WEBVTT 00:00:10.371 --> 00:00:11.521 Good morning. 00:00:12.790 --> 00:00:17.950 Worldwide, over 1.5 billion people experience armed conflict. 00:00:19.030 --> 00:00:21.726 In response, people are forced to flee their country, 00:00:21.750 --> 00:00:24.870 leaving over 15 million refugees. 00:00:25.670 --> 00:00:27.006 Children, without a doubt, 00:00:27.030 --> 00:00:29.510 are the most innocent and vulnerable victims ... 00:00:30.790 --> 00:00:33.406 but not just from the obvious physical dangers, 00:00:33.430 --> 00:00:37.150 but from the often unspoken effects that wars have on their families. 00:00:38.430 --> 00:00:41.646 The experiences of war leave children at a real high risk 00:00:41.670 --> 00:00:44.589 for the development of emotional and behavioral problems. 00:00:46.110 --> 00:00:47.966 Children, as we can only imagine, 00:00:47.990 --> 00:00:50.070 will feel worried, threatened and at risk. 00:00:50.630 --> 00:00:51.830 But there is good news. 00:00:52.470 --> 00:00:56.206 The quality of care that children receive in their families 00:00:56.230 --> 00:00:59.686 can have a more significant effect on their well-being 00:00:59.710 --> 00:01:03.390 than from the actual experiences of war that they have been exposed to. 00:01:04.510 --> 00:01:07.246 So actually, children can be protected 00:01:07.270 --> 00:01:11.710 by warm, secure parenting during and after conflict. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:13.990 --> 00:01:17.326 In 2011, I was a first-year PhD student 00:01:17.350 --> 00:01:20.550 in the University of Manchester School of Psychological Sciences. 00:01:21.110 --> 00:01:22.566 Like many of you here, 00:01:22.590 --> 00:01:25.590 I watched the crisis in Syria unfold in front of me on the TV. 00:01:26.630 --> 00:01:28.926 My family is originally from Syria, 00:01:28.950 --> 00:01:30.206 and very early on, 00:01:30.230 --> 00:01:32.910 I lost several family members in really horrifying ways. 00:01:33.830 --> 00:01:36.510 I'd sit and I'd gather with my family and watch the TV. 00:01:37.270 --> 00:01:38.686 We've all seen those scenes: 00:01:38.710 --> 00:01:40.766 bombs destroying buildings, 00:01:40.790 --> 00:01:42.230 chaos, destruction 00:01:43.110 --> 00:01:44.682 and people screaming and running. 00:01:45.510 --> 00:01:49.446 It was always the people screaming and running that really got me the most, 00:01:49.470 --> 00:01:51.710 especially those terrified-looking children. 00:01:53.470 --> 00:01:57.166 I was a mother to two young, typically inquisitive children. 00:01:57.190 --> 00:01:58.766 They were five and six then, 00:01:58.790 --> 00:02:01.846 at an age where they typically asked lots and lots of questions, 00:02:01.870 --> 00:02:03.990 and expected real, convincing answers. 00:02:05.190 --> 00:02:07.846 So, I began to wonder what it might be like 00:02:07.870 --> 00:02:11.270 to parent my children in a war zone and a refugee camp. 00:02:12.240 --> 00:02:13.560 Would my children change? 00:02:14.680 --> 00:02:17.880 Would my daughter's bright, happy eyes lose their shine? 00:02:18.520 --> 00:02:23.520 Would my son's really relaxed and carefree nature become fearful and withdrawn? 00:02:24.800 --> 00:02:26.040 How would I cope? 00:02:27.440 --> 00:02:28.640 Would I change? NOTE Paragraph 00:02:30.640 --> 00:02:32.856 As psychologists and parent trainers, 00:02:32.880 --> 00:02:36.776 we know that arming parents with skills in caring for their children 00:02:36.800 --> 00:02:39.360 can have a huge effect on their well-being, 00:02:40.200 --> 00:02:42.080 and we call this parent training. 