22 results on '"Petersen, Inge"'
Search Results
2. Sexual Violence and Youth in South Africa: The Need for Community-Based Prevention Interventions
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Petersen, Inge, Bhana, Arvin, and McKay, Mary
- Abstract
Objectives: South Africa is reported to have one of the highest rates of sexual violence in the world, with adolescent girls between the ages of 12-17 being particularly at risk. Given that adolescence is considered a critical developmental period for establishing normative sexual behavior, this study explored multiple levels of risk influences that render adolescent girls vulnerable to becoming victims of sexual violence and adolescent boys vulnerable to becoming perpetrators of such abuse in one South African community. Method: A case study approach using qualitative rapid focused ethnographic methods was used. This involved 10 focus group interviews and 10 individual interviews with a volunteer convenience sample of adolescent boys and girls between the ages of 14 and 16 years. Results: Inductive thematic analysis revealed that there were indeed multiple levels of risk influences for adolescent girls and boys becoming either victims or perpetrators of sexual violence. Using the Theory of Triadic Influence as a framework, influences at the distal socio-cultural/environmental level included traditional notions of masculinity and normalization of inter-personal violence as well as poverty and the commodification of sex leading to rape supportive attitudes. Influences at the proximal situation context/social normative level included high-risk social norms as well as a weak adult and community protective shield. Finally, influences at the intra-personal level included low self-esteem and self-efficacy as well as inter-personal affective anger. Conclusion: Given the multiple levels of risk influences that need to be addressed to protect youth from becoming either perpetrators or victims of sexual violence in the South African context, prevention programs should necessarily be comprehensive, developmentally timed, and community-based.
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- 2005
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3. Evaluation of a collaborative care model for integrated primary care of common mental disorders comorbid with chronic conditions in South Africa
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Petersen, Inge, Bhana, Arvin, Fairall, Lara R., Selohilwe, One, Kathree, Tasneem, Baron, Emily C., Rathod, Sujit D., and Lund, Crick
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- 2019
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4. ASSET - NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Health System Strengthening in Sub-Saharan Africa
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Prince, Martin, Chibanda, Dixon, Fairall, Lara, Hanlon, Charlotte, Gwyther, Liz, Harding, Richard, Leather, Andy, Lund, Crick, Petersen, Inge, Wurie, Haja, Abas, Melanie, Abdella, Ahmed, Abrahams, Zulfa, Alem, Atalay, Andualem, Araya, Ricardo, Avendano, Mauricio, Ayers, Nicola, Bekele, Abebe, Bitew, Tesera, Bogale, Birke, Boisits, Sonet, Boyd, Nick, Brima, Nataliya, Curran, Robyn, Davies, Justine, Eshetu, Tigist, Deyessa, Negussie, Diedericks, Lienke, Dube, Audry, Engida, Fasikawit, Fekadu, Abebaw, Frissa, Souci, Gallagher, Jenny, Gao, Wei, Giusti, Alessandra, Habtamu, Kassahun, Hailemichael, Yohannes, Hinrichs-Krapels, Saba, Honikman, Simone, Howard, Louise, Jacob, Kumar, Jensen, Nele, Johnson, Oliver, Kamara, Thaim, Kelly, Ann, Keynejad, Roxanne, Lempp, Heidi, Little, Alex, Mayston, Rosie, McCrone, Paul, Makwara, Israel, Medhin, Girmay, Moore, Sophie, Murdoch, Jamie, Negussie, Hanna, Nkhoma, Kennedy, Petrus, Ruwayda, Phull, Manraj, Poston, Lucilla, Kartha, Muralikrishnan, van Rensburg, Andre, Robbins, Tanya, Sandall, Jane, Schneider, Margie, Selamu, Medhin, Sevdalis, Nick, Seward, Nadine, Shennan, Andrew, Shiferaw, Solomon, Smalle, Isaac, Tadessa, Amazenet, Tesfaye, Solomon, Thornicroft, Graham, Timethewos, Sewit, Venkatapuram, Sridhar, Verhey, Ruth, Willott, Chris, and Yifta, Helen
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Zimbabwe ,Sub-Saharan Africa ,Healthcare delivery ,Maternal Care ,Global Health ,Quality Improvement ,Sierra Leone ,South Africa ,Mental Health ,Surgery ,Ethiopia ,Health Systems ,Health Systems Strengthening ,Low- and Middle-Income Countries ,Non-Communicable Diseases ,Primary Care - Published
- 2022
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5. ENhancing Assessment of Common Therapeutic factors (ENACT) tool: adaptation and psychometric properties in South Africa.
