Depression in Southern Africa: Lessons from Zimbabwe Vikram Patel Senior Lecturer, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Sangath Society,Goa, India.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Implementing NICE guidance
Advertisements

Session 1 Introduction to course. Session 1 structure 1.Why are mental health promotion and mental disorder prevention important? 2. Contents of this.
City and Hackney Commissioning Strategy Plan 2012/13 – 2015/16 Date: 5 th December2011 City and Hackney CCG.
‘Adjusting to Life Events and Their Impact on Mental Health.’
I NEQUALITIES : T HE INTERSECTION OF RACE AND GENDER T HE W OMEN ’ S H EALTH A ND E QUALITY C ONSORTIUM (WHEC) October 2014.
'Women with Mental Health Issues in the Criminal Justice System in Northern Ireland- A Misunderstood and Victimised Group'. Elizabeth Craig-PhD Student.
Copyright © 2012 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 35Seriously and Persistently Mentally Ill, Homeless, or Incarcerated Clients.
The National Child Traumatic Stress Network Ellen Gerrity, Ph.D. Associate Director and Senior Policy Advisor National Center for Child Traumatic Stress.
JSNA Schizophrenia progress report Martina Pickin Locum Consultant in Public Health.
Health service utilization by patients with common mental disorder identified by the Self Reporting Questionnaire in a primary care setting in Zomba, Malawi.
ACHMA 2012 Summit Healthy Supports, Healthy Communities: Improving the Health of Communities Through Social Supports.
Harvard Anthropology Medical Harvard Danger, Uncertainty, and Suffering: Existential versus Institutional Perspectives on Human Problems.
Health Care and Immigrant Populations in the U.S. James A. Litch MD, DTMH Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; WA Department of Health, Epidemiology.
Poverty & Mental Disorder: Breaking the Cycle
Counseling in Mental Health and Private Practice Settings History  Prior to the 1960’s: Counselors usually worked in traditional educational settings.
Introduction to Mental Health and Human Rights. Did you know? There is a high prevalence of mental health (MH) problems: One in four people will develop.
National Mental Health Programme. Govt of India integrated mental health with other health services at rural level. It is being implemented since 1982.
Prevention of Psychiatric Disorders Dr Alex Pavlovic ST6 Psychotherapy and Psychiatry.
Dixon Chibanda. Background  In sub-Saharan Africa the result of poor adherence to HAART includes poor treatment outcomes and the emergence of virus resistant.
Urbanization as a Social Determinant of Health Marilyn Rice, MA, MPH, CHES Senior Advisor in Health Promotion Coordinator, Urban Health & Health Determinants.
A PUBLIC HEALTH APPROACH ANDREA BLANCH, PHD SEPTEMBER 27, 2010 Trauma and Healthy Communities.
CHALLENGES OF A “DUAL DIAGNOSIS” AUGUST
Primary Care Psychology Lisa K. Kearney, Ph.D. Primary Care Psychologist South Texas Veterans Health Care System.
Behavioral Health Issues and Pediatric Hospitalizations Stephen R. Gillaspy, PhD 11/05/09 Reaching Out To Oklahoma III Annual Pediatric Interdisciplinary.
Cadenza Conference Hong Kong Chronic Disease Management and its relevance for older people Steve Iliffe Professor of Primary Care for Older People, University.
Implementing NICE guidance
Mental Health Care: International Perspective Afzal Javed President World Association for Psychosocial Rehabilitation
Reducing disparities in perinatal outcomes: looking upstream May 8, 2006 Paula Braveman, MD, MPH Professor of Family & Community Medicine Director, Center.
Gender and Health H.E. ADV Bience Gawanas Commissioner for Social Affairs, AUC.
Non-communicable Diseases: Integrated Care & Health Policy Eliot Sorel, M.D. Senior Scholar, Clinical Practice Innovations Professor, Global Health, Health.
Efficacy of Child Psychosocial Interventions: Synthesis of Cluster Randomized Trials in Burundi, Indonesia, Nepal, and Sri Lanka Wietse A. Tol-HealthNet.
Disaster and Trauma During Childhood: The Role of Clinicians Stephen J. Cozza, M.D. Professor of Psychiatry Uniformed Services University.
Copyright © 2014 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins Chapter 4 Treatment Settings and Therapeutic Programs.
Lih-Mei Liao, PhD FBPsS Consultant Clinical Psychologist & Honorary Senior Lecturer UCL Institute for Women’s Health, London UK.
Summary of ICIUM Chronic Care Track Prepared by: Ricardo Perez-Cuevas Veronika Wirtz David Beran.
Introduction: Medical Psychology and Border Areas
Delmar Learning Copyright © 2003 Delmar Learning, a Thomson Learning company Chapter 33 Homelessness.
Maternal Mental Health: Preventing & Mitigating Its Effects Robin C. Kopelman, M.D., M.P.H. University of Iowa Department of Psychiatry Women’s Wellness.
Western NSW Integrated Care Strategy To transform existing services into an integrated Western NSW system of care that is tailored to the needs of our.
Cathy Worthem, MSW Joyce Washburn, MPA BFSS, May 2011 Phoenix, AZ.
 Low educational attainment  Lone parents  Unemployment  Family Breakdown  Loss of partner/spouse/parent/s  Addictions  Disability – physical and.
Abby Kelly-Smith, Chair Sexual Violence Primary Prevention Council Indiana State Department of Health.
1 UNDP WORKSHOP ON SOCIAL INCLUSION, VILNIUS 26 TH APRIL 2004 Identifying synergies & differences between the EU's Social Inclusion Process and the UNDP's.
Week one. Global Mental Health  Vikram Patel Clip: Video Clip: Mental Health for All, By All URL: AKrBk.
1 Why mental health matters in India and what we can do about it? Vikram Patel London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Public Health Foundation of.
1 IRIS Initiative to Reduce the Impact of Schizophrenia DON’T DELAY! IT’S TIME TO REDUCE THE IMPACT OF PSYCHOSIS IN YOUNG PEOPLE……. NOW!
Training on Inclusive Development. Charlotte McClain-Nhlapo Disability Advisor EAP World Bank 11/12 July 2006.
Prevention of intimate partner and sexual violence against women Prof Rachel Jewkes Director, Gender & Health Research Unit, Medical Research Council,
Alcohol, Partner violence and HIV Lori Heise, Senior Lecturer L ondon School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Chief Executive, STRIVE: Tackling the Structural.
Mental Health Care in Nepal: Current Situation and Challenges for Development of a District Mental Health Care Plan Nagendra P Luitel Transcultural Psychosocial.
1 DVD: Surviving War, Surviving Peace (30 minutes) A training video for service providers working with refugee youth in resettlement context. This film.
Health and Wealth Revision. Topics to focus on Services provided by NHS Inequalities in health Government –ways of improving health in Scotland Causes.
Reproductive Health class#2 Safe motherhood. Women’s Health Key facts.
Massive Community Violence: Collective “Trauma”. Definition of “Trauma” “Trauma” was initially a medical term referring to a wound. However, it also began.
Concepts of Primary health care Ass.Prof:Dr:Essmat Gemaey
Mental Health Odhrán Allen. Mental Health It is “a state of well-being in which the individual: It is “a state of well-being in which the individual:
The Problem: Trauma Exposure  More than two thirds of Americans have experienced a significant traumatic event by age 16  More than one third have been.
Erika McElroy, Ph.D. Associate Director of Behavioral Health Services Kempe Center for the Prevention and Treatment of Child Abuse and Neglect University.
Are mental health services providing ethical responses to women whose mental health is compromised by domestic violence? Debbie Hager Homeworks Trust May.
THE HEALTH CHALLENGE Sheila Shribman National Clinical Director Children, Young People & Maternity.
©LTPHN 2008 Mental Health Speaker, name, affiliation,etc.
Mental and Behavioral Health Services
Dissociative Amnesia.
Mental Health and Conflicts: A Discussion Paper
Effective and humane care for all with mental, neurological,
Addressing Strategies and Techniques to Reduce Violence and Aggression through Trauma Informed Practices Brian R. Sims, M.D.
Understanding the Effects of Trauma on Health
Mental Health and Psychosocial Health Programs
Social Aspects in Psychosomatic
Psychiatric Nursing: Theory, Principles, and Trends
Presentation transcript:

