2017
Insecurity, distress and mental health: experimental and randomized controlled trials of a psychosocial intervention for youth affected by the Syrian crisis
Panter‐Brick C, Dajani R, Eggerman M, Hermosilla S, Sancilio A, Ager A. Insecurity, distress and mental health: experimental and randomized controlled trials of a psychosocial intervention for youth affected by the Syrian crisis. Journal Of Child Psychology And Psychiatry 2017, 59: 523-541. PMID: 28967980, PMCID: PMC5972454, DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.12832.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentAdolescent BehaviorBehavioral SymptomsChildFemaleFollow-Up StudiesHumansJordanMaleOutcome Assessment, Health CareProgram DevelopmentPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesPsychological TraumaPsychotherapy, GroupRefugeesSocial BehaviorStress Disorders, Post-TraumaticStress, PsychologicalSyriaConceptsProsocial behaviorTrauma exposurePost-traumatic stress reactionsPost-traumatic stress symptomsMental healthWar-affected youthMental health difficultiesWait-list controlMental health outcomesPsychosocial interventionsSmall effect sizesStress symptomsPsychosocial outcomesPerceived stressTreatment youthHealth difficultiesTrauma eventsPsychosocial programmingStress reactionsPsychosocial supportHuman distressEvidence baseTreat sampleYouthStructured activities
2013
A health equity critique of social marketing: Where interventions have impact but insufficient reach
Langford R, Panter-Brick C. A health equity critique of social marketing: Where interventions have impact but insufficient reach. Social Science & Medicine 2013, 83: 133-141. PMID: 23452864, DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2013.01.036.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsQualitative researchFormative qualitative researchSocial marketingQualitative dataImportant equity issueSocial marketing approachIndividual agencyParticipant observationDepth interviewsCommunity meetingsHealth inequitiesKey juncturesEquity issuesHealth interventionsHealth equitySocial marketing techniquesStructural conditionsFocus groupsRange of interventionsMarketing approachSlumsMother-infant pairsPrevention paradoxCritiqueSufficient attention