The impact of a comprehensive microfinance intervention on depression levels of AIDS-orphaned children in Uganda.
Author: Ssewamala FM, Neilands TB, Waldfogel J, Ismayilova L.
Date: 2012
Abstract:
By adversely affecting family functioning and stability, poverty constitutes an important risk factor for children’s poor mental health functioning. This study examines the impact of a comprehensive microfinance intervention, designed to reduce the risk of poverty, on depression among AIDS-orphaned youth.
METHODS:
Children from 15 comparable primary schools in Rakai District of Uganda, one of those hardest hit by HIV/AIDS in the country, were randomly assigned to control (n = 148) or treatment (n = 138) conditions. Children in the treatment condition received a comprehensive microfinance intervention comprising matched savings accounts, financial management workshops, and mentorship. This was in addition to traditional services provided for all school-going orphaned adolescents (counseling and school supplies). Data were collected at wave 1 (baseline), wave 2 (10 months after intervention), and wave 3 (20 months after intervention). We used multilevel growth models to examine the trajectory of depression in treatment and control conditions, measured using Children’s Depression Inventory (Kovacs).
RESULTS:
Children in the treatment group exhibited a significant decrease in depression, whereas their control group counterparts showed no change in depression.
CONCLUSIONS:
The findings indicate that over and above traditional psychosocial approaches used to address mental health functioning among orphaned children in sub-Saharan Africa, incorporating poverty alleviation-focused approaches, such as this comprehensive microfinance intervention, has the potential to improve psychosocial functioning of these children.
[button link=”http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1054-139X(11)00283-7″]Read More[/button]