Department of Health Services Research and Nursing Science, School of Public Health, Bielefeld University, Universitaetsstrasse 25, 33651, Bielefeld, Germany.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 Feb 15;24(1):206. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-10622-y.
Primary mental healthcare (PMHC) allows for complex mental health issues in old age to be addressed. India has sought to improve PMHC through legislation, strategies and programmes. This study analyses the challenges and opportunities involved in strengthening PMHC for older persons in India from the perspectives of key stakeholders.
Semistructured interviews were conducted with 14 stakeholders selected from the PMHC system in India and analysed using thematic analysis. First, the analysis was organizationally structured in accordance with the six WHO mental health system domains: (1) policy and legislative framework, (2) mental health services, (3) mental health in primary care, (4) human resources, (5) public information and links to other sectors, and (6) monitoring and research. Second, for each building block, challenges and opportunities were derived using inductive coding.
This study highlights the numerous challenges that may be encountered when attempting to strengthen age-inclusive PMHC. Among these challenges are poor public governance, a lack of awareness and knowledge among policy-makers and other stakeholders, and existing policies that make unrealistic promises to weak primary healthcare (PHC) structures with an excessive focus on medicalizing mental health problems. Thus, the mental health system often fails to reach vulnerable older people through PHC. Established approaches to comprehensive, family- and community-oriented PHC support attempts to strengthen intersectoral approaches to PMHC that emphasize mental health promotion in old age. Targeting the PHC workforce through age-inclusive mental health education is considered particularly necessary. Experts further argue that adequate monitoring structures and public spending for mental health must be improved.
In this study, we aim to elaborate on the mental healthcare developments that may serve to achieve equity in access to mental healthcare in India. Coordinated and collaborative efforts by public and private stakeholders involved in the care of older persons, both with and without lived mental health experiences, as well as their families and communities, are necessary to bring the vision of those policies for PMHC to fruition. The findings presented in this study can also inform future research, policies and practice in other low- and middle-income countries.
初级精神卫生保健(PMHC)可解决老年人的复杂精神健康问题。印度通过立法、战略和方案来改善 PMHC。本研究从利益攸关方的角度分析了印度加强老年人 PMHC 所面临的挑战和机遇。
从印度 PMHC 系统中选择了 14 名利益攸关方进行半结构化访谈,并使用主题分析进行分析。首先,根据世界卫生组织(WHO)心理健康系统的六个领域对分析进行了组织结构安排:(1)政策和立法框架;(2)精神卫生服务;(3)初级保健中的精神卫生;(4)人力资源;(5)公共信息和与其他部门的联系;(6)监测和研究。其次,对于每个构建块,使用归纳编码推导出挑战和机遇。
本研究强调了在试图加强以年龄为中心的 PMHC 时可能遇到的许多挑战。这些挑战包括公共治理不善、决策者和其他利益攸关方缺乏意识和知识、现有政策对薄弱的初级卫生保健(PHC)结构做出不切实际的承诺,过分关注将精神健康问题医学化。因此,精神卫生系统往往无法通过 PHC 接触到弱势老年人。综合、以家庭和社区为导向的 PHC 既定方法支持加强 PMHC 的部门间方法,强调老年人的精神健康促进。通过以年龄为中心的精神卫生教育针对 PHC 劳动力被认为是特别必要的。专家们还认为,必须改善精神卫生监测结构和公共支出。
在本研究中,我们旨在详细说明可能有助于实现印度精神卫生保健公平获取的精神卫生保健发展情况。需要公共和私营利益攸关方在照顾老年人方面进行协调和协作努力,包括有和没有精神健康经历的老年人、他们的家庭和社区,才能实现这些 PMHC 政策的愿景。本研究提出的研究结果还可以为其他低收入和中等收入国家的未来研究、政策和实践提供信息。