Samudre Sandesh, Shidhaye Rahul, Ahuja Shalini, Nanda Sharmishtha, Khan Azaz, Evans-Lacko Sara, Hanlon Charlotte
Center for Chronic Conditions and Injuries, The Public Health Foundation of India, Plot No. 47, Sector 44, Institutional Area Gurgaon, Delhi, NCR 122002, India.
Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience, Health Services and Population Research Department, King's College London, PO29 David Goldberg Centre, De Crespigny Park, London, SE5 8AF, UK.
BMC Psychiatry. 2016 Jul 28;16:269. doi: 10.1186/s12888-016-0981-8.
There is a wide recognition that involvement of service users and their caregivers in health system policy and planning processes can strengthen health systems; however, most evidence and experience has come from high-income countries. This study aimed to explore baseline experiences, barriers and facilitators to service user-caregiver involvement in the emerging mental health system in India, and stakeholders' perspectives on how greater involvement could be achieved.
A qualitative study was conducted in Sehore district of Madhya Pradesh, India. In-depth interviews (n = 27) and a focus group discussion were conducted among service users, caregivers and their representatives at district, state and national levels and policy makers, service providers and mental health researchers. The topic guide explored the baseline situation in India, barriers and facilitators to service user and caregiver involvement in the following aspects of mental health systems: policy-making and planning, service development, monitoring and quality control, as well as research. Framework analysis was employed.
Respondents spoke of the limited involvement of service users and caregivers in the current Indian mental health system. The major reported barriers to this involvement were (1) unmet treatment and economic needs arising from low access to mental health services coupled with the high burden of illness, (2) pervasive stigmatising attitudes operating at the level of service user, caregiver, community, healthcare provider and healthcare administrators, and (3) entrenched power differentials between service providers and service users. Respondents prioritised greater involvement of service users in the planning of their own individual-level mental health care before considering involvement at the mental health system level. A stepwise progression was endorsed, starting from needs assessment, through empowerment and organization of service users and caregivers, leading finally to meaningful involvement.
Societal and system level barriers need to be addressed in order to facilitate the involvement of service users and caregivers to strengthen the Indian mental health system. Shifting from a largely 'provider-centric' to a more 'user-centric' model of mental health care may be a fundamental first step to sustainable user involvement at the system level.
人们普遍认识到,服务使用者及其照料者参与卫生系统政策和规划过程能够加强卫生系统;然而,大多数证据和经验都来自高收入国家。本研究旨在探索服务使用者 - 照料者参与印度新兴精神卫生系统的基线经验、障碍和促进因素,以及利益相关者对于如何实现更大程度参与的看法。
在印度中央邦的塞霍雷区开展了一项定性研究。对服务使用者、照料者及其在地区、邦和国家层面的代表以及政策制定者、服务提供者和精神卫生研究人员进行了深入访谈(n = 27)和焦点小组讨论。主题指南探讨了印度的基线情况、服务使用者和照料者参与精神卫生系统以下方面的障碍和促进因素:政策制定与规划、服务发展、监测与质量控制以及研究。采用了框架分析法。
受访者表示服务使用者和照料者在当前印度精神卫生系统中的参与有限。报告的这种参与的主要障碍包括:(1)由于获得精神卫生服务的机会有限以及疾病负担沉重而未得到满足的治疗和经济需求;(2)在服务使用者、照料者、社区、医疗服务提供者和医疗管理人员层面普遍存在的污名化态度;(3)服务提供者与服务使用者之间根深蒂固的权力差异。在考虑服务使用者在精神卫生系统层面参与之前,受访者优先考虑让其更多地参与自身个人层面精神卫生护理计划。人们认可一种循序渐进的过程,从需求评估开始,通过增强服务使用者和照料者的权能及组织他们,最终实现有意义的参与。
需要消除社会和系统层面的障碍,以促进服务使用者和照料者的参与,从而加强印度的精神卫生系统。从主要以“提供者为中心”的精神卫生护理模式转向更“以使用者为中心”的模式,可能是在系统层面实现服务使用者可持续参与的根本第一步。