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      Communal violence and child psychosocial well-being: qualitative findings from Poso, Indonesia.

      Transcultural Psychiatry
      Child, Child Behavior Disorders, ethnology, psychology, Child Welfare, Child, Preschool, Conflict (Psychology), Cross-Cultural Comparison, Fear, Female, Focus Groups, Humans, Indonesia, Islam, Male, Medicine, Traditional, Moral Development, Politics, Poverty, Prejudice, Religion and Psychology, Social Environment, Social Problems, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic, Violence, War

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          Abstract

          This exploratory study examined the health care system in relation to communal violence-related psychosocial wellbeing in Poso, Indonesia, as preparation for conducting a cluster randomized trial of a psychosocial intervention. We employed focus groups with children (N = 9), parents (N = 11), and teachers (N = 8), as well as semi-structured interviews with families affected by communal violence (N = 42), and key informants (N = 33). An interrelated set of problems was found that included poverty, an indigenized trauma construct, morally inappropriate behavior, inter-religious tensions, and somatic problems. Participants emphasized social-ecological interactions between concerns at different systemic levels, although problems were mainly addressed through informal care by families. The programmatic and research implications of these findings are discussed.

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