MAANASI -南印度持续创新的综合精神卫生保健模式

G. Jayaram, R. Goud, Suhas Chandran, Johnson Pradeep
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)进行的研究指出,常见精神障碍与女性性别、低教育水平和贫困存在显著关联。由于缺乏疾病意识和不坚持治疗、缺乏护理和提供者资源、政策制定者对精神卫生的重视程度较低、对精神病患者的污名化和歧视,抑郁和焦虑往往变得更加复杂。本文旨在表明,女性村领导/社区卫生和外展工作者(CHWs)可以用来克服农村地区缺乏精神病学资源来治疗常见精神障碍的问题。成立了一个多学科小组来评估和治疗这些村庄的潜在客户。下列人员计划、制定和实施了一项保健服务方案:(A)针对该地区的贫困妇女;(b)将精神保健纳入初级保健;(c)在持续的监督下,培训当地妇女为卫生保健员,使人们能够负担得起并获得护理;(d)长期维持该计划。土著保健员是中心与社区之间的纽带。他们接受了实际操作培训、持续监督和一个精简但重点突出的培训模块,以识别常见的精神障碍,帮助治疗依从性、建立网络、疾病扫盲和外联工作人员提供的社区支持。他们使用翻译成当地语言的评估工具,并开展焦点小组和客户培训项目。因此,向来自南印度多达150个村庄的客户提供了心理保健。目前,中心项目地点周围约有50个村庄定期使用这些服务。目前登记客户的活跃案件量为1930宗。最终的结果是赋予接受治疗的客户权力,帮助他们自主创业。农村精神卫生保健必须在文化上保持一致,必须将初级保健和当地卫生保健工作者结合起来才能取得成功。培训、监督、卫生保健员的持续教学、现场驻地医务干事、研究和外联是20多年来持续成功的关键。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
MAANASI - A Sustained, Innovative, Integrated Mental Healthcare Model in South India
Studies in low and middle-income countries (LMICs) point to a significant association of common mental disorders with female gender, low education, and poverty. Depression and anxiety are frequently complicated by lack of disease awareness and non-adherence, the absence of care and provider resources, low value given to mental health by policy-makers, stigma, and discrimination towards the mentally ill. This paper aims to show that female village leaders/ community health and outreach workers (CHWs) can be used to overcome the lack of psychiatric resources for treatment of common mental disorders in rural areas. A multidisciplinary team was set up to evaluate and treat potential clients in the villages. A program of care delivery was planned, developed and implemented by: (a) targeting indigent women in the region; (b) integrating mental health care with primary care; (c) making care affordable and accessible by training local women as CHWs with ongoing continued supervision; and (d) sustaining the program long-term. Indigenous CHWs served as a link between the centre and the community. They received hands-on training, ongoing supervision, and an abridged but focused training module to identify common mental disorders, help treatment compliance, networking, illness literacy and community support by outreach workers. They used assessment tools translated into the local language, and conducted focus groups and client training programs.  As a result, mental healthcare was provided to clients from as many as 150 villages in South India. Currently the services are utilized on a regular basis by about 50 villages around the central project site. The current active caseload of registered clients is 1930.  Empowerment of treated clients is the final outcome, assisting them in self-employment.  Rural mental healthcare must be culturally congruent, and must integrate primary care and local CHWs for success. Training, supervision, ongoing teaching of CHWs, on-site resident medical officers, research and outreach are essential to continued success over two decades.
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