Abstract:
Background: Khat is the substance mainly used for its central nervous stimulation effects. The
substance has been associated with several mental health problems, and there is an ongoing
international concern about this causal relationship. Nevertheless, an effort to scope and
systematically review mental health effects of khat based on the available studies is a much-
ignored venture.
Objective: The objective of the study is to map, summarize and pool effect size of the
association between khat use and mental disorders
Methods: The study has two phases. The first phase deals with the scoping review of the
association between khat and mental disorders using PubMed, SCOPUS, Embase and CINAHL
databases to map and clarify the existing published studies on the relationship between khat use
and mental disorders. The second phase is a meta-analysis of the association between khat use
and ‘non-specific psychological distress’ identified using scoping review as having rich evidence
to warrant meta-analysis. Newcastle Ottawa Scale (NOS) is used to assess the qualities of studies
used for meta-analysis. The meta-analysis employed RevMan version 5.4.1 and Comprehensive
meta-analysis (CMA) software. Heterogeneity among estimates is quantitatively evaluated with
the I 2 -statistic. The Hedges method of pooling odds ratios is plotted using forest plots and pooled
odds ratio (OR) is calculated. Publication bias is investigated by construction of funnel plots and
Egger’s test.
Results: The initial online search of the four databases yielded a total of 7,121 articles and the
search of gray literature produced 5 eligible articles. A total of N=108 are considered eligible for
the scoping review. The studies are conducted in 12 different countries, a dramatic increase in the
number of studies was observed only during the last ten years and the studies mostly employed
cross-sectional design. Khat use is mostly measured using a single item ‘yes/no’ question and
attention to study the ‘dose-dependent effect’ of khat use on mental health is not given much
attention. About 14 different categories of mental disorders and related conditions have been
identified as having association with khat use. The meta-analysis shows that the pooled effect
size of psychological distress among people who use khat in the form of odds ratio (OR) using
Trim and Fill the imputed point estimate is 2.09 (1.56, 2.78), as compared to those who don’t use
khat.
Conclusion: Although most of the studies associated khat use with mental disorder, the
development of conclusive evidence about cause-effect relation is impossible given the cross-
sectional design dominating most of the studies, contradictory findings and the limited number of
studies employing advanced designs.