Yoder Hélène N C, Tol Wietse A, Reis Ria, de Jong Joop T V M
University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD USA.
Int J Ment Health Syst. 2016 Jun 27;10:48. doi: 10.1186/s13033-016-0080-8. eCollection 2016.
This study complements the growing amount of research on the psychosocial impact of war on children in Sierra Leone by examining local perceptions of child mental health, formal and informal care systems, help-seeking behaviour and stigma.
The study combined: (1) a nationwide survey of mental health care providers, with (2) exploratory qualitative research among service users and providers and other stakeholders concerned with child and adolescent mental health, with a particular emphasis on local explanations and stigma.
Formal mental health care services are extremely limited resulting in an estimated treatment gap of over 99.8 %. Local explanations of child mental health problems in Sierra Leone are commonly spiritual or supernatural in nature, and associated with help-seeking from traditional healers or religious institutions. There is a considerable amount of stigma related to mental disorders, which affects children, their caregivers and service providers, and may lead to discrimination and abuse.
Child and Adolescent Mental Health (CAMH) care development in Sierra Leone should cater to the long-term structural effects of war-violence and an Ebola epidemic. Priorities for development include: (1) the strengthening of legal structures and the development of relevant policies that strengthen the health system and specifically include children and adolescents, (2) a clearer local distinction between children with psychiatric, neurological, developmental or psychosocial problems and subsequent channelling into appropriate services (3) supplementary CAMH training for a range of professionals working with children across various sectors, (4) specialist training in CAMH, (5) integration of CAMH care into primary health care, education and the social welfare system, (6) further research on local explanations of child mental disorders and the effect they have on the well-being of the child, and (7) a careful consideration of the role of religious healers as care providers.
本研究通过考察当地对儿童心理健康的认知、正式和非正式护理系统、求助行为及污名化现象,补充了关于战争对塞拉利昂儿童心理社会影响的日益增多的研究。
该研究结合了:(1)对心理健康护理提供者的全国性调查,以及(2)对服务使用者、提供者和其他关注儿童及青少年心理健康的利益相关者进行的探索性定性研究,特别强调当地的解释和污名化现象。
正式的心理健康护理服务极其有限,估计治疗缺口超过99.8%。塞拉利昂对儿童心理健康问题的当地解释通常具有精神或超自然性质,并与向传统治疗师或宗教机构求助有关。与精神障碍相关的污名化现象相当严重,这影响到儿童、他们的照顾者和服务提供者,并可能导致歧视和虐待。
塞拉利昂的儿童和青少年心理健康(CAMH)护理发展应考虑到战争暴力和埃博拉疫情的长期结构性影响。发展重点包括:(1)加强法律结构并制定相关政策,以加强卫生系统并特别纳入儿童和青少年;(2)更明确地区分患有精神、神经、发育或心理社会问题的儿童,并随后将其引导至适当的服务;(3)为各部门从事儿童工作的一系列专业人员提供补充性的CAMH培训;(4)CAMH方面的专业培训;(5)将CAMH护理纳入初级卫生保健、教育和社会福利系统;(6)进一步研究当地对儿童精神障碍的解释及其对儿童福祉的影响;(7)仔细考虑宗教治疗师作为护理提供者的作用。