00:02:42.680 --> 00:02:44.616 The question I had was, 00:02:44.640 --> 00:02:48.376 could parent training programs be useful for families 00:02:48.400 --> 00:02:51.416 while they were still in war zones or refugee camps? 00:02:51.440 --> 00:02:54.016 Could we reach them with advice or training 00:02:54.040 --> 00:02:56.160 that would help them through these struggles? 00:02:57.800 --> 00:03:00.536 So I approached my PhD supervisor, 00:03:00.560 --> 00:03:02.056 Professor Rachel Calam, 00:03:02.080 --> 00:03:06.360 with the idea of using my academic skills to make some change in the real world. 00:03:06.720 --> 00:03:08.959 I wasn't quite sure what exactly I wanted to do. 00:03:09.970 --> 00:03:11.826 She listened carefully and patiently, 00:03:11.850 --> 00:03:13.426 and then to my joy she said, 00:03:13.450 --> 00:03:16.306 "If that's what you want to do, and it means so much to you, 00:03:16.330 --> 00:03:17.586 then let's do it. 00:03:17.610 --> 00:03:20.586 Let's find ways to see if parent programs 00:03:20.610 --> 00:03:22.970 can be useful for families in these contexts." NOTE Paragraph 00:03:23.890 --> 00:03:26.786 So for the past five years, myself and my colleagues -- 00:03:26.810 --> 00:03:29.466 Prof. Calam and Dr. Kim Cartwright -- 00:03:29.490 --> 00:03:31.706 have been working on ways to support families 00:03:31.730 --> 00:03:33.930 that have experienced war and displacement. 00:03:35.570 --> 00:03:38.986 Now, to know how to help families that have been through conflict 00:03:39.010 --> 00:03:40.426 support their children, 00:03:40.450 --> 00:03:44.266 the first step must obviously be to ask them what they're struggling with, 00:03:44.290 --> 00:03:45.506 right? 00:03:45.530 --> 00:03:46.906 I mean, it seems obvious. 00:03:46.930 --> 00:03:49.306 But it's often those that are the most vulnerable, 00:03:49.330 --> 00:03:50.746 that we're trying to support, 00:03:50.770 --> 00:03:52.106 that we actually don't ask. 00:03:52.130 --> 00:03:55.306 How many times have we just assumed we know exactly the right thing 00:03:55.330 --> 00:03:58.970 that's going to help someone or something without actually asking them first? NOTE Paragraph 00:03:59.410 --> 00:04:03.066 So I traveled to refugee camps in Syria and in Turkey, 00:04:03.090 --> 00:04:05.450 and I sat with families, and I listened. 00:04:06.250 --> 00:04:08.986 I listened to their parenting challenges, 00:04:09.010 --> 00:04:11.266 I listened to their parenting struggles 00:04:11.290 --> 00:04:13.506 and I listened to their call for help. 00:04:13.530 --> 00:04:15.546 And sometimes that was just paused, 00:04:15.570 --> 00:04:17.626 as all I could do was hold hands with them 00:04:17.650 --> 00:04:19.850 and just join them in silent crying and prayer. 00:04:20.610 --> 00:04:23.026 They told me about their struggles, 00:04:23.050 --> 00:04:27.176 they told me about the rough, harsh refugee camp conditions 00:04:27.200 --> 00:04:30.415 that made it hard to focus on anything but practical chores 00:04:30.439 --> 00:04:32.240 like collecting clean water. 00:04:32.960 --> 00:04:35.520 They told me how they watched their children withdraw; 00:04:36.280 --> 00:04:39.456 the sadness, depression, anger, 00:04:39.480 --> 00:04:42.656 bed-wetting, thumb-sucking, fear of loud noises, 00:04:42.680 --> 00:04:44.536 fear of nightmares -- 00:04:44.560 --> 00:04:46.280 terrifying, terrifying nightmares. 