Closing the Mental Health Gap in Low-income Settings by Building Research Capacity: Perspectives from Mozambique
Author(s) -
Annika C. Sweetland,
María A. Oquendo,
Mohsin Sidat,
Palmira Fortunato dos Santos,
Sten H. Vermund,
Cristiane S. Duarte,
Melissa R. Arbuckle,
Milton L. Wainberg
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
annals of global health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.602
H-Index - 66
ISSN - 2214-9996
DOI - 10.1016/j.aogh.2014.04.014
Subject(s) - annals , global health , publication , public health , political science , publishing , health policy , medicine , public relations , law , geography , nursing , archaeology
Neuropsychiatric disorders are the leading cause of disability worldwide, accounting for 22.7% of all years lived with disability. Despite this global burden, fewer than 25% of affected individuals ever access mental health treatment; in low-income settings, access is much lower, although nonallopathic interventions through traditional healers are common in many venues. Three main barriers to reducing the gap between individuals who need mental health treatment and those who have access to it include stigma and lack of awareness, limited material and human resources, and insufficient research capacity. We argue that investment in dissemination and implementation research is critical to face these barriers. Dissemination and implementation research can improve mental health care in low-income settings by facilitating the adaptation of effective treatment interventions to new settings, particularly when adapting specialist-led interventions developed in high-resource countries to settings with few, if any, mental health professionals. Emerging evidence from other low-income settings suggests that lay providers can be trained to detect mental disorders and deliver basic psychotherapeutic and psychopharmacological interventions when supervised by an expert.
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