BACKGROUND: The Russian aggression on Ukraine of February 24, 2022 caused the massive influx of war refugees, mainly mothers and children, to Poland. One of the initiatives to support their mental health was undertaken in a frame of the agreement between UNICEF and the Ministry of Health. AIMS: This study aimed to evaluate the emergency response mental health support program on Ukrainian refugee parents' resilience, mental health and competencies to enhance children's wellbeing in the face of adversity. METHODS: = 630). The anonymous questionnaire covered the key components of the program: health (HRQL-14), wellbeing (WHO-5), coping with stress (BRIEF-COPE), resilience (CD-RISC), post-traumatic growth (PTGI), and parenting practices (PRS). RESULTS: = 0.11). Increase in use of constructive coping strategies and parenting practices based on child's acceptance, as well as, decrease in excessive protection, excessive demands and inconsistency in parenting were significant, too although the effect sizes were moderate. CONCLUSIONS: program usefulness for emergent mental health support of parents affected by war. However, several factors should be taken into account when interpreting this results, including the temporality and specificity of the psychological needs of the target population, the role of trainers and methodological constraints.
Okulicz‐Kozaryn et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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