Mental health in primary care: Integration through in-service training in a South African rural clinic.

Journal: African journal of primary health care & family medicine

Volume: 10

Issue: 1

Year of Publication: 2018

Affiliated Institutions:  Improving Global Health, NHS Thames Valley and Wessex Leadership Academy. lucy.maconick@gmail.com.

Abstract summary 

Integrating mental health into primary care is a global priority. It is proposed to 'task-share' the screening, diagnosis and treatment of common mental disorders fromspecialists to primary care workers. Key to facilitating this is training primary care workers to deliver mental health care. Mental health training in Africa shows a predominance of short-term, externally driven training programmes. Locally, a more sustainable delivery system was needed.The aim of the study was to develop and evaluate a locally delivered, long-term, inservice training programme to facilitate mental health care in primary care.This was a quasi-experimental study using mixed methods. The in-service training programme was delivered in weekly 1-h sessions by local psychiatry staff to 20 primary care nurses at the clinic over 5 months. The training was evaluated using quantitative data from participant questionnaires and analysis of the referrals from primary to specialist care. Qualitative data were collected via semi-structured interviews and 14 observed training sessions.The training was feasible and well received. Referrals to the mental health nurse increased in quality and participants' self-rated competence improved. Additional benefits included the development of supervision skills of mental health nurses and providing a forum for staff to discuss service improvement. The programme acted as a vehicle to pilot integration in one clinic and identify unanticipated barriers prior to rollout.Long-term, in-service training, using existing local staff had benefits to the integration of mental health into primary care. This approach could be relevant to similar contexts elsewhere.

Authors & Co-authors:  Maconick Lucy L Jenkins Louis S LS Fisher Henriette H Petrie Anthony A Boon Lynnie L Reuter Hermann H

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations :  World Health Organization Comprehensive mental health action plan 2013–2020 [homepage on the Internet]. 2013. [cited 2017 Sept 28]. Available from: http://apps.who.int/gb/ebwha/pdf_files/WHA66/A66_10Rev1-en.pdf
Authors :  6
Identifiers
Doi : 1660
SSN : 2071-2936
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Adult
Other Terms
integrated;mental health;nurses;primary health care;rural;training
Study Design
Cross Sectional Study,Quasi Experimental Study
Study Approach
Quantitative,Qualitative,Mixed Methods
Country of Study
South Africa
Publication Country
South Africa