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Spedding, Maxine, Kohrt, Brandon, Myers, Bronwyn, Stein, Dan J., Petersen, Inge, Lund, Crick, and Sorsdahl, Katherine
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PSYCHOMETRICS ,PSYCHOTHERAPY ,CRONBACH'S alpha ,CLINICAL psychologists ,INTRACLASS correlation - Abstract
Background: The ENhancing Assessment of Common Therapeutic factors (ENACT) tool measures a set of therapeutic competencies required for the effective psychological intervention, including delivery by non-specialists. This paper describes the systematic adaptation of the ENACT for the South African (SA) context and presents the tool's initial psychometric properties. Methods: We employed a four-step process: (1) Item generation: 204 therapeutic factors were generated by SA psychologists and drawn from the original ENACT as potential items; (2) Item relevance: SA therapists identified 96 items that were thematically coded according to their relationship to one another and were assigned to six domains; (3) Item utility: The ENACT-SA scale was piloted by rating recordings of psychological therapy sessions and stakeholder input; and (4) Psychometric properties: Internal consistency and inter-rater reliability of the final 12-item ENACT-SA were explored using Cronbach's alpha and intraclass correlation co-efficient (ICC) for both clinical psychologists and registered counsellors. Results: Although the original ENACT provided a framework for developing a tool for use in SA, several modifications were made to improve the applicability of the tool for the SA context, and optimise its adaptability other contexts. The adapted 12-item tool's internal consistency was good, while the inter-rater reliability was acceptable for both clinical psychologists and registered counsellors. Conclusion: The ENACT-SA is a reliable tool to assess common factors in psychological treatments. It is recommended that the tool be used in conjunction with assessment protocols and treatment-specific competency measures to fully assess implementation fidelity and potential mechanisms of therapeutic change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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6. Implementation and Scale-Up of Integrated Depression Care in South Africa: An Observational Implementation Research Protocol.
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Petersen, Inge, Kemp, Christopher G., Rao, Deepa, Wagenaar, Bradley H., Sherr, Kenneth, Grant, Merridy, Bachmann, Max, Barnabas, Ruanne V., Mntambo, Ntokozo, Gigaba, Sithabisile, Van Rensburg, André, Luvuno, Zamasomi, Amarreh, Ishmael, Fairall, Lara, Hongo, Nikiwe N., and Bhana, Arvin
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RESEARCH protocols ,INTEGRATIVE medicine ,PRIMARY health care ,RESEARCH implementation ,MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
Background: People with chronic general medical conditions who have comorbid depression experience poorer health outcomes. This problem has received scant attention in low- and middle-income countries. The aim of the ongoing study reported here is to refine and promote the scale-up of an evidence-based task-sharing collaborative care model, the Mental Health Integration (MhINT) program, to treat patients with comorbid depression and chronic disease in primary health care settings in South Africa.Methods: Adopting a learning-health-systems approach, this study uses an onsite, iterative observational implementation science design. Stage 1 comprises assessment of the original MhINT model under real-world conditions in an urban subdistrict in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, to inform refinement of the model and its implementation strategies. Stage 2 comprises assessment of the refined model across urban, semiurban, and rural contexts. In both stages, population-level effects are assessed by using the RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance) evaluation framework with various sources of data, including secondary data collection and a patient cohort study (N=550). The Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research is used to understand contextual determinants of implementation success involving quantitative and qualitative interviews (stage 1, N=78; stage 2, N=282).Results: The study results will help refine intervention components and implementation strategies to enable scale-up of the MhINT model for depression in South Africa.Next Steps: Next steps include strengthening ongoing engagements with policy makers and managers, providing technical support for implementation, and building the capacity of policy makers and managers in implementation science to promote wider dissemination and sustainment of the intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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7. Patient-level predictors of detection of depressive symptoms, referral, and uptake of depression counseling among chronic care patients in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.