00:04:47.320 --> 00:04:51.000 These families had been through what we had been watching on the TV. 00:04:51.600 --> 00:04:52.816 The mothers -- 00:04:52.840 --> 00:04:55.016 almost half of them were now widows of war, 00:04:55.040 --> 00:04:57.816 or didn't even know if their husbands were dead or alive -- 00:04:57.840 --> 00:05:00.520 described how they felt they were coping so badly. 00:05:01.840 --> 00:05:05.896 They watched their children change and they had no idea how to help them. 00:05:05.920 --> 00:05:08.880 They didn't know how to answer their children's questions. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:09.750 --> 00:05:13.086 What I found incredibly astonishing and so motivational 00:05:13.110 --> 00:05:18.006 was that these families were so motivated to support their children. 00:05:18.030 --> 00:05:20.446 Despite all these challenges they faced, 00:05:20.470 --> 00:05:22.726 they were trying to help their children. 00:05:22.750 --> 00:05:26.366 They were making attempts at seeking support from NGO workers, 00:05:26.390 --> 00:05:28.286 from refugee camp teachers, 00:05:28.310 --> 00:05:29.526 professional medics, 00:05:29.550 --> 00:05:30.750 other parents. 00:05:31.350 --> 00:05:34.566 One mother I met had only been in a camp for four days, 00:05:34.590 --> 00:05:36.206 and had already made two attempts 00:05:36.230 --> 00:05:38.646 at seeking support for her eight-year-old daughter 00:05:38.670 --> 00:05:40.710 who was having terrifying nightmares. 00:05:42.310 --> 00:05:45.230 But sadly, these attempts are almost always useless. 00:05:45.990 --> 00:05:48.046 Refugee camp doctors, when available, 00:05:48.070 --> 00:05:49.846 are almost always too busy, 00:05:49.870 --> 00:05:53.950 or don't have the knowledge or the time for basic parenting supports. 00:05:54.670 --> 00:05:57.790 Refugee camp teachers and other parents are just like them -- 00:05:58.430 --> 00:06:01.910 part of a new refugee community who's struggling with new needs. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:02.490 --> 00:06:04.690 So then we began to think. 00:06:05.250 --> 00:06:07.610 How could we help these families? 00:06:08.730 --> 00:06:12.866 The families were struggling with things much bigger than they could cope with. 00:06:12.890 --> 00:06:14.586 The Syrian crisis made it clear 00:06:14.610 --> 00:06:19.906 how incredibly impossible it would be to reach families on an individual level. 00:06:19.930 --> 00:06:21.906 How else could we help them? 00:06:21.930 --> 00:06:25.866 How would we reach families at a population level 00:06:25.890 --> 00:06:27.450 and low costs 00:06:28.110 --> 00:06:30.830 in these terrifying, terrifying times? NOTE Paragraph 00:06:31.870 --> 00:06:34.446 After hours of speaking to NGO workers, 00:06:34.470 --> 00:06:36.926 one suggested a fantastic innovative idea 00:06:36.950 --> 00:06:41.966 of distributing parenting information leaflets via bread wrappers -- 00:06:41.990 --> 00:06:46.326 bread wrappers that were being delivered to families in a conflict zone in Syria 00:06:46.350 --> 00:06:47.990 by humanitarian workers. 00:06:48.350 --> 00:06:49.966 So that's what we did. 00:06:49.990 --> 00:06:52.966 The bread wrappers haven't changed at all in their appearance, 00:06:52.990 --> 00:06:55.190 except for the addition of two pieces of paper. 00:06:55.790 --> 00:07:00.686 One was a parenting information leaflet that had basic advice and information 00:07:00.710 --> 00:07:04.126 that normalized to the parent what they might be experiencing, 00:07:04.150 --> 00:07:06.166 and what their child might be experiencing. 