Review Article
Trauma in Sub-Saharan Africa: Review of Cost, Estimation Methods, and Interventions
Melissa A. Smigelsky, Jamie D. Aten, Stacy Gerberich, Mark Sanders, Rachael Post, Kimberly Hook, Angie Ku, David M. Boan, Phil Monroe
Humanitarian Disaster Institute, Wheaton College, United States
Abstract
Trauma is a widely acknowledged problem facing individuals and communities in developing countries. In sub-Saharan Africa?a region that is home to some of the world?s worst human rights violations, ethnic and civil conflicts, disease epidemics, and conditions of poverty-trauma is an all-too-common experience in citizens? daily lives. In order to address these conditions effectively, the impact of trauma must be understood. The authors reviewed recent literature on the cost and consequences of psychological trauma in sub-Saharan Africa to provide a substantive perspective on how trauma affects individuals, communities, and organizations and to inform the effort to determine a method for measuring the impact of trauma in sub-Saharan Africa and the efficacy of trauma interventions in the region. Several recommendations are offered to help broaden and deepen the current approaches to conceptualizing trauma, evaluating its cost, and intervening on behalf of those impacted by trauma in sub-Saharan Africa.