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Kemp, Christopher G., Mntambo, Ntokozo, Bachmann, Max, Bhana, Arvin, Rao, Deepa, Grant, Merridy, Hughes, James P., Simoni, Jane M., Weiner, Bryan J., Gigaba, Sithabisile Gugulethu, Luvuno, Zamasomi Prudence Busisiwe, and Petersen, Inge
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MENTAL depression ,MENTAL health services ,PATIENT care ,COUNSELING ,HEALTH counseling ,NURSES as patients - Abstract
Background. Integration of depression treatment into primary care could improve patient outcomes in low-resource settings. Losses along the depression care cascade limit integrated service effectiveness. This study identified patient-level factors that predicted detection of depressive symptoms by nurses, referral for depression treatment, and uptake of counseling, as part of integrated care in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Methods. This was an analysis of baseline data from a prospective cohort. Participants were adult patients with at least moderate depressive symptoms at primary care facilities in Amajuba, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Participants were screened for depressive symptoms prior to routine assessment by a nurse. Generalized linear mixed-effects models were used to estimate associations between patient characteristics and service delivery outcomes. Results. Data from 412 participants were analyzed. Nurses successfully detected depressive symptoms in 208 [50.5%, 95% confidence interval (CI) 38.9-62.0] participants; of these, they referred 76 (36.5%, 95% CI 20.3-56.5) for depression treatment; of these, 18 (23.7%, 95% CI 10.7-44.6) attended at least one session of depression counseling. Depressive symptom severity, alcohol use severity, and perceived stress were associated with detection. Similar factors did not drive referral or counseling uptake. Conclusions. Nurses detected patients with depressive symptoms at rates comparable to primary care providers in high-resource settings, though gaps in referral and uptake persist. Nurses were more likely to detect symptoms among patients in more severe mental distress. Implementation strategies for integrated mental health care in low-resource settings should target improved rates of detection, referral, and uptake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. Process Evaluation of a Pilot Intervention for Psychosocial Rehabilitation for Service Users with Schizophrenia in North West Province, South Africa.
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Brooke-Sumner, Carrie, Selohilwe, One, Mazibuko, Musawenkosi Sphiwe, and Petersen, Inge
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SOCIAL isolation ,INCOME ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL care use ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,PRIMARY health care ,RISK-taking behavior ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,SUPPORT groups ,SELF-perception ,SOCIAL skills ,PATIENT participation ,QUALITATIVE research ,FINANCIAL management ,QUANTITATIVE research ,HUMAN services programs ,INDEPENDENT living ,HEALTH literacy ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,EVALUATION of human services programs ,PREVENTION - Abstract
This study investigated a non-specialist delivered programme for psychosocial rehabilitation for service users with schizophrenia in a low-resource South African setting. Forty-four service users with schizophrenia living in the community, receiving ongoing medication through primary care, participated in a structured support group. Quantitative measures (WHODAS 12 item, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale and Internalized Stigma of Mental Illness Inventory) were assessed at baseline and 12 months. Sixteen service users were interviewed on their experiences. WHODAS data showed a small reduction. ISMI assessment showed a statistically significant reduction. Qualitative data revealed: improved self-esteem and increased illness knowledge, reduced risk taking, reduced social isolation and improved pro-social behavior, improved financial management and engagement in income generation activities as well as improved acceptance by the community. This study provides preliminary evidence on the benefits of this programme that warrant further study incorporating experimental methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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9. Community-based psychosocial rehabilitation for schizophrenia service users in the north west province of South Africa: A formative study.
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Brooke-Sumner, Carrie, Lund, Crick, Selohilwe, One, and Petersen, Inge
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SOCIAL isolation ,ADAPTABILITY (Personality) ,COMMUNITY health services ,INCOME ,INTERVIEWING ,LONGITUDINAL method ,RESEARCH methodology ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,PATIENT compliance ,PERSONNEL management ,QUALITY assurance ,REHABILITATION ,RESEARCH funding ,SCHIZOPHRENIA ,HEALTH self-care ,SELF-perception ,SOCIAL workers ,TRANSLATIONS ,WORK ,QUALITATIVE research ,FINANCIAL management ,SOCIAL support ,THEMATIC analysis ,HUMAN services programs ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,HEALTH literacy ,DATA analysis software ,MEDICAL coding ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,PREVENTION - Abstract
Psychosocial support is recognized as important for recovery for service users with schizophrenia, in addition to provision of antipsychotic medication. This study aimed to develop a community-based psychosocial rehabilitation programme for service users with schizophrenia to be facilitated by auxiliary social workers, and to investigate acceptability and feasibility of the programme. A task-sharing approach was adopted in which auxiliary social workers were trained to facilitate psychosocial rehabilitation groups. In-depth individual qualitative interviews were conducted with six group members at baseline, midpoint, and endpoint (18 interviews in total). NVivo10 was used to store data and conduct qualitative framework analysis. Participants reported benefits of the programme, including improvements in group members’ self-esteem, social support, illness knowledge, self-care, and contribution to their households. A key barrier to acceptability was the lack of provision of income generating opportunities. Implementation challenges include difficulties in tracing and engaging service users and families, lack of an appropriate venue, and issues with supply of antipsychotic medication. This study has provided evidence for the benefits and acceptability of this contextually adapted programme. Key barriers to implementation can be addressed through the provision of the necessary resources for auxiliary social worker input in the community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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10. The validity of the Patient Health Questionnaire for screening depression in chronic care patients in primary health care in South Africa.