Depression in Southern Africa: Lessons from Zimbabwe Vikram Patel Senior Lecturer, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Sangath Society,Goa, India

The focus Depression: the commonest mental disorder Term used synonymous to Common Mental Disorders, i.e. Includes the broad spectrum of depressive and anxiety disorders Single most important cause of disability amongst mental disorders (Global Burden of Disease Report 1996)

The nature of the evidence Series of research studies conducted since the 1980s with the shared features: multidisciplinary intersectoral (academic, health services, NGOs) locally evolved agenda of priorities most studies based in Harare city

The authors of the evidence Melanie Abas, Jeremy Broadhead & colleagues Tony Reeler & colleagues Vikram Patel, Charles Todd & colleagues Sekai Nhiwatiwa

The type of evidence Ethnographic Studies explanatory models of primary and traditional care attenders explanatory models of nurses and traditional healers Shona models of depression

The type of evidence (2) Pathways to Care Pathways to primary care Pathways to traditional healers Pathways to tertiary care

The type of evidence (3) Clinical & Diagnostic Studies Phenomenology of depression Development of Shona measures of depression Comparison of emic and etic models of depression

The type of evidence (4) Epidemiological Studies Prevalence and risk factors in community, primary care and traditional healer populations Incidence and outcome in primary care, traditional healer and GP attenders Life events and depression in women

