Toward a multi-level strategy to reduce stigma in global mental health: overview protocol of the Indigo Partnership to develop and test interventions in low- and middle-income countries.

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY
Petra C Gronholm, Ioannis Bakolis, Anish V Cherian, Kelly Davies, Sara Evans-Lacko, Eshetu Girma, Dristy Gurung, Charlotte Hanlon, Fahmy Hanna, Claire Henderson, Brandon A Kohrt, Heidi Lempp, Jie Li, Santosh Loganathan, Pallab K Maulik, Ning Ma, Uta Ouali, Renee Romeo, Nicolas Rüsch, Maya Semrau, Tatiana Taylor Salisbury, Nicole Votruba, Syed Shabab Wahid, Wufang Zhang, Graham Thornicroft
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Abstract

There is increasing attention to the impacts of stigma and discrimination related to mental health on quality of life and access to and quality of healthcare. Effective strategies for stigma reduction exist, but most evidence comes from high-income settings. Recent reviews of stigma research have identified gaps in the field, including limited cultural and contextual adaptation of interventions, a lack of contextual psychometric information on evaluation tools, and, most notably, a lack of multi-level strategies for stigma reduction. The Indigo Partnership research programme will address these knowledge gaps through a multi-country, multi-site collaboration for anti-stigma interventions in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) (China, Ethiopia, India, Nepal, and Tunisia). The Indigo Partnership aims to: (1) carry out research to strengthen the understanding of mechanisms of stigma processes and reduce stigma and discrimination against people with mental health conditions in LMICs; and (2) establish a strong collaborative research consortium through the conduct of this programme. Specifically, the Indigo Partnership involves developing and pilot testing anti-stigma interventions at the community, primary care, and mental health specialist care levels, with a systematic approach to cultural and contextual adaptation across the sites. This work also involves transcultural translation and adaptation of stigma and discrimination measurement tools. The Indigo Partnership operates with the key principle of partnering with people with lived experience of mental health conditions for the development and implementation of the pilot interventions, as well as capacity building and cross-site learning to actively develop a more globally representative and equitable mental health research community. This work is envisioned to have a long-lasting impact, both in terms of the capacity building provided to participating institutions and researchers, and the foundation it provides for future research to extend the evidence base of what works to reduce and ultimately end stigma and discrimination in mental health.

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采取多层次战略,减少全球心理健康领域的污名化现象:在中低收入国家开发和测试干预措施的靛蓝伙伴关系协议概览。
人们越来越关注与心理健康有关的耻辱化和歧视对生活质量、医疗服务的获取和质量的影响。减少成见的有效策略是存在的,但大多数证据来自高收入环境。最近对成见研究的审查发现了该领域存在的差距,包括干预措施在文化和背景方面的适应性有限,评估工具缺乏背景心理测量信息,最值得注意的是缺乏多层次的减少成见战略。靛蓝伙伴关系研究计划将通过多国、多地点合作,在中低收入国家(中国、埃塞俄比亚、印度、尼泊尔和突尼斯)开展反污名化干预活动,填补这些知识空白。靛蓝伙伴关系旨在:(1) 开展研究,加强对成见过程机制的了解,减少对中低收入国家精神疾病患者的成见和歧视;(2) 通过实施该计划建立一个强大的合作研究联盟。具体而言,靛蓝伙伴关系涉及在社区、初级保健和心理健康专科护理层面开发和试点测试反污名化干预措施,并在各个地点采用系统的文化和环境适应方法。这项工作还包括跨文化翻译和调整羞辱与歧视测量工具。靛蓝伙伴关系 "的主要原则是与有心理健康问题亲身经历的人合作,共同开发和实施试点干预措施,并开展能力建设和跨站点学习,以积极发展更具全球代表性和更公平的心理健康研究社区。预计这项工作将产生长期影响,既包括为参与机构和研究人员提供能力建设,也包括为今后的研究奠定基础,以扩大证据库,从而减少并最终消除心理健康方面的污名化和歧视。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
2.80%
发文量
52
审稿时长
13 weeks
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