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Acceptability and feasibility of using non-specialist health workers to deliver mental health care: Stakeholder perceptions from the PRIME district sites in Ethiopia, India, Nepal, South Africa, and Uganda

机译:使用非专业卫生工作者提供精神保健的可接受性和可行性:埃塞俄比亚,印度,尼泊尔,南非和乌干达PRIME地区的利益相关者看法

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Three-quarters of the global mental health burden exists in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), yet the lack of mental health services in resource-poor settings is striking. Task-sharing (also, task-shifting), where mental health care is provided by non-specialists, has been proposed to improve access to mental health care in LMICs. This multi-site qualitative study investigates the acceptability and feasibility of task-sharing mental health care in LMICs by examining perceptions of primary care service providers (physicians, nurses, and community health workers), community members, and service users in one district in each of the five countries participating in the PRogramme for Improving Mental health carE (PRIME): Ethiopia, India, Nepal, South Africa, and Uganda. Thirty-six focus group discussions and 164 in-depth interviews were conducted at the pre-implementation stage between February and October 2012 with the objective of developing district level plans to integrate mental health care into primary care. Perceptions of the acceptability and feasibility of task-sharing were evaluated first at the district level in each country through open-coding and then at the cross-country level through a secondary analysis of emergent themes. We found that task-sharing mental health services is perceived to be acceptable and feasible in these LMICs as long as key conditions are met: 1) increased numbers of human resources and better access to medications; 2) ongoing structured supportive supervision at the community and primary care-levels; and 3) adequate training and compensation for health workers involved in task-sharing. Taking into account the socio-cultural context is fundamental for identifying local personnel who can assist in detection of mental illness and facilitate treatment and care as well as training, supervision, and service delivery. By recognizing the systemic challenges and sociocultural nuances that may influence task-sharing mental health care, locally-situated interventions could be more easily planned to provide appropriate and acceptable mental health care in LMICs.
机译:全球四分之三的精神卫生负担存在于低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC),但在资源匮乏的环境中缺乏精神卫生服务的情况令人震惊。已经提出了由非专家提供精神保健的任务共享(也称为任务转移),以改善低收入和中等收入国家获得精神保健的机会。这项多站点定性研究通过检查每个地区一个地区的初级保健服务提供者(医生,护士和社区卫生工作者),社区成员和服务使用者的看法,调查了中低收入国家分担精神保健服务的可接受性和可行性。参与改善精神卫生保健计划(PRIME)的五个国家中:埃塞俄比亚,印度,尼泊尔,南非和乌干达。在实施之前的2012年2月至2012年10月之间,进行了3​​6次焦点小组讨论和164次深度访谈,目的是制定将精神保健纳入初级保健的地区级计划。首先通过开放编码在每个国家的地区级别评估任务共享的可接受性和可行性的感知,然后通过对新兴主题的二次分析在越野级别评估这种意识。我们发现,只要满足关键条件,在这些低收入和中等收入国家中,分担任务的精神卫生服务就被认为是可接受和可行的:1)人力资源数量增加和获得药物的更好机会; 2)在社区和初级保健级别进行持续的结构化支持性监督; (3)对参与任务共享的卫生工作者进行充分的培训和补偿。考虑到社会文化背景对于确定可以协助发现精神疾病并促进治疗和护理以及培训,监督和服务提供的当地人员至关重要。通过认识到可能影响任务共享精神卫生保健的系统性挑战和社会文化差异,可以更轻松地计划本地干预措施,以在中低收入国家提供适当和可接受的精神卫生保健。

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