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Review
. 2024 Nov 14:11:e109.
doi: 10.1017/gmh.2024.82. eCollection 2024.

Meta-Analysis: Prevalence of Youth Mental Disorders in Sub-Saharan Africa

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Review

Meta-Analysis: Prevalence of Youth Mental Disorders in Sub-Saharan Africa

Cecilia E Jakobsson et al. Glob Ment Health (Camb). .

Abstract

Youth in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) face limited access to professional mental health resources. A comprehensive assessment of the prevalence of mental disorders would build an understanding of the scope of the need. We conducted systematic searches in PsycInfo, Pubmed, AfriBib and Africa Journals Online to identify prevalence rates for five disorders (anxiety, depression, conduct disorder, attention problems and post-traumatic stress) among SSA youth with a mean age of less than 19 years. We calculated a random-effects pooled prevalence for each disorder and assessed possible moderators. The meta-analysis included 63 studies with 55,071 participants. We found the following pooled prevalence rates: 12.53% post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 15.27% depression, 6.55% attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, 11.78% anxiety and 9.76% conduct disorder. We found high heterogeneity across the studies, which may have resulted from differences in samples or measurement tools. Reported prevalence rates were not explained by the sample (i.e., special or general population), but whether the psychometric tool was validated for SSA youth affected the reported prevalence of PTSD and anxiety. In a meta-regression, prevalence rates were associated with the disorder type, with a higher prevalence of depression and PTSD. We found the mean age significantly moderated the prevalence in univariate meta-regression, with increased age correlated with greater prevalence. Our findings suggest there is a need to explore reasons for varying prevalence rates further and to develop interventions that support youth mental health in SSA, particularly interventions for depression and PTSD. Limitations included a lack of standardization in psychometric tools and limited reporting on research methods, which influenced quality rating. Importantly, the search only considered studies published in English and was conducted 2 years ago. Although recent estimates reported slightly higher than our prevalence estimates, these reviews together highlight the prevalence and importance of youth mental health difficulties in SSA.

Keywords: child and adolescent; mental health; prevalence; sub-Saharan Africa; youth.

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Conflict of interest statement

KVC is a co-founder and scientific director at the Shamiri Institute, a non-profit organization that aims to provide accessible mental healthcare for youth in the global South. BO and RB are employees of Shamiri Institute. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

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