The COVID pandemic is delivering âa major hitâ to efforts to provide education to displaced young people worldwide and also hindering mental health efforts at a time when they are needed most. But researchers and aid organizations are learning some valuable lessons.
Those were key take-aways offered by ¶¶Òőapp faculty members Mary Mendenhall and Lena Verdeli in a recent webinar hosted by the .
[Watch , which was organized by Mendenhall and TC Post-doctoral Research Fellow Vidur Chopra, and moderated by Chopra.]
Watch the webinar âEducation, Health, and Well-being for Displaced Populations: Strengthening Coordination and Approachesâ
Mendenhall, Associate Professor of Practice in TCâs Department of International & Transcultural Studies, has spent years shaping new methods to prepare teachers who work with displaced populations. She lamented the pandemicâs impact on such efforts.
âThe gains weâve made to get kids into school are now in jeopardy, especially for girls,â she said. âThe longer the health pandemic affects familiesâ and caregiversâ economic prospects, the more kids will have to stay out of school and have to work to support their families.â
KNOWING THE TERRAIN The webinar was organized by TC Associate Professor of Practice Mary Mendenhall (left). Mendenhall and Lena Verdeli, Associate Professor of Psychology & Education (center) were among the speakers, and Post-Doctoral Research Fellow Vidur Chopra moderated. (Photos: TC Archives)
[Read a story about Mendenhallâs efforts to improve preparation for teachers working with refugees.]
Girls face particular challenges because of âthe anticipated increases in early marriage, early pregnancy and the sexual and gender-based violence that tend to accompany these types of crises,â Mendenhall said, citing a 65 percent increase in teen pregnancy in some areas of Sierra Leone during the 2014-16 Ebola virus outbreak in that country.
The gains weâve made to get kids into school are now in jeopardy, especially for girls,. The longer the health pandemic affects familiesâ and caregiversâ economic prospects, the more kids will have to stay out of school and have to work to support their families.
â Mary Mendenhall
On the positive side, Mendenhall said that âthe pandemic has reminded everyone, literally the world over,â of teachersâ importance. âWe have to figure out how to leverage [that] newfound respect and appreciation for teachers in sustainable ways post-pandemic â not just by providing more training, but through actual stipends, payments and compensation that reflects the work theyâre doing, and also through broader systemic and policy-level change.â
For the first time in a disaster, mental health has been identified explicitly as a priority. Yet at a time of increased need and demand, there is decreased availability of mental health services because of closures, illness and major disruption.
â Lena Verdeli
Verdeli, Associate Professor of Psychology & Education and Director of TCâs Global Mental Health Lab, has adapted interpersonal therapy (ITP) to help populations around the world. She said of the pandemic that âfor the first time in a disaster, mental health has been identified explicitly as a priority. Yet at a time of increased need and demand, there is decreased availability of mental health services because of closures, illness and major disruption.â
[Read a story about the work of Verdeli and TCâs Global Mental Health Lab in the Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh.]
Still, she said, the pandemic âforces us to think of how to make mental health systems more versatile and more community based.â She cited the example of Lebanon, where she and her students have worked closely with the government to address the impact of a massive influx of people displaced from neighboring Syria.
âThe country adopted a human rights approach â everyone living in Lebanon had to have access to evidence-based mental health care for a vulnerable population,â she said. âAs a result of a more centralized strategy, there are more national regions with online tools, and better hotline coordination with NGOs, ministries and academic centers.â