Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Partners in Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
BMJ Open. 2017 Feb 28;7(2):e014067. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2016-014067.
Integrating mental healthcare into primary care can reduce the global burden of mental disorders. Yet data on the effective implementation of real-world task-shared mental health programmes are limited. In 2012, the Rwandan Ministry of Health and the international healthcare organisation Partners in Health collaboratively adapted the Mentoring and Enhanced Supervision at Health Centers (MESH) programme, a successful programme of supported supervision based on task-sharing for HIV/AIDS care, to include care of neuropsychiatric disorders within primary care settings (MESH Mental Health). We propose 1 of the first studies in a rural low-income country to assess the implementation and clinical outcomes of a programme integrating neuropsychiatric care into a public primary care system.
A mixed-methods evaluation will be conducted. First, we will conduct a quantitative outcomes evaluation using a pretest and post-test design at 4 purposively selected MESH MH participating health centres. At least 112 consecutive adults with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression or epilepsy will be enrolled. Primary outcomes are symptoms and functioning measured at baseline, 8 weeks and 6 months using clinician-administered scales: the General Health Questionnaire and the brief WHO Disability Assessment Scale. We hypothesise that service users will experience at least a 25% improvement in symptoms and functioning from baseline after MESH MH programme participation. To understand any outcome improvements under the intervention, we will evaluate programme processes using (1) quantitative analyses of routine service utilisation data and supervision checklist data and (2) qualitative semistructured interviews with primary care nurses, service users and family members.
This evaluation was approved by the Rwanda National Ethics Committee (Protocol #736/RNEC/2016) and deemed exempt by the Harvard University Institutional Review Board. Results will be submitted for peer-reviewed journal publication, presented at conferences and disseminated to communities served by the programme.
将精神卫生保健纳入初级保健可以减轻全球精神障碍负担。然而,关于现实世界中任务分担式精神卫生规划有效实施的数据有限。2012 年,卢旺达卫生部和国际医疗组织“健康伙伴”合作改编了 Mentoring and Enhanced Supervision at Health Centers (MESH) 方案,这是一个基于任务分担的成功支持监督方案,用于在初级保健环境中提供神经精神疾病护理(MESH 精神卫生)。我们提出了在农村低收入国家进行的首个研究之一,以评估将精神卫生护理纳入公共初级保健系统的方案的实施情况和临床结果。
将进行混合方法评估。首先,我们将使用预测试和后测试设计在 4 个有目的选择的 MESH MH 参与卫生中心进行定量结果评估。将招募至少 112 名连续的精神分裂症、双相情感障碍、抑郁症或癫痫患者。主要结局是使用临床医生管理的量表(一般健康问卷和简短的世界卫生组织残疾评估量表)在基线、8 周和 6 个月时测量的症状和功能。我们假设在 MESH MH 项目参与后,服务使用者的症状和功能将至少改善 25%。为了了解干预下的任何结果改善,我们将使用(1)常规服务利用数据和监督检查表数据的定量分析和(2)初级保健护士、服务使用者和家庭成员的半结构化访谈进行方案流程评估。
该评估获得了卢旺达国家伦理委员会(协议 #736/RNEC/2016)的批准,并被哈佛大学机构审查委员会豁免。结果将提交给同行评议的期刊发表,在会议上展示,并传播给该方案服务的社区。