Rutakumwa Rwamahe, Tusiime Christine, Mpango Richard Stephen, Kyohangirwe Leticia, Kaleebu Pontiano, Patel Vikram, Kinyanda Eugene
Medical Research Council/Uganda Virus Research Institute & London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine Uganda Research Unit, Plot 50-59 Nakiwogo Road, P.O. Box 49 Entebbe, Uganda.
Butabika National Referral Mental Hospital, Old Port Bell Road, P.O. Box 7017 Kampala, Uganda.
Psychiatry J. 2023 Jan 17;2023:1986908. doi: 10.1155/2023/1986908. eCollection 2023.
Depression is the fourth leading cause of the global disease burden and worsens the outcome of comorbidities including HIV/AIDS. Depression is particularly problematic among persons living with HIV in sub-Saharan Africa where scarcity of cost-effective interventions is compounded by inadequate understanding of the disease. We examine risk factors for depression among persons living with HIV undergoing antiretroviral treatment in Uganda and discuss policy implications.
A qualitative study using a narrative approach was conducted, the formative phase of a large study to develop a model for integrating depression management into routine HIV care in Uganda. Participants were purposively sampled at four public health facilities in Mpigi District. In-depth interviews were conducted with four clinicians, three supervisors, and 11 persons living with HIV and suffering from depression, as were three focus group discussions with lay health workers. Exit interviews were conducted with 17 persons living with HIV who completed/interrupted depression treatment but had not been interviewed. Only data collected from persons living with HIV and lay health workers were analysed for the purpose of this paper. A narrative thematic approach was used in data analysis. . There were several pathways through which lack of family social support reportedly led to depression: worries about disclosure in discordant relationships, false perceptions of social support, stigmatisation and discrimination, and domestic violence. Economic/poverty and other causes were identified, but their role was less significant or moderated by family social support.
Family social support plays a dominant role-both directly and indirectly-in influencing depression risk. We propose the mainstreaming of formal psychosocial support and a shift from individual to family-focused counselling that targets both persons living with HIV and their family.
抑郁症是全球疾病负担的第四大主要原因,它会使包括艾滋病毒/艾滋病在内的合并症的病情恶化。在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,抑郁症在艾滋病毒感染者中尤其成问题,因为成本效益高的干预措施稀缺,而且对该疾病的认识不足。我们研究了乌干达接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的艾滋病毒感染者中抑郁症的风险因素,并讨论了政策影响。
采用叙事方法进行了一项定性研究,这是一项大型研究的形成阶段,旨在开发一个将抑郁症管理纳入乌干达常规艾滋病毒护理的模型。在姆皮吉区的四个公共卫生设施中进行了目的抽样。对四名临床医生、三名监督员和11名患有抑郁症的艾滋病毒感染者进行了深入访谈,还与非专业卫生工作者进行了三次焦点小组讨论。对17名完成/中断抑郁症治疗但未接受访谈的艾滋病毒感染者进行了退出访谈。为了本文的目的,仅分析了从艾滋病毒感染者和非专业卫生工作者那里收集的数据。数据分析采用叙事主题方法。据报道,缺乏家庭社会支持通过多种途径导致抑郁症:对不和谐关系中披露信息的担忧、对社会支持的错误认知、污名化和歧视以及家庭暴力。确定了经济/贫困和其他原因,但其作用不太显著或受到家庭社会支持的调节。
家庭社会支持在直接和间接影响抑郁症风险方面都起着主导作用。我们建议将正式的心理社会支持纳入主流,并从针对艾滋病毒感染者个人的咨询转向以家庭为重点的咨询,同时兼顾艾滋病毒感染者及其家庭。