Acceptability of Mental Health Facilities and De-addiction Centers in India.

Journal of Experimental Neuroscience Pub Date : 2019-04-07 eCollection Date: 2019-01-01 DOI:10.1177/1179069519839990
Pahul Preet Singh, Ishan Goel, Amit Mondal, Farooq Ali Khan, Ashish Kumar Singh, Preeti Dubey, Sushma Chaudhary, P Venkata Anil Kumar Reddy, Viola Rodrigues, Vidhi Bassi, Karan Ahuja, Abhidith Shetty, Anjan Kumar Sahu, Karan Jodha, Nilesh Singh, Suprabhat Das, Rimi Sharma, Ria Bagaria, Sushmitha Poojary, Shrey M Gohil, Abhilash Bonu, Sushmita Vazirani, Leila Esfandiari, Sunil Shukla, Shubha Shukla, Sukant Khurana
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Not much is known about disease prevalence, treatment outcomes, trained manpower, programs, and patients' awareness of diseases from South Asia, compared with the Western world. While other aspects are improving, the quantitative evaluation of awareness of diseases is lagging. Compared with other diseases, the situation for mental health disorders and addiction is worse. While no single study can fully quantify all aspects of awareness, a good starting point is to understand if increasing the number of mental health facilities is beneficial by understanding people's perception toward the likelihood of contracting various diseases, their preferred approach to treatment, and their perception of whether there are enough current facilities. We surveyed over 8000 families across several states of India and asked if they would treat a particular problem at home, visit a local healer, seek religious council, or go to a modern hospital for treatment. Our questions also included non-medical options to assess how likely people are to avoid trained medical help. We also asked people about their perceived likelihood of a family member ever suffering from (1) diarrhea, (2) high fever, (3) alcoholism, and (4) schizophrenia and other mental health problems. We reversed the order of diseases in our questions for a fraction of the population to evaluate the effect of order of questioning. Finally, we asked, if people feel they have enough local healers, religious places, general hospitals, de-addiction centers, and mental health facilities. Despite the taboo around mental health, many people claimed that their family members were unlikely to contract mental health or addiction problems, people recognized the severe paucity of mental health facilities and de-addiction centers. This raises hope for improving the mental health situation in India. We also found a significant relation between education levels and choices people make, underscoring the positive role education has in improving mental health.

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印度精神卫生设施和戒毒中心的可接受性。
与西方世界相比,人们对南亚的疾病流行、治疗结果、训练有素的人力、项目和患者对疾病的认识知之甚少。虽然其他方面正在改善,但对疾病认识的定量评价滞后。与其他疾病相比,心理健康障碍和成瘾的情况更为严重。虽然没有一项研究可以完全量化意识的所有方面,但一个很好的起点是通过了解人们对感染各种疾病的可能性的看法,他们喜欢的治疗方法,以及他们对现有设施是否足够的看法,来了解增加精神卫生设施的数量是否有益。我们调查了印度几个邦的8000多个家庭,询问他们是否会在家里治疗特定的问题,拜访当地的治疗师,寻求宗教委员会,或者去现代医院治疗。我们的问题还包括非医疗选项,以评估人们避免接受培训的医疗帮助的可能性。我们还询问了人们他们认为家庭成员患有(1)腹泻、(2)高烧、(3)酗酒、(4)精神分裂症和其他精神健康问题的可能性。为了评估提问顺序的效果,我们对一小部分人群的提问顺序进行了颠倒。最后,我们问,人们是否觉得他们有足够的当地治疗师、宗教场所、综合医院、戒毒中心和精神卫生设施。尽管关于精神健康的禁忌,许多人声称他们的家庭成员不太可能患有精神健康或成瘾问题,但人们认识到精神健康设施和戒瘾中心的严重缺乏。这为改善印度的精神卫生状况带来了希望。我们还发现教育水平与人们做出的选择之间存在显著关系,强调了教育在改善心理健康方面的积极作用。
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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