Department of Psychiatry,School of Medicine,College of Health Sciences,Addis Ababa University,Addis Ababa,Ethiopia.
Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health,Alan J Flisher Centre for Public Mental Health,University of Cape Town,Cape Town,Republic of South Africa.
Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci. 2019 Aug;28(4):397-407. doi: 10.1017/S2045796017000701. Epub 2017 Nov 16.
In low-income African countries, ensuring food security for all segments of the population is a high priority. Mental illness is associated consistently with poverty, but there is little evidence regarding the association with food insecurity. The aim of this study was to compare the levels of food insecurity in people with severe mental disorders (SMD) with the general population in a rural African setting with a high burden of food insecurity.
Households of 292 community-ascertained people with a specialist-confirmed diagnosis of SMD (including schizophrenia and bipolar disorder) were compared with 284 households without a person with SMD in a rural district in south Ethiopia. At the time of the study, no mental health services were available within the district. Food insecurity was measured using a validated version of the Household Food Insecurity Access Scale. Disability was measured using the World Health Organisation Disability Assessment Schedule 2.0.
Severe household food insecurity was reported by 32.5% of people with SMD and 15.9% of respondents from comparison households: adjusted odds ratio 2.82 (95% confidence interval 1.62 to 4.91). Higher annual income was associated independently with lower odds of severe food insecurity. When total disability scores were added into the model, the association between SMD and food insecurity became non-significant, indicating a possible mediating role of disability.
Efforts to alleviate food insecurity need to target people with SMD as a vulnerable group. Addressing the disabling effects of SMD would also be expected to reduce food insecurity. Access to mental health care integrated into primary care is being expanded in this district as part of the Programme for Improving Mental health carE (PRIME). The impact of treatment on disability and food insecurity will be evaluated.
在低收入非洲国家,确保所有人的食品安全是当务之急。精神疾病与贫困密切相关,但关于其与粮食不安全之间的关联,证据甚少。本研究旨在比较严重精神障碍(SMD)患者与粮食不安全负担高的农村非洲环境中一般人群的粮食不安全水平。
在埃塞俄比亚南部的一个农村地区,比较了 292 户经专科医生确诊患有 SMD(包括精神分裂症和双相情感障碍)的社区确定的患者家庭与 284 户无 SMD 患者的家庭。在研究时,该地区没有心理健康服务。使用经过验证的家庭粮食不安全获取量表的版本来衡量粮食不安全。使用世界卫生组织残疾评估量表 2.0 来衡量残疾。
32.5%的 SMD 患者和 15.9%的对照组家庭报告了严重的家庭粮食不安全:调整后的优势比为 2.82(95%置信区间 1.62 至 4.91)。较高的年收入与严重粮食不安全的几率较低独立相关。当将总残疾评分纳入模型后,SMD 与粮食不安全之间的关联变得不显著,表明残疾可能起中介作用。
减轻粮食不安全的努力需要将 SMD 患者作为弱势群体的目标。解决 SMD 的致残影响也有望减少粮食不安全。该地区正在扩大纳入初级保健的改善精神卫生保健方案(PRIME),以获取精神卫生保健。将评估治疗对残疾和粮食不安全的影响。