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Bhana, Arvin, Rathod, Sujit D., Selohilwe, One, Kathree, Tasneem, and Petersen, Inge
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PATIENTS ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,MEDICAL screening ,DEPRESSED persons ,PRIMARY care ,MENTAL health - Abstract
Background: People with chronic health conditions are known to have a higher prevalence of depressive disorder. The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) is a widely-used screening tool for depression which has not yet been validated for use on chronic care patients in South Africa. Methods: A sample of 676 chronic care patients attending two primary health facilities in North West Province, South Africa were administered the PHQ-9 by field workers and a diagnostic interview (the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV) (SCID) by clinical psychologists. The PHQ-9 and the PHQ-2 were evaluated against the SCID, as well as for sub-samples of patients who were being treated for HIV infection and for hypertension. Results: Using the SCID, 11.4 % of patients had major depressive disorder. The internal consistency estimate for the PHQ-9 was 0.76, with an area under the receiver operator curve (AUROC) of 0.85 (95 % CI 0.82-0.88), which was higher than the AURUC for the PHQ-2 (0.76, 95 % CI 0.73-0.79). Using a cut-point of 9, the PHQ-9 has sensitivity of 51 % and specificity of 94 %. The PHQ-9 AUROC for the sub-samples of patients with HIV and with hypertension were comparable (0.85 and 0.86, respectively). Conclusions: The PHQ-9 is useful as a screening tool for depression among patients receiving treatment for chronic care in a public health facility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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11. Health system governance to support integrated mental health care in South Africa: challenges and opportunities.
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Marais, Debra Leigh and Petersen, Inge
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MENTAL health services , *MENTAL illness , *HEALTH behavior , *PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *PUBLIC health - Abstract
Background: While South Africa has a new policy framework supporting the integration of mental health care into primary health care, this is not sufficient to ensure transformation of the health care system towards integrated primary mental health care. Health systems strengthening is needed, incorporating, inter alia, capacity building and resource inputs, as well as good governance for ensuring that the relevant policy imperatives are implemented. Objectives: To identify systemic factors within institutional and policy contexts that are likely to facilitate or impede the implementation of integrated mental health care in South Africa. Methods: Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted with 17 key stakeholders in the Department of Health and Department of Social Development at national level, at provincial level in the North West Province, and at district level in the Dr Kenneth Kaunda district. Participants were purposively identified based on their positions and job responsibilities. Interview questions were guided by a hybrid of Siddiqi et al.'s governance framework principles and Mikkelsen-Lopez et al.'s health system governance approach. Data were analysed using framework analysis in NVivo. Results: Facilitative factors included the recent mental health care policy framework and national action plan that embraces integrated care using a task sharing model and provides policy imperatives for the establishment of district mental health teams to facilitate the development and implementation of district mental health care plans; the roll out of the integrated chronic disease service delivery platform that can be leveraged to increase access and resources as well as decrease stigma; and the presence of NGOs that can assist with service delivery. Challenges included the low prioritisation and stigmatisation of mental illness; weak managerial and planning capacity to develop and implement mental health care plans at provincial and district level; poor pre-service training of generalists in mental health care; weak orientation to integrated care; high staff turnover; weak intersectoral coordination; infrastructural constraints; and no dedicated mental health budget. Conclusion: This study identifies strategies to support and improve integrated mental health care in primary health care services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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12. Optimizing lay counsellor services for chronic care in South Africa: A qualitative systematic review.
