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Associations between water insecurity and depression among refugee adolescents and youth in a humanitarian context in Uganda: cross-sectional survey findings

Carmen H. Logie, Moses Okumu, Miranda G. Loutet, Isha Berry, Lina Taing, Simon Odong Lukone, Nelson Kisubi, Nina Sokolovic, Peter Kyambadde

2022International Health25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Water insecurity is linked to poor mental health through intrapersonal, relational and community-based stressors. We examined water insecurity and depression among refugee youth in Bidi Bidi, Uganda. METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional survey and multivariable ordinal logistic regression to examine associations between water insecurity and depression severity, adjusting for gender, resilience, social support and food insecurity. RESULTS: Among participants (n=115; mean age: 19.7 y, SD 2.3), 80.0% reported water insecurity and 18.3% had moderate/severe depression symptoms. Water insecurity was independently associated with higher levels of depression severity (adjusted OR: 5.61; 95% CI 1.20 to 26.30; p=0.03). CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest water insecurity was commonplace and associated with depression. Water insecurity could be integrated in refugee mental health promotion by policymakers and community-based programmers.

Topics & Concepts

Intrapersonal communicationCross-sectional studyMental healthRefugeeDepression (economics)Context (archaeology)StressorPsychological resiliencePsychologyEnvironmental healthMedicinePsychiatryGeographySocial psychologyInterpersonal communicationPathologyArchaeologyEconomicsMacroeconomicsChild Nutrition and Water AccessFood Security and Health in Diverse PopulationsSleep and related disorders