The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Herbertpur Christian Hospital, Emmanuel Hospital Association, Dehradun, Uttarakhand, India.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2024 Mar;59(3):493-502. doi: 10.1007/s00127-023-02582-1. Epub 2024 Jan 23.
Community-based workers promote mental health in communities. Recent literature has called for more attention to the ways they operate and the strategies used. For example, how do they translate biomedical concepts into frameworks that are acceptable and accessible to communities? How do micro-innovations lead to positive mental health outcomes, including social inclusion and recovery? The aim of this study was to examine the types of skills and strategies to address social dimensions of mental health used by community health workers (CHWs) working together with people with psychosocial disability (PPSD) in urban north India.
We interviewed CHWs (n = 46) about their registered PPSD who were randomly selected from 1000 people registered with a local non-profit community mental health provider. Notes taken during interviews were cross-checked with audio recordings and coded and analyzed thematically.
CHWs displayed social, cultural, and psychological skills in forming trusting relationships and in-depth knowledge of the context of their client's lives and family dynamics. They used this information to analyze political, social, and economic factors influencing mental health for the client and their family members. The diverse range of analysis and intervention skills of community health workers built on contextual knowledge to implement micro-innovations in a be-spoke way, applying these to the local ecology of people with psychosocial disabilities (PPSD). These approaches contributed to addressing the social and structural determinants that shaped the mental health of PPSD.
Community health workers (CHWs) in this study addressed social aspects of mental health, individually, and by engaging with wider structural factors. The micro-innovations of CHWs are dependent on non-linear elements, including local knowledge, time, and relationships. Global mental health requires further attentive qualitative research to consider how these, and other factors shape the work of CHWs in different locales to inform locally appropriate mental health care.
社区工作者在社区中促进心理健康。最近的文献呼吁更多地关注他们的运作方式和使用的策略。例如,他们如何将生物医学概念转化为社区可接受和可理解的框架?微创新如何导致积极的心理健康结果,包括社会包容和康复?本研究旨在探讨在印度北部城市,与有心理社会残疾(PPSD)的人一起工作的社区卫生工作者(CHWs)用于解决心理健康社会层面的技能和策略类型。
我们采访了 46 名社区卫生工作者(CHWs),他们的注册 PPSD 是从当地非营利性社区心理健康服务提供商注册的 1000 人中随机选择的。访谈中记录的笔记与录音进行了交叉核对,并进行了主题编码和分析。
CHWs 在建立信任关系和深入了解客户生活和家庭动态的背景方面表现出社会、文化和心理技能。他们利用这些信息分析影响客户及其家庭成员心理健康的政治、社会和经济因素。社区卫生工作者的各种分析和干预技能基于对客户及其家庭成员的背景知识,以独特的方式实施微创新,将这些技能应用于有心理社会残疾(PPSD)的当地生态系统。这些方法有助于解决影响 PPSD 心理健康的社会和结构性决定因素。
本研究中的社区卫生工作者(CHWs)单独且通过参与更广泛的结构性因素来解决心理健康的社会方面。CHWs 的微创新取决于非线性因素,包括当地知识、时间和关系。全球心理健康需要进一步进行注重质量的研究,以考虑这些因素以及其他因素如何影响 CHWs 在不同地点的工作,从而为当地提供适当的精神卫生保健。