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Petersen, Inge, Fairall, Lara, Egbe, Catherine O., and Bhana, Arvin
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COUNSELING , *LONG-term care facilities , *SYSTEMATIC reviews , *ANTIRETROVIRAL agents , *MENTAL depression - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: To conduct a qualitative systematic review on the use of lay counsellors in South Africa to provide lessons on optimizing their use for psychological and behavioural change counselling for chronic long-term care in scare-resource contexts. Method: A qualitative systematic review of the literature on lay counsellor services in South Africa. Results: Twenty-nine studies met the inclusion criteria. Five randomized control trials and two cohort studies reported that lay counsellors can provide behaviour change counselling with good outcomes. One multi-centre cohort study provided promising evidence of improved anti-retroviral treatment adherence and one non-randomized controlled study provided promising results for counselling for depression. Six studies found low fidelity of lay counsellor-delivered interventions in routine care. Reasons for low fidelity include poor role definition, inconsistent remuneration, lack of standardized training, and poor supervision and logistical support. Conclusion: Within resource-constrained settings, adjunct behaviour change and psychological services provided by lay counsellors can be harnessed to promote chronic care at primary health care level. Practice implications: Optimizing lay counsellor services requires interventions at an organizational level that provide a clear role definition and scope of practice; in-service training and formal supervision; and sensitization of health managers to the importance and logistical requirements of counselling. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2014
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13. Closing the mental health treatment gap in South Africa: a review of costs and cost-effectiveness.
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Jack, Helen, Wagner, Ryan G., Petersen, Inge, Thom, Rita, Newton, Charles R., Stein, Alan, Kahn, Kathleen, Tollman, Stephen, and Hofman, Karen J.
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COST effectiveness ,MEDICAL screening ,NEUROLOGICAL disorders ,SUBSTANCE abuse treatment ,SYSTEMATIC reviews ,COST analysis ,TREATMENT programs ,PSYCHIATRIC treatment - Abstract
Background: Nearly one in three South Africans will suffer from a mental disorder in his or her lifetime, a higher prevalence than many low- and middle-income countries. Understanding the economic costs and consequences of prevention and packages of care is essential, particularly as South Africa considers scaling- up mental health services and works towards universal health coverage. Economic evaluations can inform how priorities are set in system or spending changes. Objective: To identify and review research from South Africa and sub-Saharan Africa on the direct and indirect costs of mental, neurological, and substance use (MNS) disorders and the cost-effectiveness of treatment interventions. Design: Narrative overview methodology. Results and conclusions: Reviewed studies indicate that integrating mental health care into existing health systems may be the most effective and cost-efficient approach to increase access to mental health services in South Africa. Integration would also direct treatment, prevention, and screening to people with HIV and other chronic health conditions who are at high risk for mental disorders. We identify four major knowledge gaps: 1) accurate and thorough assessment of the health burdens of MNS disorders, 2) design and assessment of interventions that integrate mental health screening and treatment into existing health systems, 3) information on the use and costs of traditional medicines, and 4) cost-effectiveness evaluation of a range of specific interventions or packages of interventions that are tailored to the national context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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14. Challenges facing South Africa's mental health care system: stakeholders' perceptions of causes and potential solutions.
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Lund, Crick, Kleintjes, Sharon, Cooper, Sara, Petersen, Inge, Bhana, Arvin, and Flisher, Alan J.
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ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,DISCRIMINATION (Sociology) ,FOCUS groups ,INTERVIEWING ,MEDICAL care ,MEDICAL personnel ,HEALTH policy ,MENTAL health ,PRIMARY health care ,RESEARCH funding ,SOCIAL stigma ,QUALITATIVE research ,COMMUNITY-based social services - Abstract
In recent years South Africa has taken some important steps forward in strengthening its mental health systems. Mental health legislation has been reformed and there is some level of policy commitment to mental health. However, there remain ongoing challenges, largely related to implementation. The aim of this paper is to review the major challenges facing the South African mental health system, to provide a greater understanding of these challenges (as articulated by stakeholders from a wide range of sectors) and to highlight stakeholders' recommendations about the best way to address them. Ninety nine interviews and 12 focus group discussions were conducted with stakeholders drawn from the national, provincial and district levels. The major challenges identified include: the lack of officially endorsed mental health policy; the continued low priority of mental health; limited intersectoral policy integration; stigma and discrimination; inadequate integration of mental with primary health care; and 'de-hospitalisation' rather than 'de-institutionalization'. Recommendations include: developing an overarching national mental health policy; lobbying for mental health on national policy agendas; including mental health in poverty alleviation programmes; greater educational and awareness-raising campaigns; standardised evidence-based training of health staff; and the development of community-based mental health services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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15. Collaboration Between Traditional Practitioners and Primary Health Care Staff in South Africa: Developing a Workable Partnership for Community Mental Health Services.
