Boris, Neil W., Lisanne A. Brown, Tonya
R. Thurman, Janet C. Rice, Leslie M. Snider, Joseph Ntaganira, and Laetitia
N. Nyirazinyoye.
2008. "Depressive symptoms in youth heads of household in Rwanda,"
Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine 162(9): 836–843. (offsite
full text)
Objective
To examine the level of depressive symptoms and their predictors in youth
from one region of Rwanda who function as heads of household (i.e., those
responsible for caring for other children) and care for younger orphans.
Design
Cross-sectional survey.
Setting
Four adjoining districts in Gigonkoro, an impoverished rural province in
southwestern Rwanda.
Participants
Trained interviewers met with the eldest member of each household (n = 539)
in which a youth 24 years old or younger was caring for one child or more.
Main exposure
Serving as a youth head of household.
Main outcome measures
Rates and severity of depressive symptoms using the Center for Epidemiologic
Studies Depression scale; measures of grief, adult support, social
marginalization, and sociodemographic factors using scales developed for
this study.
Results
Of the 539 youth heads of household, 77 percent were subsistence farmers and
only 7 percent had attended school for six years or more. Almost half (44%) reported
eating only one meal a day in the last week, and 80 percent rated their health as
fair or poor. The mean score on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies
Depression scale was 24.4, exceeding the most conservative published cutoff
score for adolescents. Multivariate analysis revealed that reports of
depressive symptoms that exceeded the clinical cutoff were associated with
having three basic household assets or fewer, such as a mattress and a spare set
of clothes (odds ratio [OR], 1.69; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.06–2.70),
eating less than one meal per day (OR, 1.68; 95% CI, 1.09–2.60), reporting
fair health (OR, 1.32; 95% CI, 0.76–2.29) or poor health (OR, 2.33; 95% CI,
1.17–4.64), endorsing high levels of grief (OR, 2.67; 95% CI, 1.73–4.13),
having at least one parent die in the genocide as opposed to all other causes
of parental death (OR, 1.83; 95% CI, 1.10–3.04), and not having a close
friend (OR, 1.91; 95% CI, 1.17–3.12). There was an interaction between
marginalization from the community and alcohol use; youth who were highly
marginalized and did not drink alcohol were more than three times more likely to
report symptoms of depression (OR, 3.07; 95% CI, 1.73–5.42). When models
were constructed by grouping theoretically related variables into blocks and
controlling for other blocks, the emotional status block of variables (grief
and marginalization) accounted for the most variance in depressive symptoms.
Conclusions
Orphaned youth who head households in rural Rwanda face many challenges and
report high rates of depressive symptoms. Interventions designed to go
beyond improving food security and increasing household assets may be needed
to reduce social isolation of youth heads of household. The effect of
head-of-household depressive symptoms on other children living in
youth-headed households is unknown.
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