00:07:06.190 --> 00:07:10.006 And information on how they could support themselves and their children, 00:07:10.030 --> 00:07:14.246 such as information like spending time talking to your child, 00:07:14.270 --> 00:07:16.366 showing them more affection, 00:07:16.390 --> 00:07:18.446 being more patient with your child, 00:07:18.470 --> 00:07:20.286 talking to your children. 00:07:20.310 --> 00:07:22.886 The other piece of paper was a feedback questionnaire, 00:07:22.910 --> 00:07:24.510 and of course, there was a pen. 00:07:26.050 --> 00:07:29.546 So is this simply leaflet distribution, 00:07:29.570 --> 00:07:33.386 or is this actually a possible means of delivering psychological first aid 00:07:33.410 --> 00:07:36.466 that provides warm, secure, loving parenting? NOTE Paragraph 00:07:36.490 --> 00:07:40.570 We managed to distribute 3,000 of these in just one week. 00:07:42.050 --> 00:07:45.706 What was incredible was we had a 60 percent response rate. 00:07:45.730 --> 00:07:49.946 60 percent of the 3,000 families responded. 00:07:49.970 --> 00:07:52.466 I don't know how many researchers we have here today, 00:07:52.490 --> 00:07:54.826 but that kind of response rate is fantastic. 00:07:54.850 --> 00:07:58.106 To have that in Manchester would be a huge achievement, 00:07:58.130 --> 00:08:00.826 let alone in a conflict zone in Syria -- 00:08:00.850 --> 00:08:04.570 really highlighting how important these kinds of messages were to families. 00:08:05.190 --> 00:08:09.046 I remember how excited and eager we were for the return of the questionnaires. 00:08:09.070 --> 00:08:11.566 The families had left hundreds of messages -- 00:08:11.590 --> 00:08:13.966 most incredibly positive and encouraging. 00:08:13.990 --> 00:08:15.726 But my favorite has got to be, 00:08:15.750 --> 00:08:18.750 "Thank you for not forgetting about us and our children." 00:08:20.190 --> 00:08:22.246 This really illustrates the potential means 00:08:22.270 --> 00:08:25.046 of the delivery of psychological first aid to families, 00:08:25.070 --> 00:08:27.166 and the return of feedback, too. 00:08:27.190 --> 00:08:29.686 Just imagine replicating this using other means 00:08:29.710 --> 00:08:34.286 such as baby milk distribution, or female hygiene kits, 00:08:34.310 --> 00:08:35.590 or even food baskets. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:35.861 --> 00:08:37.576 But let's bring this closer to home, 00:08:37.600 --> 00:08:38.896 because the refugee crisis 00:08:38.920 --> 00:08:42.336 is one that is having an effect on every single one of us. 00:08:42.360 --> 00:08:46.975 We're bombarded with images daily of statistics and of photos, 00:08:46.999 --> 00:08:48.576 and that's not surprising, 00:08:48.600 --> 00:08:49.855 because by last month, 00:08:49.879 --> 00:08:52.976 over one million refugees had reached Europe. 00:08:53.000 --> 00:08:54.200 One million. 00:08:54.800 --> 00:08:57.936 Refugees are joining our communities, 00:08:57.960 --> 00:08:59.456 they're becoming our neighbors, 00:08:59.480 --> 00:09:01.960 their children are attending our children's schools. 00:09:03.120 --> 00:09:06.680 So we've adapted the leaflet to meet the needs of European refugees, 00:09:07.440 --> 00:09:09.776 and we have them online, open-access, 00:09:09.800 --> 00:09:12.426 in areas with a really high refugee influx. 