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Campbell-Hall, Vicky, Petersen, Inge, Bhana, Arvin, Mjadu, Sithembile, Hosegood, Victoria, and Flisher, Alan J.
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COMMUNITY mental health service administration , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *FOCUS groups , *INTERPROFESSIONAL relations , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MENTAL illness , *PRIMARY health care , *RESEARCH , *TRADITIONAL medicine , *EMPLOYEES - Abstract
The majority of the black African population in South Africa utilize both traditional and public sector Western systems of healing for mental health care. There is a need to develop models of collaboration that promote a workable relationship between the two healing systems. The aim of this study was to explore perceptions of service users and providers of current interactions between the two systems of care and ways in which collaboration could be improved in the provision of community mental health services. Qualitative individual and focus group interviews were conducted with key health care providers and service users in one typical rural South African health sub-district. The majority of service users held traditional explanatory models of illness and used dual systems of care, with shifting between treatment modalities reportedly causing problems with treatment adherence. Traditional healers expressed a lack of appreciation from Western health care practitioners but were open to training in Western biomedical approaches and establishing a collaborative relationship in the interests of improving patient care. Western biomedically trained practitioners were less interested in such an arrangement. Interventions to acquaint traditional practitioners with Western approaches to the treatment of mental illness, orientation of Western practitioners towards a culture-centred approach to mental health care, as well as the establishment of fora to facilitate the negotiation of respectful collaborative relationships between the two systems of healing are required at district level to promote an equitable collaboration in the interests of improved patient care. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2010
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16. Mental health promotion initiatives for children and youth in contexts of poverty: the case of South Africa.
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Petersen, Inge, Swartz, Leslie, Bhana, Arvin, and Flisher, Alan J.
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MENTAL health promotion , *POVERTY , *MENTAL health , *SUSTAINABLE development , *ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
In order to achieve sustainable development and a consequent reduction in levels of poverty, a multisectoral response to development incorporating pro-poor economic policies in low- to middle-income countries (LMICs) is required. An important aspect is strengthening the human capital asset base of vulnerable populations. This should include the promotion of mental health, which can play an important role in breaking the intergenerational cycle of poverty and mental ill-health through promoting positive mental health outcomes within the context of risk. For each developmental phase of early childhood, middle childhood and adolescence, this article provides: (i) an overview of the critical risk influences and evidence of the role of mental health promotion initiatives in mediating these influences; (ii) a background to these risk influences in South Africa; and (iii) a review of mental health promotion initiatives addressing distal upstream influences at a macro-policy level in South Africa, as well as evidence-based micro- and community level interventions that have the potential to be scaled up. From this review, strengths and gaps in existing micro- and community-level evidence-based mental health promotion interventions as well as macro-policy-level initiatives are identified, and recommendations made for South Africa that may also have applicability for other LMICs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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17. Facilitating health-enabling social contexts for youth: qualitative evaluation of a family-based HIV-prevention pilot programme.
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Paruk, Zubeda, Petersen, Inge, and Bhana, Arvin
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YOUTH , *AIDS prevention , *HIV , *CLINICAL health psychology - Abstract
This paper reports on a post-intervention qualitative evaluation of the pilot intervention of the AmaQhawe Family Project, in South Africa, which is a cartoon-based, manualised intervention delivered to multiple family groups over 10 sessions, aimed at preventing HIV in adolescents through strengthening the adult protective shield. Semi-structured interviews with nine women who had participated in the pilot intervention were used to understand participants' perceptions of how the family-based HIV-prevention programme had assisted in addressing the issues identified in a pre-intervention exploratory study. Analysis of the data was informed by community health psychology and social capital theory. The findings indicate that at an individual level, the women interviewed had experienced an improved sense of empowerment, both as parents and as women. They also reported increased social support for effective parenting. At a collective level, the women reported that the programme had helped them to exert better informal social controls within the community, as well as to increase their social leverage and participation in community organisations. The findings suggest that HIV interventions involving families can strengthen the adult protective shield to facilitate health-enabling social contexts for youth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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18. Community Collaborative Youth-Focused HIV/AIDS Prevention in South Africa and Trinidad: Preliminary Findings.
