects were estimated using a doubly robust linear regression model with the outcome predicted by treatment group and covariates and fit using the weights defined above.
Results
Child soldiers in each treatment group differed from comparison child soldiers in other treatment groups (including the no treatment group) on key measured pre-treatment variables. Those receiving the ERPs were less likely to be female or from Dalit/Nepali castes and more likely to be younger than those in the other treatment groups (see Table 1). The three groups were generally comparable on measures of traumatic events and all the three pre-treatment clinical scales (i.e. DSRS, CPSS, and CFI). The application of propensity score weighting addressed these imbalances in the distributions of baseline covariates. Figure 1 illustrates the distribution of propensity scores for each treatment group. The figure demonstrates moderate overlap in the propensity scores between treatment groups.
Table 1 displays the means and maximum ASMDs of the covariates of interest before and after weighting. As indicated in the columns in the right side of the table, maximum ASMDs were reduced to less than 0.20 for all covariates of interest after weighting, indicating good balance among the observed covariates. Figure 2 graphically displays the change in maximum ASMDs before and after weighting, again indicating that weighting resulted in a substantial improvement in balance, especially for the variables with highest standardized mean differences prior to weighting.
Estimated treatment effects
The estimated treatment effect of the ERP on depression compared with no treatment (after adjusting for age, sex, caste, traumatic events, and all the three baseline scale scores) was a non-significant reduction in DSRS symptom score by 0.59 (95% CI −1.97 to 0.79) (Table 2). The ERP was associated with a non-significant increase of 1.15 (95% CI −1.55 to 3.86) in the CPSS score and a non-significant increase of 0.91 (95% CI −0.31 to 2.14) on the CFI.
ERP, education reintegration package; ORPs, other reintegration packages; DSRS, depression self-rating scale; CPSS, child PTSD symptom scale; CFI, child functional impairment scale.
* All multivariate regressions adjusted for age, sex, caste, traumatic events, baseline CPSS score, baseline DSRS score, and baseline CFI score.
The estimated treatment effect of the ORPs on depression compared with no treatment (after adjusting for age, sex, caste, traumatic events, and all the three baseline scale scores) was a non-significant reduction in DSRS symptom score by 0.60 (95% CI −2.16 to 0.96). The ORPs were associated with a non-significant increase of 0.66 (95% CI −2.24 to 3.57) in the CPSS score and a non-significant increase of 1.05 (95% CI −0.71 to 2.80) on the CFI.
Discussion
In the context of demobilizing and reintegrating former child soldiers into their home communities immediately after war, it was not considered ethical to randomize children to a waitlist condition. Moreover, children were given the option to select the type of reintegration package that they wanted, thus it was also not appropriate to randomize them to a package not of their choosing. Therefore, in this context it was not possible to conduct an RCT of the effects of reintegration programs. Instead, propensity score weighting was used as a technique to compare the effect of reintegration packages v. no treatment. We did not find evidence of significant effects on depression, PTSD, or functional impairment for the evaluated reintegration packages compared with no treatment. The findings suggest that compared with no reintegration package, ERPs or ORPs do not result in different outcomes in terms of depression, PTSD, and functional impairment when reintegration packages are conducted in the context of broader community-wide psychosocial support programs (see Kohrt et al. (Reference Kohrt, Jordans, Koirala and Worthman2015)).
We had hypothesized that education would have been the most beneficial package from a MHPS perspective given outcomes of mixed-methods research that pointed towards the desire of most former children to return to school and cross-sectional associations between education attainment and MHPS outcomes (Morley & Kohrt, Reference Morley and Kohrt2013). Nearly, half (46%) of eligible participants did not elect to enroll in the education package. Uptake was low among older children who may not have returned to school because of age differences with potential classmates (e.g. returning to school at age 16–17 years with classmates in the 12–13 year age range). Uptake was also particularly low among females and members of Dalit/Nepali castes, which is to be expected given historic trends creating barriers for girls and Dalit/Nepali castes to participate in school. These observations raise some questions about the appropriateness of child-driven selection processes. Some children, especially girls and Dalit/Nepali castes, may not have selected education because of anticipated barriers and discrimination. In such cases, it may have been helpful to explore reasons why the former child soldiers selected certain reintegration packages and then address potential barriers to participation in some packages. For example, future studies would benefit from evaluating parents’ perceived value of education as a determinant of uptake of education packages.
An important issue to consider is that our outcomes for this analysis were limited to depression, PTSD, and function impairment. The benefits of different reintegration programs on other life domains such as employment, economic security, physical health, and social status were not evaluated. There may be differential impact on these outcomes based on type of package received. Moreover, this analysis is limited to the 12-month period during which former child soldiers were receiving services. The longer-term difference in outcomes may have varied based on type of reintegration package, but such differences may not have been observable after only 1 year.
Regarding the statistical approach, a key limitation of the PSMs employed in this analysis is that adjustments could only be made for observed confounders. Thus, there may still be bias due to unobserved confounding. Omitting a key (unobserved) covariate can result in confounding if that characteristic was related to both treatment selection and the outcome(s). For example, in our study parents’ perceived value in education may have affected both treatment assignment (i.e. receipt of education package) and the outcomes of interest. Of note, in addition to balancing the distribution of observed covariates, PSMs may also partially address differences in the distribution of unobserved covariates, at least those correlated with the observed covariates (Stuart, Reference Stuart2010).
Our study was characterized by a relatively small sample size, which reduced statistical power to detect small but true differences in outcomes between treatment groups (i.e. Type II error). A larger study may have been better able to detect true differences between treatment options. That said, the magnitude of the changes observed in this study were very small, suggesting that clinical significant improvement may not be observed even with larger sample sizes. Finally, we note that the use of propensity scores in small samples is a relatively underdeveloped topic and deserves further study.
Conclusion
Alternative approaches to evaluating interventions in humanitarian crises are needed when RCTs are not possible for ethical, logistical, or other feasibility reasons. Propensity scoring weighting is one analytic approach that can be used when relatively large samples are available and there is variation in the type of services received. The technique is only as helpful as the degree to which potential confounders are also recorded. Therefore, if propensity score weighting is a planned analytic approach, then ideally this should be considered at the design stage to assure that a broad range of confounders are assessed. When working with children, potential confounders related to parents and caregivers also should be assessed whenever possible. In the context of this study with child soldiers in Nepal, we were able to demonstrate comparable outcomes for ERPs v. other types of services in the context of a broader community-wide psychosocial intervention. Future research is needed to evaluate long-term outcomes of different packages on mental health and psychosocial well-being, as well as the impact in other key domains of life.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank the TPO-Nepal staff involved in the intervention development including Rohit Karki, Nabin Lamichhane, Rajesh Jha, Mark Jordans, Wietse Tol, and Em Perera. Thanks to Anvita Bhardwaj for her assistance with manuscript preparation.
Financial support
UNICEF Nepal supported Transcultural Psychosocial Organization (TPO) Nepal to conduct this research. The first author (B. A. K.) was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) F31 MH075584.
Declaration of interest
None.
Ethical standards
The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. The study protocol was approved by the Institutional Review Board of Emory University, Atlanta, USA.