00:09:12.450 --> 00:09:15.666 For example, the Swedish healthcare uploaded it onto their website, 00:09:15.690 --> 00:09:17.386 and within the first 45 minutes, 00:09:17.410 --> 00:09:19.727 it was downloaded 343 times -- 00:09:20.490 --> 00:09:22.386 really highlighting how important it is 00:09:22.410 --> 00:09:24.946 for volunteers, practitioners and other parents 00:09:24.970 --> 00:09:27.890 to have open-access, psychological first-aid messages. NOTE Paragraph 00:09:30.290 --> 00:09:36.466 In 2013, I was sitting on the cold, hard floor of a refugee camp tent 00:09:36.490 --> 00:09:39.570 with mothers sitting around me as I was conducting a focus group. 00:09:40.480 --> 00:09:42.776 Across from me stood an elderly lady 00:09:42.800 --> 00:09:46.256 with what seemed to be a 13-year-old girl lying beside her, 00:09:46.280 --> 00:09:48.560 with her head on the elderly lady's knees. 00:09:49.120 --> 00:09:51.896 The girl stayed quiet throughout the focus group, 00:09:51.920 --> 00:09:53.216 not talking at all, 00:09:53.240 --> 00:09:55.360 with her knees curled up against her chest. 00:09:56.080 --> 00:09:57.776 Towards the end of the focus group, 00:09:57.800 --> 00:10:00.776 and as I was thanking the mothers for their time, 00:10:00.800 --> 00:10:03.776 the elderly lady looked at me while pointing at the young girl, 00:10:03.800 --> 00:10:06.200 and said to me, "Can you help us with...?" 00:10:07.120 --> 00:10:09.496 Not quite sure what she expected me to do, 00:10:09.520 --> 00:10:11.376 I looked at the young girl and smiled, 00:10:11.400 --> 00:10:12.776 and in Arabic I said, 00:10:12.800 --> 00:10:14.816 "Salaam alaikum. Shu-ismak?" 00:10:14.840 --> 00:10:16.040 "What's your name?" 00:10:16.760 --> 00:10:19.496 She looked at me really confused and unengaged, 00:10:19.520 --> 00:10:21.120 but then said, "Halul." 00:10:21.880 --> 00:10:26.416 Halul is the pet's name for the Arabic female name, Hala, 00:10:26.440 --> 00:10:29.320 and is only really used to refer to really young girls. 00:10:30.360 --> 00:10:34.000 At that point I realized that actually Hala was probably much older than 13. 00:10:34.840 --> 00:10:39.120 It turns out Hala was a 25-year-old mother to three young children. 00:10:39.960 --> 00:10:43.936 Hala had been a confident, bright, bubbly, loving, caring mother 00:10:43.960 --> 00:10:45.176 to her children, 00:10:45.200 --> 00:10:47.160 but the war had changed all of that. 00:10:48.040 --> 00:10:52.416 She had lived through bombs being dropped in her town; 00:10:52.440 --> 00:10:54.880 she had lived through explosions. 00:10:55.480 --> 00:10:57.936 When fighter jets were flying around their building, 00:10:57.960 --> 00:10:59.176 dropping bombs, 00:10:59.200 --> 00:11:01.936 her children would be screaming, terrified from the noise. 00:11:01.960 --> 00:11:05.056 Hala would frantically grab pillows and cover her children's ears 00:11:05.080 --> 00:11:06.456 to block out the noise, 00:11:06.480 --> 00:11:08.040 all the while screaming herself. 00:11:09.070 --> 00:11:10.766 When they reached the refugee camp 00:11:10.790 --> 00:11:14.006 and she knew they were finally in some kind of safety, 00:11:14.030 --> 00:11:17.430 she completely withdrew to acting like her old childhood self. 00:11:18.070 --> 00:11:20.150 She completely rejected her family -- 00:11:21.470 --> 00:11:23.430 her children, her husband. 00:11:24.190 --> 00:11:26.310 Hala simply could no longer cope. NOTE Paragraph 00:11:27.590 --> 00:11:30.486 This is a parenting struggle with a really tough ending, 00:11:30.510 --> 00:11:32.326 but sadly, it's not uncommon. 