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Baptiste, Donna R., Bhana, Arvin, Petersen, Inge, McKay, Mary, Voisin, Dexter, Bell, Carl, and Martinez, Dona D.
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AIDS prevention ,ADOLESCENCE ,RESEARCH ,TRUST - Abstract
Background South Africa and Trinidad and Tobago are disproportionately impacted by high rates of HIV/AIDS among adolescents. Objective The article describes the HIV crises in these countries; outlines a community participatory research framework to adapt and deliver family-based prevention; and presents preliminary data from intervention pilots in each setting. Methods Adapted interventions were piloted with N = 140 families in South Africa and N=16 families in Trinidad and Tobago to refine recruitment and retention efforts and to assess the adapted interventions' impact on family and risk-related constructs. Results Both settings reported promising results including high recruitment and retention and favourable pre to post changes in parent/youth frequency and comfort in talking about sensitive subjects, HIV transmission knowledge and attitudes about persons with HIV/AIDS. Conclusion International HIV-prevention alliances are increasing. Such alliances are challenged by trust issues, power- differentials and ideological differences. Recommendations are provided on how some challenges can be overcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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19. Mediating Social Representations Using a Cartoon Narrative in the Context of HIV/AIDS: The AmaQhawe Family Project in South Africa.
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Petersen, Inge, Mason, Andy, Bhana, Arvin, Bell, Carl C., and McKay, Mary
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HIV infections , *AIDS , *PICTORIAL wit & humor ,CARICATURES & cartoons - Abstract
Using findings from the formative evaluation of the adaptation of the Collaborative HIV/AIDS Adolescent Mental Health Programme (CHAMP) family-based intervention in South Africa, known as the 'AmaQhawe Family Project', the potential role of 'micro-media' using a cartoon narrative for promoting health-enhancing behaviour change is explored. In particular, the cartoon narrative was found to be a useful medium for informing the development and diffusion of health-enhancing social representations that shape the potential for health-related behaviour change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2006
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20. Sexual violence and youth in South Africa: The need for community-based prevention interventions
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Petersen, Inge, Bhana, Arvin, and McKay, Mary
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SEXUAL abuse victims , *CRIME prevention , *TEENAGERS' sexual behavior , *CRIMES against women - Abstract
Abstract: Objectives: South Africa is reported to have one of the highest rates of sexual violence in the world, with adolescent girls between the ages of 12–17 being particularly at risk. Given that adolescence is considered a critical developmental period for establishing normative sexual behavior, this study explored multiple levels of risk influences that render adolescent girls vulnerable to becoming victims of sexual violence and adolescent boys vulnerable to becoming perpetrators of such abuse in one South African community. Method: A case study approach using qualitative rapid focused ethnographic methods was used. This involved 10 focus group interviews and 10 individual interviews with a volunteer convenience sample of adolescent boys and girls between the ages of 14 and 16 years. Results: Inductive thematic analysis revealed that there were indeed multiple levels of risk influences for adolescent girls and boys becoming either victims or perpetrators of sexual violence. Using the Theory of Triadic Influence as a framework, influences at the distal socio-cultural/environmental level included traditional notions of masculinity and normalization of inter-personal violence as well as poverty and the commodification of sex leading to rape supportive attitudes. Influences at the proximal situation context/social normative level included high-risk social norms as well as a weak adult and community protective shield. Finally, influences at the intra-personal level included low self-esteem and self-efficacy as well as inter-personal affective anger. Conclusion: Given the multiple levels of risk influences that need to be addressed to protect youth from becoming either perpetrators or victims of sexual violence in the South African context, prevention programs should necessarily be comprehensive, developmentally timed, and community-based. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2005
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21. Did young women in South African informal settlements display increased agency after participating in the Stepping Stones and Creating Futures intervention? A qualitative evaluation.
