尼日利亚家庭医生对世卫组织精神卫生差距行动规划的认识和参与:一项定性研究。

Olumide Thomas Adeleke, Wulaimat Abimbolanle Adekunle, Oludaisi Adeshina Oduniyi, Akeem Opeyemi Akinbode, Alarape Naomi Oluwasanya, Omorovbiye Aibangbee, Eloho Joy Orji, Temitayo Olabode Aderemi, Adekunle Joseph Ariba
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:世界卫生组织的精神卫生差距行动规划(mhGAP)干预指南(IG)为评估和综合护理重点疾病提供了基于证据的建议和工具。其目标是缩小心理健康差距;然而,这一差距仍然存在,其特点是在获得保健和保健质量方面存在巨大差异。家庭医生在弥合这一差距方面至关重要;然而,他们对执行mhGAP的认识和参与程度仍然模糊不清。这项研究探讨了尼日利亚家庭医生对实施精神卫生服务的认识和参与程度,以及影响他们参与“精神卫生差距行动方案”的因素和障碍。方法:本研究采用描述性参与式行动研究设计,利用半结构化的关键信息访谈,访问了代表六个地缘政治区域的24名全国家庭医生。采访被逐字记录下来,并使用归纳编码和内容分析进行分析,揭示了影响研究结果的关键主题和模式,这些主题和模式以主题形式表示。结果:家庭医生表现出对心理健康指南和干预措施的不同认识。由于没有国家统一的指导方针,参与程度从最低到积极不等。促进mhGAP参与和实施的因素包括医生培训、患者关系和多学科合作,而障碍包括时间限制、耻辱感和系统差距。结论:本研究揭示了尼日利亚家庭医生对mhGAP的不同程度的认识和参与。虽然有些人积极主动,但许多人的参与度有限。培训、患者关系和协作促进了参与,而时间限制、耻辱感和系统性差距则阻碍了参与。需要有针对性的干预措施来弥合精神卫生行动的差距。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Awareness and involvement of Nigerian Family Physicians in WHO's Mental Health Gap Action Programme: a qualitative study.

Background: The World Health Organization's Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP) intervention guide (IG) offers evidence-based recommendations and instruments for evaluating and comprehensive care of priority disorders. Its objective is to close the mental health gap; yet, this gap remains, characterized by substantial differences in access to and quality of care. Family physicians are essential in bridging this gap; nevertheless, their awareness and engagement in executing mhGAP remain ambiguous. This study explored family physicians' awareness and involvement levels in the implementation of mental health services in Nigeria as well as the perceived facilitators and barriers affecting their participation in the "Mental Health Gap Action Programme".

Methods: This study employed a descriptive participatory action research design, utilizing semi-structured key informant interviews with 24 family physicians nationwide, representing all six geopolitical zones. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using inductive coding and content analysis, revealing key themes and patterns that informed the study's findings, which were represented thematically.  RESULTS: Family physicians demonstrated varying awareness of mental health guidelines and interventions. Involvement levels ranged from minimal to proactive as there was no national unified guide. Facilitators to mhGAP involvement and implementation included training of physicians, patient relationships, and multidisciplinary collaboration while barriers included time constraints, stigma, and systemic gaps.

Conclusions: This study reveals the varying levels of mhGAP awareness and involvement among Nigerian family physicians. While some are proactive, many show limited engagement. Training, patient relationships, and collaboration facilitate involvement, while time constraints, stigma, and systemic gaps hinder it. Targeted interventions are needed to bridge the mental health action gap.

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