Dividing them setting apart problematic children in front of the whole community is not advisable. On the other hand, setting up only social activities, leaving psychologically severely traumatized children without due attention, is wrong. This article summarizes the central elements of a programme of psychosocial rehabilitation for IDP children in Azerbaijan from 1995 to 1999, implemented by the Norwegian Refugee Council with BUTA Childrens Humanitarian Foundation, an Azerbaijani NGO. The methodology balances the therapeutic and the social elements of normal psychosocial rehabilitation, avoiding division and involving children in theatre, art, sport and music.
The major principle is restoration of the childs world and the cornerstone of this is the childs need for play. This implies also working with parents, teachers and the elderly, to re-establish intracommunal, intrafamilial and interpersonal relationships.
The children may participate in one of four sections: theatre, art, sport musical folklore. Depending on the motifs and game scenarios, the level and the focus of intervention shifts from medical-psychological to the educational with an emphasis on childrens rights. Each child chooses his/her preferred section and because of this element of free choice, the children and the community as the whole interpret their participation not as medical treatment but as part of creative, play activities.
1. Theatre
This section has roots in common with G Morenos method of psychodrama.(1) The difference is, however, that children do not re-enact their own experiences and problems. Instead, indirect intervention into problems takes place. Psychiatrists and psychologists individualize and adapt well-known fairy-tales and legends for the child-actors. The lives of the characters, their experiences and behaviour and, what is also important, the ways in which they solve their problems are very close to the lives of the IDP children.
2. Art
The methodology applied in the art section is based on art therapy; adaptation lies in the selection of themes. At first, in the diagnostic period, children are offered a free theme for drawing. Very often, children illustrate their traumatic experiences. Following this, children are asked to draw pictures with completely different themes, such as my worst day (one drawing) and my best days (three to four drawings). After several lessons, children are once more asked to draw on a free topic. After several such free topics, the number of children who reflect their traumatic experiences in their drawing decreases considerably. It is important to ensure that, after actualization takes place during the drawing process, the children are then directed towards something good, kind and positive, either recollecting it from the past or transferring it to the future.
3. Music
Musical folklore appeals to the age-old mechanism of musics complex psychophysical effect (music, text and rhythm). To a certain degree, these effects are predictable, stereotyped and leave less space for individualized associations. Each lesson starts with songs with a sad component (10-15 per cent of the time); then songs with more neutral content (up to 20-25 per cent); and at the end come songs and dances with an optimistic, happy component (60-70 per cent).
4. Sport
Sport yields less possibility for directed intervention into childrens psychogenic problems but has more impact on behavioural problems. In general, this section uses team sports such as relay race competitions; the results are improved emotional health, rehabilitation and interpersonal relationships. The games also create favourable conditions for addressing personal characteristics such as withdrawal, egocentrism, depression and frustration.
This method of complex mass psychosocial rehabilitation of IDP children can be applied on three different levels with the use of various specialists:
Level 3: This involves two specialists: a psychiatrist (or psychologist) and a professional group leader whose background corresponds with the section profile (theatre producer, artist, etc). The psychiatrist designs a play scenario for the work of the section; the group leader implements this plan, making it attractive and interesting for children. Medical-psychological, social and to a lesser extent pedagogical interventions are applied.
Level 2: This involves one psychiatrist (or psychologist) and four to eight social workers. The latter are trained in the basics of intervention methodology. The work of the psychiatrist is confined to difficult children and supervision of the social workers. (A common mistake is a tendency on the part of the social workers to focus on either the most talented or the most deprived children.) Mainly social-pedagogical and to a lesser extent medical-psychological types of interventions are applied.
Level 1: This involves social workers only, though they still require training. Intervention is implemented on the social-pedagogical and, to a much lesser extent, the medical-psychological level (mild neurotic reactions spontaneously decrease).
What level to choose will depend on the following:
Assessment should indicate:
We would like to comment on the statement in the article by Anica Mikus Kos and Sanja Derviskadic-Jovanovic (2) that time is the most important healer. The state of mental health and psychosocial functioning improve in the majority of children without psychosocial intervention. Our experience does not support this statement. Comparative evaluation of the children who took part in our activities and those excluded from them shows a significant difference among them.
Based on fieldwork experience and the results of examination, we came to the conclusion that the best way to progress in psychosocial rehabilitation is to move from the medical-psychological complex to activities with purely social-pedagogical and educational components. All this should be done with the same group of children, in the same community, especially if their life in the camps spans a long period of time.
Nazim Akhundov is a psychiatrist, Associate Professor of the Medical In-service Training Institute and Medical Coordinator of BUTA Childrens Humanitarian Foundation. Email: nazim@intrans.az
BUTA is currently preparing a book including the main principles of the above methodology plus concrete recommendations about standardized games for use in interventions. Contact BUTA at Najaf Narimanov St, 5A, Apt 17, Baku, Azerbaijan. Tel/fax: +994 12 627432. Email: nazim@intrans.az