The type of evidence (5) Special Populations Motherhood and Post-natal depression Refugees from Mozambique & survivors of torture

The type of evidence (6) Interventions Training Program for City of Harare Health Department Nurses Psychotherapy for survivors of torture

The Lessons Learned The symptoms of depression are largely universal, but the construct is not Depression is commonest amongst marginalized populations Depression has a profound adverse impact on the lives of the sufferers

Lesson#1 Many symptoms are Universal... Somatic presentations typical, e.g. Tiredness, heart-ache and sleep problems On inquiry, emotional and cognitive symptoms can be elicited Local idioms common, e.g. Kufungisisa Some “typical symptoms” e.g. Loss of appetite not specific due to physical causes Some symptoms culturally explained, e.g. Visual hallucinations at night

..but the construct is not No Shona term conceptually equivalent for depression Local models, esp. Kufungisisa, show high concordance with depression Causal attributions include relationship problems and supernatural causes; not a “mental” disorder

So What? Case finding measures developed in Western cultures can be used with emphasis on conceptual translation Include local idioms in research and training programs The clinical and cultural validity of categorical and “psychiatric” models of depression and anxiety not sustained

Lesson#2 The marginalized are vulnerable Women Refugees and torture survivors The poor

Women Risk in primary care populations twice that for of mothers and women living in the community suffer from depression Severe life events, e.g. Marital crises, violence, bereavement, infertility and unwanted pregnancy common Support from close family member protective

Survivors of Torture & Trauma Experience of violence common both as a result of war, civil conflict and crime Rates of depression high amongst those who had been victims as well as witnesses

The poor Hunger (due to lack of money) and low income risk factors for depression Incidence in those who had experienced hunger due to lack of money: 30% vs 12% Persistence in those whose economic problems had resolved compared to those who had new problems: 31% vs 56%

So What? Active efforts to remove the myths that depression are a luxury for the marginalized Integrate mental health into existing health and development activities targeted to the marginalized Potential strategies for prevention in high- risk groups e.g. the bereaved, women with infertility, for poor (micro-credit)

Lesson#3 The profound impact Under-recognition & inappropriate treatment Chronicity & Disability Costs of Illness

Recognition and Treatment More than 75% of morbidity not diagnosed by health providers, but often recognized Symptomatic treatments predominate (e.g. Vitamins for tiredness; hypnotics for sleep) Minimal efforts to link symptoms with psychosocial stressors Recognition linked to improved outcome in traditional and biomedical health attenders

Chronicity & Disability In primary and traditional healer attenders, 40% show morbidity at 12 months In community populations, 30% remain ill at 12 months Twice the number of days spent out of work or in bed both in cross-sectional and longitudinal studies

Costs of Illness Multiple consultations with range of health care providers Traditional healers and private GPs expensive Disability impairs economic productivity: A cycle of poverty, disability and depression

A Vicious cycle of poverty and mental illness Economic Deprivation: Malnutrition, Low Education, Domestic Violence, Indebtedness etc Ill-Health e.g. Depression & Anxiety, physical ill-health, Alcohol abuse Economic Impact Reduced productivity Disability Increased health costs

So What? Aggressive program to raise diagnostic and management skills in health providers Greater availability of antidepressants and non-medical counselors in health facilities Consolidate collaborative linkages between different health sectors (e.g. NGOs, traditional healers, GPs)

Secondary Prevention: Educating Health & Social Welfare Professionals Depression is a health priority because it is common, chronic, costly and disabling Patients are already flooding health services: providing care will not increase workload There are effective treatments for Depression Depression is a general health problem, not a psychiatric (or specialist) illness

Key Message to health workers Just as we treat other diseases associated with poverty, so too we must treat mental disorders for they are not the “natural” outcome of impoverishment… most poor people are mentally healthy

Implications for Policy To realize agenda of integrating mental health in primary health, there is limited scope for stand alone or add-on programs Linkages must be built with other health and social sectors, e.g. Women’s health, Violence prevention, Child Education Policies aimed at increasing gender equality and poverty alleviation will have a profound effect in improving mental health

Implications for Research Priorities must be intervention research and linkage research (to date, no trials for depression in primary care from Africa) Regional research priorities with participatory evolution of agendas Collaborations with other developing countries which share similar health systems to avoid reinventing the wheel

Shared Health System Characteristics of DCs History of Psychiatry Concepts of Mental Illness Communicable diseases burden Income and gender inequality Globalization and economic reform Medical Pluralism and few specialists Violence and Political Instability

Outstanding Research Questions What are the protective factors in those who remain in good mental health, despite stressful circumstances? What interventions speed recovery from depression?

Full reference list can be obtained from the paper based on this lecture: Patel, V et al (2001) Depression in Developing Countries: Lessons from ZimbabwePatel, V et al (2001) Depression in Developing Countries: Lessons from Zimbabwe. British Medical JournalBritish Medical Journal or from the author on