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British Journal of Psychiatry | 2016

Integrating mental health into chronic care in South Africa: the development of a district mental healthcare plan

Inge Petersen; Lara Fairall; Arvin Bhana; Tasneem Kathree; One Selohilwe; Carrie Brooke-Sumner; Gill Faris; Erica Breuer; Nomvula Sibanyoni; Crick Lund; Vikram Patel

Background In South Africa, the escalating prevalence of chronic illness and its high comorbidity with mental disorders bring to the fore the need for integrating mental health into chronic care at district level. Aims To develop a district mental healthcare plan (MHCP) in South Africa that integrates mental healthcare for depression, alcohol use disorders and schizophrenia into chronic care. Method Mixed methods using a situation analysis, qualitative key informant interviews, theory of change workshops and piloting of the plan in one health facility informed the development of the MHCP. Results Collaborative care packages for the three conditions were developed to enable integration at the organisational, facility and community levels, supported by a human resource mix and implementation tools. Potential barriers to the feasibility of implementation at scale were identified. Conclusions The plan leverages resources and systems availed by the emerging chronic care service delivery platform for the integration of mental health. This strengthens the potential for future scale up.


BMC Women's Health | 2014

Perceptions of postnatal depression and health care needs in a South African sample: the “mental” in maternal health care

Tasneem Kathree; One Selohilwe; Arvin Bhana; Inge Petersen

BackgroundMaternal mental health care is a neglected area in low and middle income countries (LAMIC) such as South Africa, where maternal and child health care priorities are focused on reducing maternal and infant mortality and promoting infant physical health. In the context of a paucity of mental health specialists, the aim of this study was to understand the explanatory models of illness held by women with maternal depression with the view to informing the development of an appropriate counselling intervention using a task sharing approach.MethodsTwenty semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with mothers from a poor socio-economic area who were diagnosed with depression at the time of attending a primary health care facility. Follow-up interviews were conducted with 10 participants in their homes.ResultsDimensions of poverty, particularly food and financial insecurity and insecure accommodation; unwanted pregnancy; and interpersonal conflict, particularly partner rejection, infidelity and general lack of support were reported as the causes of depression. Exacerbating factors included negative thoughts and social isolation. Respondents embraced the notion of task sharing, indicating that counselling provided by general health care providers either individually or in groups could be helpful.ConclusionCounselling interventions drawing on techniques from cognitive behavioural therapy and problem solving therapy within a task sharing approach are recommended to build self-efficacy to address their material conditions and relationship problems in poorly resourced primary health care facilities in South Africa.


Social Work in Mental Health | 2017

Community-based psychosocial rehabilitation for schizophrenia service users in the north west province of South Africa: A formative study

Carrie Brooke-Sumner; Crick Lund; One Selohilwe; Inge Petersen

ABSTRACT Psychosocial support is recognized as important for recovery for service users with schizophrenia, in addition to provision of antipsychotic medication. This study aimed to develop a community-based psychosocial rehabilitation programme for service users with schizophrenia to be facilitated by auxiliary social workers, and to investigate acceptability and feasibility of the programme. A task-sharing approach was adopted in which auxiliary social workers were trained to facilitate psychosocial rehabilitation groups. In-depth individual qualitative interviews were conducted with six group members at baseline, midpoint, and endpoint (18 interviews in total). NVivo10 was used to store data and conduct qualitative framework analysis. Participants reported benefits of the programme, including improvements in group members’ self-esteem, social support, illness knowledge, self-care, and contribution to their households. A key barrier to acceptability was the lack of provision of income generating opportunities. Implementation challenges include difficulties in tracing and engaging service users and families, lack of an appropriate venue, and issues with supply of antipsychotic medication. This study has provided evidence for the benefits and acceptability of this contextually adapted programme. Key barriers to implementation can be addressed through the provision of the necessary resources for auxiliary social worker input in the community.


