NURS FPX 8024 Assessment 2 Global Issue Problem Description
NURS FPX 8024 Assessment 2 Global Issue Problem Description Student Name Capella University NURS-FPX8024 Advanced Global Population Health Professor Name Submission Date Global Issue Problem Description The global health issues remain an urgent concern in a modern world where globalisation and interdependence frequently make boundaries permeable and demand a unified effort in response to any outbreak of a pandemic or diverse health disparities. Mental health issues in humanitarian groups are a significant concern in today’s world (Kemmak et al., 2021). The evaluation considers the problem in an epidemiological way and prevalence, scale, and impact on people, communities, and populations. Through an examination of socioeconomic, political, and cultural determinants, and an assessment of the health systems’ and nongovernmental organizations’ roles, the assessment underlines the obstacles as well as possibilities in resolving the issue. Besides that, the paper provides an evidence-based culturally competent intervention to enhance prevention and treatment to ensure interventions are effective and sustainable in a diverse range of global locations. Description of the Problem Mental health in humanitarian crises, such as conflicts, displacement, and disasters, is a profound, under-thought worldwide health issue with trickle-down impacts on individuals, communities, and populations. A meta-analysis of 40 studies (11,053 participants) by Patanè et al. (2022) highlights the staggering amounts of burdens in adult refugees, with 32% of them having major depressive disorder (MDD), 31% post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 5% bipolar disorder, and 1% psychosis. Twenty-two percent of 3,255 Syrian refugees aged above 18 who were screened in Lebanon had moderate to severe depression (Naal et al., 2021). Depression, PTSD, and anxiety were 41-50, 40-46, and 41-50 prevalent in Turkiye, Syria, and Afghanistan, respectively (Kurt et al., 2022). Eastern Mediterranean reports a systematic review that found the prevalence of anxiety (68), PTSD (52), and depression (43) in women in vulnerable settings (Emhj, 2024). Social Determinants that Impact the Problem Research and literature suggest that living conditions that are socially disadvantaged play a significant role in enhancing the risks of depression, PTSD, and anxiety in life trajectories in displaced populations; economic disadvantage during resettlement is a predictor of poor symptom outcomes (Kirkbride et al., 2024). Intervention combinations (which include interventions based on cash transfers, livelihood interventions, and education) do not reduce symptom load when compared to trials and implementation studies, thus reducing the likelihood of reducing symptom load. In the culture, stigma of mental illness, somatization of distress, and traditional avoidance of traditional healers decrease uptake significantly. Language problems, mistrust, and culturally defined explanatory models are repeatable barriers to receiving evidence-based treatments when it comes to migrants and refugees, which systematic reviews document and which explain enormous gaps in need and treatment coverage (Kemmak et al., 2021). Risk can be geographically clustered: the war-touched countries are characterized by risk, and the Eastern Mediterranean territories, as well as the Horn of Africa and displacement settings (camps and urban slums), are at high levels of prevalence and low density of services (World Health Organization, 2022). Remote or climate-affected regions have impaired supply chains and manpower deficiencies, which have added to the unmet need. Poor socioeconomic status (SES) increases the risk of experiencing traumatic events, as well as limits access to care. Mental-health expenditures remain a minuscule portion of health budgets in all countries of the world, and the most vulnerable ones are the poorest countries with the highest number of displaced persons. Economic studies argue that under-investment is a guarantee of the avoidable morbidity and the loss of productivity in the long-term, continuing the cycles of disease and poverty (McDaid and Park, 2023). Poor outcomes are linked to authoritarian or weak states, less access to humanitarian, and inconsistent national MHPSS planning. In places of weak governance, the national action plans are drafted, but not implemented, financed, and scaled up in manpower; on the contrary, those countries that consider mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) in multisectoral humanitarian programming improve their reach and results (Tol et al., 2023). Scaling integrated MHPSS during humanitarian responses is part of global consensus research agendas. Nongovernment Funding Organization Involvement Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) The organization caters to sub-populations such as those who have been exposed to conflict, displacement, and acute crises, those who are in the form of IDPs, refugees, and members of host communities, in low to middle-income countries (LMIC) settings where MSF has deployed emergency teams. The MSF integrates mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) as a part of emergency medical treatment by deploying mobile mental-health teams, brief trauma-informed therapies, and placing counsellors in primary care and field hospitals to provide psychological treatment as individual and group therapies (Tol et al., 2023). The quantification of the reach and clinical effect of MSF activity reports, and multicountry service data in emergency settings (e.g., improved symptom scores, services take up by older populations and conflict-affected groups), and the strategy used by MSF is aligned with evidence showing that integrated, facility-bound MHPSS increases access in frail settings (MSF, 2023). Nevertheless, the results vary depending on the degree and the situation; the serious one is still to be referred to the specialists, which is often unavailable in the long-term crisis. International Rescue Committee (IRC) The sub-population of the organization is the caregivers, women, and young children in displacement situations who experience caregiver stress, parenting disturbance, and early-childhood developmental risk. IRC scales and adapts community-based parenting/ psychosocial initiatives (e.g., Reach Up and Learn (RUL); phone-delivered RUL in COVID adaptations), which combine parenting skills, stimulation, and psychosocial assistance provided by trained community workers or provided by remote calls (Bowden et al., 2022). Cluster-randomized trials and reports on implementation indicate such programs are acceptable, feasible, and associated with improved child outcomes in psychosocial health and stimulation by caregivers in the case of refugees; cost-effectiveness evaluations of phone-delivered RUL indicate the potential of scalable effects, but with varying effect sizes depending on retention and delivery fidelity. International Medical Corps (IMC) Sub-population includes adults and adolescents who are affected by conflict in protracted crisis situations (e.g., Afghanistan, some of the Horn of Africa) with common mental
