Baron Emily C, Hanlon Charlotte, Mall Sumaya, Honikman Simone, Breuer Erica, Kathree Tasneem, Luitel Nagendra P, Nakku Juliet, Lund Crick, Medhin Girmay, Patel Vikram, Petersen Inge, Shrivastava Sanjay, Tomlinson Mark
Alan J Flisher Centre for Public Mental Health, Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape Town, 46 Sawkins Road, Rondebosch, 7700, Cape Town, South Africa.
Department of Psychiatry, College of Health Sciences, School of Medicine, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2016 Feb 16;16:53. doi: 10.1186/s12913-016-1291-z.
The integration of maternal mental health into primary health care has been advocated to reduce the mental health treatment gap in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). This study reports findings of a cross-country situation analysis on maternal mental health and services available in five LMICs, to inform the development of integrated maternal mental health services integrated into primary health care.
The situation analysis was conducted in five districts in Ethiopia, India, Nepal, South Africa and Uganda, as part of the Programme for Improving Mental Health Care (PRIME). The analysis reports secondary data on the prevalence and impact of priority maternal mental disorders (perinatal depression, alcohol use disorders during pregnancy and puerperal psychosis), existing policies, plans and services for maternal mental health, and other relevant contextual factors, such as explanatory models for mental illness.
Limited data were available at the district level, although generalizable data from other sites was identified in most cases. Community and facility-based prevalences ranged widely across PRIME countries for perinatal depression (3-50 %) and alcohol consumption during pregnancy (5-51 %). Maternal mental health was included in mental health policies in South Africa, India and Ethiopia, and a mental health care plan was in the process of being implemented in South Africa. No district reported dedicated maternal mental health services, but referrals to specialised care in psychiatric units or general hospitals were possible. No information was available on coverage for maternal mental health care. Challenges to the provision of maternal mental health care included; limited evidence on feasible detection and treatment strategies for maternal mental disorders, lack of mental health specialists in the public health sector, lack of prescribing guidelines for pregnant and breastfeeding women, and stigmatising attitudes among primary health care staff and the community.
It is difficult to anticipate demand for mental health care at district level in the five countries, given the lack of evidence on the prevalence and treatment coverage of women with maternal mental disorders. Limited evidence on effective psychosocial interventions was also noted, and must be addressed for mental health programmes, such as PRIME, to implement feasible and effective services.
倡导将孕产妇心理健康纳入初级卫生保健,以缩小低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)的心理健康治疗差距。本研究报告了对五个低收入和中等收入国家孕产妇心理健康及可用服务的跨国情况分析结果,为将孕产妇心理健康服务纳入初级卫生保健的综合服务发展提供参考。
作为改善精神卫生保健计划(PRIME)的一部分,在埃塞俄比亚、印度、尼泊尔、南非和乌干达的五个地区进行了情况分析。该分析报告了关于优先孕产妇精神障碍(围产期抑郁症、孕期酒精使用障碍和产褥期精神病)的患病率和影响、现有的孕产妇心理健康政策、计划和服务以及其他相关背景因素(如精神疾病的解释模型)的二手数据。
尽管在大多数情况下能找到来自其他地点的可推广数据,但地区层面的数据有限。在PRIME国家中,基于社区和机构的围产期抑郁症患病率(3%-50%)和孕期酒精消费率(5%-51%)差异很大。南非、印度和埃塞俄比亚的精神卫生政策纳入了孕产妇心理健康内容,南非正在实施一项精神卫生保健计划。没有一个地区报告有专门的孕产妇心理健康服务,但可转介至精神科病房或综合医院接受专科护理。关于孕产妇心理健康护理的覆盖范围没有可用信息。提供孕产妇心理健康护理面临的挑战包括:孕产妇精神障碍可行的检测和治疗策略证据有限、公共卫生部门缺乏精神卫生专家、缺乏针对孕妇和哺乳期妇女的处方指南,以及初级卫生保健人员和社区存在污名化态度。
鉴于缺乏孕产妇精神障碍患病率和治疗覆盖范围的证据,很难预测这五个国家地区层面的精神卫生保健需求。还注意到有效心理社会干预措施的证据有限,对于像PRIME这样的精神卫生项目而言,必须解决这一问题才能实施可行且有效的服务。