Delivering a complex mental health intervention in low-resource settings: lessons from the implementation of the PRIME mental healthcare plan in primary care in Sehore district, Madhya Pradesh, India.

Journal: BJPsych open

Volume: 5

Issue: 5

Year of Publication: 

Affiliated Institutions:  Senior Research Scientist and Associate Professor,Center for Chronic Conditions and Injuries, Public Health Foundation of India,India. Project Director,PRIME,Sangath,India. Research Coordinator,PRIME,Sangath,India. Researcher,PRIME,Sangath,India. Intervention Coordinator, PRIME, Sangath,India. Alan J Flisher Centre for Public Mental Health,University of Cape Town,South Africa; andConjoint Lecturer,University of Newcastle,Australia.

Abstract summary 

The PRogramme for Improving Mental health care (PRIME) designed, implemented and evaluated a comprehensive mental healthcare plan (MHCP) for Sehore district, Madhya Pradesh, India.AimsTo provide quantitative measures of outputs related to implementation processes, describe the role of contextual factors that facilitated and impeded implementation processes, and discuss what has been learned from the MHCP implementation.A convergent parallel mixed-methods design was used. The quantitative strand consisted of process data on mental health indicators whereas the qualitative strand consisted of in-depth interviews and focus group discussions with key stakeholders involved in PRIME implementation.The implementation of the MHCP in Sehore district in Madhya Pradesh, India, demonstrated that it is feasible to establish structures (for example Mann-Kaksha) and operationalise processes to integrate mental health services in a 'real-world' low-resource primary care setting. The key lessons can be summarised as: (a) clear 'process maps' of clinical interventions and implementation steps are helpful in monitoring/tracking the progress; (b) implementation support from an external team, in addition to training of service providers, is essential to provide clinical supervision and address the implementation barriers; (c) the enabling packages of the MHCP play a crucial role in strengthening the health system and improving the context/settings for implementation; and (d) engagement with key community stakeholders and incentives for community health workers are necessary to deliver services at the community-platform level.The PRIME implementation model could be used to scale-up mental health services across India and similar low-resource settings.Declaration of interestNone.

Authors & Co-authors:  Shidhaye Rahul R Murhar Vaibhav V Muke Shital S Shrivastava Ritu R Khan Azaz A Singh Abhishek A Breuer Erica E

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations :  Gururaj G, Varghese M, Benegal V, Rao GN, Pathak K, Singh LK, et al. National Mental Health Survey of India, 2015–16: Prevalence, Patterns and Outcomes. NIMHANS, 2016.
Authors :  7
Identifiers
Doi : e63
SSN : 2056-4724
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
Primary care;alcohol disorders;depressive disorders;low and middle income countries
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study
Study Approach
Quantitative,Qualitative
Country of Study
Publication Country
England