Ikwuka Ugo, Galbraith Niall, Manktelow Ken, Chen-Wilson Josephine, Oyebode Femi, Muomah Rosemary C, Igboaka Anuli
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2016;27(1):157-175. doi: 10.1353/hpu.2016.0025.
The striking gaps in formal mental health care in the developing world are largely traceable to Instrumental and Ideological Barriers. Focusing on south-eastern Nigeria, the study aimed to establish the relative weight, significance and determinants of these barriers for prioritised policy interventions. Multistage sampling method was used to select participants (n = 706) to whom questionnaires were administered. Ideological Barriers (cultural and mental health literacy constraints) were more significantly perceived (84.8%) than Instrumental Barriers (systemic and financial impediments) (56.6%). The study demonstrated the primacy of improved knowledge in plugging the gap in conventional mental health care in a region ironically defined more by systemic and material poverty. This is instructive for prioritised policy interventions with an indication that even if facilities and socio-economic status improve, services will likely be underused without greater improvement in people's conceptualisation of mental illness. It equally underscored the need for cultural competence in mental health service provision.
发展中国家正规精神卫生保健方面存在的显著差距在很大程度上可归因于工具性和意识形态障碍。该研究聚焦于尼日利亚东南部,旨在确定这些障碍的相对权重、重要性及决定因素,以便进行优先政策干预。采用多阶段抽样方法选取参与者(n = 706)并对其进行问卷调查。意识形态障碍(文化和精神卫生素养限制)(84.8%)比工具性障碍(系统和经济障碍)(56.6%)被更显著地感知到。该研究表明,在一个具有讽刺意味的、更多由系统性和物质贫困所定义的地区,提高知识水平对于填补传统精神卫生保健方面的差距至关重要。这对于优先政策干预具有指导意义,表明即便设施和社会经济地位有所改善,但如果人们对精神疾病的认知没有更大提升,服务仍可能未得到充分利用。这同样强调了精神卫生服务提供中文化能力的必要性。