Youth living in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) have an increased vulnerability to mental illnesses, with many lacking access to adequate treatment. There has been a growing body of interventions using task sharing with trained peer leaders to address this mental health gap. This scoping review examines the characteristics, effectiveness, components of peer delivery and challenges of peer-led mental health interventions for youth aged 10–24 in LMICs. A key term search strategy was employed across MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, Global Health and Global Index Medicus. Eligibility criteria included young people aged 10–24 and a peer-led component delivered in any setting in an LMIC. Study selection and extraction were conducted independently by the first and second authors, with discrepancies resolved by the senior author. Study characteristics were summarised and presented descriptively. The search identified 5,358 citations, and 19 studies were included. There were 14 quantitative, four qualitative and one mixed methods study reporting mental health outcomes. Types of interventions were heterogenous but fell within three broad categories: (1) peer education and psychoeducation, (2) peer-led psychotherapy and counselling and (3) peer support. All studies reported improved mental health outcomes as a result of the peer-led interventions. Peer-led interventions are versatile in terms of both the types of interventions and mode of delivery. Lived experience, mutual respect and reduced stigma make this method a highly unique and effective way to engage this age group. However, implementing peer-led youth interventions is not without challenges. Adequate training, supervision, cultural appropriateness and support from established institutions are critical to safeguarding and ensuring the sustainability of such programs. Our findings suggest that peer-led models are a valuable intervention strategy that policymakers can leverage in current and future efforts to address youth mental health in LMICs. Future areas of research should expand to include the perspectives of other key stakeholders involved in the implementation of peer-led mental health interventions, focusing on factors including fidelity, feasibility and acceptability to enhance implementation insights.
Review
A scoping review on peer-led interventions to improve youth mental health in low- and middle-income countries
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- 16 December 2024, e1
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Applying systems theory to global mental health
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- 20 December 2024, e2
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Overview Review
Early intervention in psychosis programs in Africa, Asia and Latin America; challenges and recommendations
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- 06 January 2025, e3
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Data-driven supervision to optimize the effectiveness of proactive case detection for mental health care among children: a proof-of-concept study
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- 20 December 2024, e4
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Climate change trauma and collective dissociation: Unraveling the impact on mental health and advocating for collective action
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- 14 January 2025, e5
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El Niño-driven flooding and mental health symptomology among adolescents and young adults in Peru
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- 05 February 2025, e6
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Associations between the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) and Tests of Variables of Attention (TOVA) in rural school-aged children in Benin Africa
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- 14 January 2025, e7
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Cultural adaptation process of six stigma assessment scales among Kannada speaking population in South India
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- 14 January 2025, e8
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Internet chat based intervention as a mode for therapy and counselling
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- 09 January 2025, e9
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Global variation in the assessment of psychological trauma in pregnancy
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- 07 January 2025, e10
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Corrigendum
Father’s involvement associated with rural children’s depression and anxiety: A large-scale analysis based on data from seven provinces in China – CORRIGENDUM
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- 27 January 2025, e11
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Findings from the Tushirikiane-4-MH (supporting each other for mental health) mobile health–supported virtual reality randomized controlled trial among urban refugee youth in Kampala, Uganda
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- 23 January 2025, e12
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Cultural and contextual adaptation of the Solastalgia subscale of the Environmental Distress Scale in drought-affected Kilifi, Kenya
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- 22 January 2025, e13
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Anxiety and depression screening reveals the importance of advancing mental health support for Haitian healthcare providers
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- 22 January 2025, e14
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Exploring the delivery of empathic care in task-shared settings: A psychometric study in rural Pakistan
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- 13 January 2025, e15
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Feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effectiveness of a culturally adapted nonspecialist delivery Problem-Solving Therapy: Friendship Bench Intervention for perinatal psychological distress in Sierra Leone
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- 03 February 2025, e16
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Wearable technology and daily diaries for studying mental health: lessons learned from pilot studies in Kampala, Uganda
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- 23 January 2025, e17
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