Evaluating a Mental Health Program for Palestinian Refugees in Lebanon

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Springer New York LLC

Abstract

Medecins sans Frontière, an international non-governmental organization, initiated a mental health program for Palestinian refugees living in Lebanon. To evaluate the impact of the program after its completion, focus groups were conducted with three target groups: (1) patients, (2) staff, and (3) local community stakeholders. Participants voiced overall satisfaction with the program. The program provided easy access, good quality care, decreased stigma, as perceived by participants, and revealed a sense of community contentedness. In addition, several short-term outcomes were achieved, such as increasing the numbers of patients visiting the center/ receiving mental health treatment. However, lack of planning for sustainability and proper procedures for hand-over of the program constituted a major downfall. Program discontinuation posed ethical dilemmas, common in provisional interventions in underprivileged refugee communities. © 2017, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.

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Lebanon, Medecins sans frontières (msf), Mental health program, Non-governmental organization (ngo), Program evaluation, Refugee community, Sustainability, Adult, Arabs, Female, Health services accessibility, Humans, Male, Mental health, Mental health services, Middle aged, Patient satisfaction, Quality of health care, Refugee camps, Refugees, Social stigma, Arab, Epidemiology, Ethnology, Health care delivery, Health care quality, Human, Mental health service, Organization and management, Psychology, Refugee, Refugee camp, Statistics and numerical data

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