Trials | 2018

Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults receiving antiretroviral therapy in South Africa: study protocol for the CobALT randomised controlled trial

Lara Fairall; Inge Petersen; Babalwa Zani; Naomi Folb; Daniella Georgeu-Pepper; One Selohilwe; Ruwayda Petrus; Ntokozo Mntambo; Arvin Bhana; Carl Lombard; Max Bachmann; Crick Lund; Jill Hanass-Hancock; Dan Chisholm; Paul McCrone; Sergio Carmona; Thomas A. Gaziano; Naomi S. Levitt; Tasneem Kathree; Graham Thornicroft

BackgroundThe scale-up of antiretroviral treatment (ART) programmes has seen HIV/AIDS transition to a chronic condition characterised by high rates of comorbidity with tuberculosis, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and mental health disorders. Depression is one such disorder that is associated with higher rates of non-adherence, progression to AIDS and greater mortality. Detection and treatment of comorbid depression is critical to achieve viral load suppression in more than 90% of those on ART and is in line with the recent 90-90-90 Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) targets. The CobALT trial aims to provide evidence on the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of scalable interventions to reduce the treatment gap posed by the growing burden of depression among adults on lifelong ART.MethodsThe study design is a pragmatic, parallel group, stratified, cluster randomised trial in 40 clinics across two rural districts of the North West Province of South Africa. The unit of randomisation is the clinic, with outcomes measured among 2000 patients on ART who screen positive for depression using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). Control group clinics are implementing the South African Department of Health’s Integrated Clinical Services Management model, which aims to reduce fragmentation of care in the context of rising multimorbidity, and which includes training in the Primary Care 101 (PC101) guide covering communicable diseases, NCDs, women’s health and mental disorders. In intervention clinics, we supplemented this with training specifically in the mental health components of PC101 and clinical communications skills training to support nurse-led chronic care. We strengthened the referral pathways through the introduction of a clinic-based behavioural health counsellor equipped to provide manualised depression counselling (eight sessions, individual or group), as well as adherence counselling sessions (one session, individual). The co-primary patient outcomes are a reduction in PHQ-9 scores of at least 50% from baseline and viral load suppression rates measured at 6 and 12 months, respectively.DiscussionThe trial will provide real-world effectiveness of case detection and collaborative care for depression including facility-based counselling on the mental and physical outcomes for people on lifelong ART in resource-constrained settings.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02407691) registered on 19 March 2015; Pan African Clinical Trials Registry (201504001078347) registered on 19/03/2015; South African National Clinical Trials Register (SANCTR) (DOH-27-0515-5048) NHREC number 4048 issued on 21/04/2015.


BMJ Open | 2018

Detection and treatment initiation for depression and alcohol use disorders: facility-based cross-sectional studies in five low-income and middle-income country districts

Sujit Rathod; Tessa Roberts; Girmay Medhin; Vaibhav Murhar; Sandesh Samudre; Nagendra P. Luitel; One Selohilwe; Joshua Ssebunnya; Mark J. D. Jordans; Arvin Bhana; Inge Petersen; Fred Kigozi; Juliet Nakku; Crick Lund; Abebaw Fekadu; Rahul Shidhaye