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Willan, Samantha, Gibbs, Andrew, Shai, Nwabisa, Ntini, Nolwazi, Petersen, Inge, and Jewkes, Rachel
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POVERTY areas , *COMMUNICATION , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *PARTICIPANT observation , *STATISTICAL sampling , *SEX distribution , *SOCIAL norms , *TIME , *WOMEN , *QUALITATIVE research , *FEMININITY , *SOCIOECONOMIC factors , *INTIMATE partner violence , *EVALUATION of human services programs , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
This paper investigates the impact of the Stepping Stones Creating Futures (SSCF) intervention on young women in informal settlements in eThekwini, South Africa. Specifically, whether following participation in the intervention the young women experienced a reduction in intimate partner violence, strengthened agency and shifted gender relations. Where changes occurred, it examines how they occurred, and barriers and enablers to change. SSCF is a gender transformative and livelihoods strengthening intervention using participatory, reflective small groups. Qualitative research was undertaken with fifteen women participating in the SSCF randomised control trial between 2015 and 2018. The women were followed over 18 months, participating in in-depth interviews at baseline, 12- and 18-months post intervention. To supplement these, eight women were involved in Photovoice work at baseline and 18 months and seven were included in ongoing participant observation. Data were analysed inductively. Data revealed many women changed their behaviours following SSCF, including: having more power within relationships, improved communication and relationship skills, increased resistance to controlling partners, shifting relationship expectations, emergence of new femininities and improved livelihoods. Despite these important shifts many women did not report a reduction in IPV. Nonetheless we argue most of the women, following the intervention, became more agentic. Drawing on the notion of 'distributed agency' as developed by Campbell and Mannell (2016), we show that SSCF bolstered the women's distributed agency. Distributed agency recognizes small agentic acts that women take, acts which to them are significant, it further notes that agency is temporal, fluid, dynamic and context specific. Women do not 'either have agency or not', rather being agentic depends on time, context and the particular incident. These findings provide an important contribution to the limited application of distributed agency and femininities work in informal settlements and are critical for policy and intervention science to reduce IPV and support women's agency. • South African informal settlements have high rates of intimate partner violence. • The Stepping Stones Creating Futures intervention strengthened young women's agency. • Women developed new skills, reduced violent confrontations and improved livelihoods. • However, many women remained in violent relationships. • Participatory, group-based, gender transformative interventions can reduce violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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22. Task-sharing of psychological treatment for antenatal depression in Khayelitsha, South Africa: Effects on antenatal and postnatal outcomes in an individual randomised controlled trial.
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Lund, Crick, Schneider, Marguerite, Garman, Emily C., Davies, Thandi, Munodawafa, Memory, Honikman, Simone, Bhana, Arvin, Bass, Judith, Bolton, Paul, Dewey, Michael, Joska, John, Kagee, Ashraf, Myer, Landon, Petersen, Inge, Prince, Martin, Stein, Dan J., Tabana, Hanani, Thornicroft, Graham, Tomlinson, Mark, and Hanlon, Charlotte
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PRENATAL depression , *HAMILTON Depression Inventory , *EDINBURGH Postnatal Depression Scale - Abstract
The study's objective was to determine the effectiveness of a task-sharing psychological treatment for perinatal depression using non-specialist community health workers. A double-blind individual randomised controlled trial was conducted in two antenatal clinics in the peri-urban settlement of Khayelitsha, Cape Town. Adult pregnant women who scored 13 or above on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression rating Scale (EPDS) were randomised into the intervention arm (structured six-session psychological treatment) or the control arm (routine antenatal health care and three monthly phone calls). The primary outcome was response on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) at three months postpartum (minimum 40% score reduction from baseline) among participants who did not experience pregnancy or infant loss (modified intention-to-treat population) (registered on Clinical Trials: NCT01977326). Of 2187 eligible women approached, 425 (19.4%) screened positive on the EPDS and were randomised; 384 were included in the modified intention-to-treat analysis (control: n = 200; intervention: n = 184). There were no significant differences in response on the HDRS at three months postpartum between the intervention and control arm. A task-sharing psychological treatment was not effective in treating depression among women living in Khayelitsha, South Africa. The findings give cause for reflection on the strategy of task-sharing in low-resource settings. • In South Africa, prevalence of perinatal depression ranges between 21.5 and 34.7%. • Task-shared psychosocial interventions for perinatal depression can be effective. • Can such interventions be effective for routine use in low-resource settings? • A brief task-shared psychological treatment was not effective in South Africa. • Less intense interventions in low resource routine care might dilute effectiveness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
- Full Text
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