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The Philippine Journal of Psychiatry ; : 53-2017.
Artículo en Inglés | WPRIM | ID: wpr-633558

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: According to WHO about 80% of people living with a severe mental disorder in Low-and-Middle-income countries (LAMICs) do not have access to appropriate healthcare. Low literacy regarding mental disorders is one of the main barriers that prevent access to mental healthcare, which leads to stigma, socio economic exclusion, suffering of people with mental disorders and forces families to hide their relatives rather than to direct them to the community healthcare centre. To address this issue mental health, stakeholders from more than 20 countries joined forces with the World Association of Social Psychiatry and Sanofi in the FAST program, based on 3 pillars: (1) Mental health literacy, (2) health care professionals training and (3) affordable quality medicines.OBJECTIVE: This research aimed or develop Information-Education-Communication materials to improve mental health literacy in LAMICs.METHODOLOGY: Workshops with participants from different sectors (public, academic, associative, private) were set up to develop generic documentsbased on the experienced derived from malaria awareness programs. Then, for each country, documents were revised and adapted by a local working group.RESULTS: A flip chart, an educational comic book, a leaflet, a poster and a brochure on schizophrenia were made available with versions adapted to the local specificities of (a) Sub - Saharan Africa (b) North Africa (c) Eastern Europe and (d) Latin America. The main message of the educational materials was that: mental disorders are like any other disease i.e. they can be treated and people with mental disorders are like any other person. The following specific topics where covered: frequency of mental disorders, symptoms recognition, cause of disease, where to seek help, stigma. Recommendations on how to use these materials were also available.CONCLUSION: Improving mental health literacy in developing countries calls for relevant materials. A rigorous evaluation of the impact of the FAST documents is now required.


Asunto(s)
Humanos , Alfabetización en Salud , Salud Mental , Países en Desarrollo , Estigma Social , Psiquiatría Comunitaria , Esquizofrenia , Servicios de Salud Comunitaria , Malaria
2.
The Philippine Journal of Psychiatry ; : 53-2017.
Artículo en Inglés | WPRIM | ID: wpr-633557

RESUMEN

INTRODUCTION: Prevalence of mental disorders is high worldwide. In Low-and-Lower-Middle-income countries (LALMICs) mental illnesses are already the second cause of burden in DALYs. As psychiatrists are extremely rare in LALMICs, addressing this issue calls for shifting mental health to primary care and consequently, training first line health care providers would be the next challenge. Via the FAST program, the World Asssociation of Social Psychiatry (WASP), Sanofi, Ministries of Health, academics, patients/families association and NGOs have joined forces to improve access to mental health care in LALMICs. The program is based on 3 pillars: (1) Mental health literacy, (2) health care professionals (HCP) training and (3) affordable quality medicines. OBJECTIVE: This study aims to develop a training curriculum and a set of materials to train HCP that is easily adaptable to the singularity of the local environment.METHODOLOGY: (1) A master-2 public health student conducted the project; (2) two domains were selected in priority: schizophrenia and unipolar mood disorders; (3) two main targets were identified: general practitioners and nurses / community healthcare workers; (4) professional's needs were assessed through a phone questionnaire; (5) WASP experts were in charge of drafting slides kits and other technical documents (6) to avoid any risk of conflict of interest, it was decided that training on medications will be based on the WHO mhGAP guide.RESULTS: For each disease and each category of HCP (1) a training of trainers manual; (2) a training curriculum; (3) a slide kit; (4) a training brochure; (5) videos of patients; (6) role-play scenarios; (7) clinical cases (8) pre and post assessment questionnaires, were made available.CONCLUSION: First feed-back indicated that these tools were of great added value for countries with limited human resources, even though, as anticipated, they will have to be adapted locally, especially role-play scenarios, clinical cases and patient's videos.


Asunto(s)
Salud Mental , Médicos Generales , Alfabetización en Salud , Prevalencia , Estudiantes de Salud Pública , Trastornos del Humor , Psiquiatría Comunitaria , Atención Primaria de Salud , Servicios de Salud Comunitaria , Curriculum , Esquizofrenia
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