Objectives To estimate the proportion of adult primary care outpatients who are clinically detected and initiate treatment for depression and alcohol use disorder (AUD) in low-income and middle-income country (LMIC) settings. Design Five cross-sectional studies. Setting Adult outpatient services in 36 primary healthcare facilities in Sodo District, Ethiopia (9 facilities); Sehore District, India (3); Chitwan District, Nepal (8); Dr Kenneth Kaunda District, South Africa (3); and Kamuli District, Uganda (13). Participants Between 760 and 1893 adults were screened in each district. Across five districts, between 4.2% and 20.1% screened positive for depression and between 1.2% and 16.4% screened positive for AUD. 96% of screen-positive participants provided details about their clinical consultations that day. Primary outcomes Detection of depression, treatment initiation for depression, detection of AUD and treatment initiation for AUD. Results Among depression screen-positive participants, clinical detection of depression ranged from 0% in India to 11.7% in Nepal. Small proportions of screen-positive participants received treatment (0% in Ethiopia, India and South Africa to 4.2% in Uganda). Among AUD screen-positive participants, clinical detection of AUD ranged from 0% in Ethiopia and India to 7.8% in Nepal. Treatment was 0% in all countries aside Nepal, where it was 2.2%. Conclusions The findings of this study suggest large detection and treatment gaps for adult primary care patients, which are likely contributors to the population-level mental health treatment gap in LMIC. Primary care facilities remain unfulfilled intervention points for reducing the population-level burden of disease in LMIC.


Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences | 2017

Risk correlates for physical-mental multimorbidities in South Africa: a cross-sectional study.

Inge Petersen; Sujit Rathod; Tasneem Kathree; One Selohilwe; Arvin Bhana

AIMS The aim of this study was to identify the risk correlates for coexisting common mental disorders (CMDs) in the chronic care population in South Africa, with the view to identifying particularly vulnerable patient populations. METHODS The sample comprised 2549 chronic care patients enrolled in the baseline and endline rounds of a facility detection survey conducted by the Programme for Improving Mental Health Care in three large facilities in the Dr Kenneth Kaunda district in the North West province of South Africa. Participants were screened for depression using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ9) and for alcohol misuse using the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT). Data were analysed according to the number of morbidities, disorder type (physical or mental) and demographic variables. Multimorbidity was defined as the presence of two or more disorders (physical and/or mental). RESULTS Just over one-third of the sample reported two or more physical conditions. Women were more at risk of being depressed than were men, with men more at risk of alcohol misuse. Those who were employed were at lower risk of having coexisting CMDs, while being younger, HIV positive, and food deprived were all found to be associated with higher risk for having coexisting CMDs. CONCLUSION In the face of the large treatment gap for CMDs in South Africa, and the role that coexisting CMDs can play in exacerbating the burden of chronic physical diseases, mental health screening and treatment interventions should target HIV-positive, younger patients living in circumstances where there is household food insecurity.


BMC Psychiatry | 2015

The validity of the Patient Health Questionnaire for screening depression in chronic care patients in primary health care in South Africa

Arvin Bhana; Sujit Rathod; One Selohilwe; Tasneem Kathree; Inge Petersen


BMC Psychiatry | 2014

Psychiatric stigma and discrimination in South Africa: perspectives from key stakeholders.

Catherine O. Egbe; Carrie Brooke-Sumner; Tasneem Kathree; One Selohilwe; Graham Thornicroft; Inge Petersen


Trials | 2018

Collaborative care for the detection and management of depression among adults with hypertension in South Africa: study protocol for the PRIME-SA randomised controlled trial

Inge Petersen; Arvin Bhana; Naomi Folb; Graham Thornicroft; Babalwa Zani; One Selohilwe; Ruwayda Petrus; Ntokozo Mntambo; Daniella Georgeu-Pepper; Tasneem Kathree; Crick Lund; Carl Lombard; Max Bachmann; Thomas A. Gaziano; Naomi S. Levitt; Lara Fairall


Community Mental Health Journal | 2018

Process Evaluation of a Pilot Intervention for Psychosocial Rehabilitation for Service Users with Schizophrenia in North West Province, South Africa

Carrie Brooke-Sumner; One Selohilwe; Musawenkosi Sphiwe Mazibuko; Inge Petersen

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Inge Petersen

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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Arvin Bhana

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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Tasneem Kathree

University of KwaZulu-Natal

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Carrie Brooke-Sumner

South African Medical Research Council

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Lara Fairall

University of Cape Town

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Babalwa Zani

University of Cape Town

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Carl Lombard

South African Medical Research Council

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