Mental Health and Psychosocial Support (MHPSS) in refugee settings

Researcher: Daniela Arocha Ramirez

Topic:  Implementation of Interpersonal Group Therapy (IPG-T) in Refugee Communities of Palabek Settlement, Northern Uganda

Unit: CHASE-i, Department of Social Work and Social Administration, Makerere University

Programme: Master of Social Work

Supervisors: Dr Gloria Seruwagi & Dr Esther Nanfuka

Summary Background & Research Motivation: Daniela Arocha Ramirez is a psychologist with both research and practice experience in mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS), migration, and public policies for global development. Daniela has worked with social research and international non-governmental organizations (iNGOs) in Latin America – particularly in the areas of community-based and psychosocial interventions, humanitarian contexts, and human rights advocacy. She holds an associate degree in education, and a Master’s in Social Work from the University of Stavanger (UiS) in Norway.  Joining CHASE-i as an Erasmus Mundus Scholar, Daniela was initially a visiting researcher in Uganda attached to the Centre where she conducted graduate research on the COMPASS project’s Protection and Mental Health intervention under the supervision of Dr. Gloria Seruwagi and Dr Esther Nanfuka in Makerere University’s Department of Social Work. Her research focused on  assessing and documenting  the implementation of the WHO’s Interpersonal Group Therapy (IPT-G). It also explored perceptions and experiences of IPG-T implementers, clients, refugee and local host communities in Uganda. IPG-T is part of the WHO’s Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP). Daniela’s research generated important evidence which contributed to programming under the Protection and Health strands of the COMPASS Project implemented in Uganda and South Sudan – with key lessons for adapting the intervention in other contexts. Daniela is originally from Colombia. Her motivation for MHPSS and research generally stems from her work with internally displaced people (IDPs) affected by Colombia’s armed conflict and Venezuela’s refugee crisis, where she closely attended to the anguish of vulnerable communities who had suffered through traumatic situations of displacement. Completed in 2023, Daniela Arocha Ramirez’s research was nested under the COMPASS Project.

Catherine Nakidde Nzesei

BSc. | MA | MPH | PhD ongoing

Associate Director of Programmes

Catherine Nakidde Nzesei is the Centre’s Associate Director of Programmes – providing leadership and support to the Programmes Unit across all projects, teams and associates.

Catherine is a public health specialist with graduate training in public health, health promotion and international development. A recipient of the 2022 Commonwealth Scholarship, she embarked on a PhD in public pealth at UCL which is driven by her passion for health system strengthening – and building on previous work around Strengthening Health Professional Regulation in Uganda and Kenya. Catherine’s PhD examines systems and processes for continuous quality improvement of healthcare professional training.

Catherine’s professional interests revolve around leveraging impact from effective systems and empowering vulnerable population categories to enable them to fulfil their potential – whether in a professional, community or personal setting. Some of her previous work has focused on understanding the experiences of refugees and slum dwellers in the COVID-19 pandemic as well as health system resilience. Since inception, Catherine has directly supported for several Centre projects including those on Reproductive Maternal Newborn Child and Adolescent Health (RMNCAH), refugee health and wellbeing, Quality Improvement (QI) and livelihoods.