The burden of mental disorder in Sierra Leone: a retrospective observational evaluation of programmatic data from the roll out of decentralised nurse-led mental health units.

Journal: International journal of mental health systems

Volume: 15

Issue: 1

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  King's Sierra Leone Partnership, King's Global Health Partnerships, King's Centre for Global Health and Health Partnerships, School of Population and Environmental Sciences, King's College London, Freetown, Sierra Leone. helen.hopwood@doctors.org.uk. Regimental Military Hospital, Freetown, Sierra Leone. Kings College London Centre for Global Health and Health Partnerships, School of Population Health and Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine, King's College London, London, UK. King's Sierra Leone Partnership, King's Global Health Partnerships, King's Centre for Global Health and Health Partnerships, School of Population and Environmental Sciences, King's College London, Freetown, Sierra Leone. School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, UK. Sustainable Health Systems, Freetown, Sierra Leone.

Abstract summary 

In sub-Saharan Africa the treatment gap for mental disorders is high. In 2009, 98.0% of people with mental illness in Sierra Leone were not receiving treatment, partly due to the absence of public psychiatric facilities outside the capital. In response, the Ministry of Health and Sanitation rolled out nurse-led mental health units (MHU) to every district. This study aims to retrospectively evaluate the uptake of these services by examining the pathways to care, diagnosis, management, and treatment gap, to provide insight into the functioning of these units and the potential burden of mental health disorders in Sierra Leone.We evaluated the roll out of MHU using summary data from all units between 1 st January 2015 and 1 st January 2017, to establish the burden of diagnoses among service users, pathways to care, treatments provided, and treatment gaps. Negative binomial regressions examine bivariate relationships between diagnoses, treatments, and medication inaccessibility with demographics (age and sex), location (Freetown vs the rest and Ebola endemic regions vs the rest) and year.We collected data from 15 MHU covering 13 districts in 24 months. There were 2401 referrals. The largest age category was 25-34 (23.4%). The prominent diagnoses were epilepsy (43.5%, associated with children) and psychosis (17.5%, associated with males). Reported depression (8.6%) and suicide attempts (33 patients) were low. Ebola endemic regions reported higher rates of grief, trauma, and medically unexplained symptoms. In 24.7% of cases where medication was required, it was not accessible.Nurse-led MHU can have a modest effect on the treatment gap in resource constrained environments such as Sierra Leone, particularly in epilepsy and psychosis.

Authors & Co-authors:  Hopwood Sevalie Herman Harris Collet Bah Beynon

Study Outcome 

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Citations :  Charlson FJ, Diminic S, Lund C, Degenhardt L, Whiteford HA. Mental and Substance Use Disorders in Sub-Saharan Africa: Predictions of Epidemiological Changes and Mental Health Workforce Requirements for the Next 40 Years. PLoS ONE. 2014 doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0110208.
Authors :  7
Identifiers
Doi : 31
SSN : 1752-4458
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
Study Design
Study Approach
Country of Study
Sierra leone
Publication Country
England