00:11:32.350 --> 00:11:35.326 Those who experience armed conflict and displacement 00:11:35.350 --> 00:11:37.950 will face serious emotional struggles. 00:11:38.610 --> 00:11:40.650 And that's something we can all relate to. 00:11:41.810 --> 00:11:44.810 If you have been through a devastating time in your life, 00:11:45.490 --> 00:11:49.130 if you have lost someone or something you really care about, 00:11:50.290 --> 00:11:52.370 how would you continue to cope? 00:11:53.570 --> 00:11:56.690 Could you still be able to care for yourself and for your family? NOTE Paragraph 00:11:58.370 --> 00:12:01.506 Given that the first years of a child's life are crucial 00:12:01.530 --> 00:12:04.786 for healthy physical and emotional development, 00:12:04.810 --> 00:12:09.786 and that 1.5 billion people are experiencing armed conflict -- 00:12:09.810 --> 00:12:12.506 many of whom are now joining our communities -- 00:12:12.530 --> 00:12:14.426 we cannot afford to turn a blind eye 00:12:14.450 --> 00:12:17.706 to the needs of those who are experiencing war and displacement. 00:12:17.730 --> 00:12:20.186 We must prioritize these families' needs -- 00:12:20.210 --> 00:12:25.050 both those who are internally displaced, and those who are refugees worldwide. 00:12:26.010 --> 00:12:31.026 These needs must be prioritized by NGO workers, policy makers, 00:12:31.050 --> 00:12:35.346 the WHO, the UNHCR and every single one of us 00:12:35.370 --> 00:12:38.770 in whatever capacity it is that we function in our society. NOTE Paragraph 00:12:38.980 --> 00:12:44.156 When we begin to recognize the individual faces of the conflict, 00:12:44.180 --> 00:12:48.676 when we begin to notice those intricate emotions on their faces, 00:12:48.700 --> 00:12:50.580 we begin to see them as humans, too. 00:12:51.250 --> 00:12:54.065 We begin to see the needs of these families, 00:12:54.089 --> 00:12:55.769 and these are the real human needs. 00:12:57.160 --> 00:12:59.856 When these family needs are prioritized, 00:12:59.880 --> 00:13:03.176 interventions for children in humanitarian settings 00:13:03.200 --> 00:13:08.480 will prioritize and recognize the primary role of the family in supporting children. 00:13:09.160 --> 00:13:11.736 Family mental health will be shouting loud and clear 00:13:11.760 --> 00:13:13.520 in global, international agenda. 00:13:14.400 --> 00:13:18.096 And children will be less likely to enter social service systems 00:13:18.120 --> 00:13:19.696 in resettlement countries 00:13:19.720 --> 00:13:22.400 because their families would have had support earlier on. 00:13:23.840 --> 00:13:26.576 And we will be more open-minded, 00:13:26.600 --> 00:13:28.416 more welcoming, more caring 00:13:28.440 --> 00:13:31.920 and more trusting to those who are joining our communities. NOTE Paragraph 00:13:33.120 --> 00:13:35.320 We need to stop wars. 00:13:36.040 --> 00:13:40.696 We need to build a world where children can dream of planes dropping gifts, 00:13:40.720 --> 00:13:41.960 and not bombs. 00:13:42.640 --> 00:13:46.696 Until we stop armed conflicts raging throughout the world, 00:13:46.720 --> 00:13:49.416 families will continue to be displaced, 00:13:49.440 --> 00:13:50.800 leaving children vulnerable. 00:13:51.400 --> 00:13:54.456 But by improving parenting and caregiver support, 00:13:54.480 --> 00:13:59.736 it may be possible to weaken the links between war and psychological difficulties 00:13:59.760 --> 00:14:01.680 in children and their families. NOTE Paragraph 00:14:02.160 --> 00:14:03.376 Thank you. NOTE Paragraph 00:14:03.400 --> 00:14:06.779 (Applause)