McCollum Rosalind, Barrett Carrie, Zawolo Georgina, Johnstone Rachel, Godwin-Akpan Tiawanlyn G, Berrian Hannah, Chowdhury Shahreen, Kollie Jerry, Kollie Karsor, Rogers Emerson, Parker Colleen, Phillip Maneesh, Sempe Lucas, Seekles Maaike, Smith John Solunta, Seekey Wede, Wickenden Anna, Zaizay Zeela, Theobald Sally, Dean Laura
Department of International Public Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool L3 5QA, UK.
Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, University of Liberia, Monrovia 1000, Liberia.
Trop Med Infect Dis. 2024 Aug 17;9(8):183. doi: 10.3390/tropicalmed9080183.
Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs) are a group of chronic infectious diseases of poverty affecting over one billion people globally. Intersections of NTDs, disability, and mental ill-health are increasingly evidenced but are rarely studied from a mixed-methods perspective. Here, we advance syndemic understandings by further assessing and contextualising the syndemic relationship between NTDs (particularly their associated disability) and mental distress in Liberia. Participatory qualitative methods, including body mapping (56 participants), social mapping (28 participants), and in-depth interviews (12) provided space for persons affected by NTDs to narrate their experiences. Simultaneously, 201 surveys explored experiences of common mental health conditions among persons affected by skin NTDs. An intersectionality approach was applied within the analysis for both qualitative and quantitative methods informed by Meyer's minority stress model, adapted for NTDs. Qualitative data was analysed thematically and gender-disaggregated, univariable and multivariable analyses were applied to survey data for the outcome measures depression (PHQ-9) and anxiety (GAD-7). Disability was associated with higher levels of depression and anxiety ( < 0.001). An interaction between disability and being a women increased incidence risk ratio of depression ( < 0.001). In alignment with qualitative findings, persons affected experienced additional generalised (financial concerns), external (experience of stigma) and internal (experience of pain and physical symptoms) minority stressors, to varying degrees, which contributed towards their mental distress, and mental health conditions. These findings were used to co-develop a syndemic-informed person-centred health system response to address the suffering associated with NTDs and mental distress, including a focus on strengthening relationships between formal and informal community health actors and the broader health system.
被忽视的热带病(NTDs)是一类与贫困相关的慢性传染病,全球有超过10亿人受其影响。NTDs、残疾和心理健康问题之间的关联日益明显,但很少从混合方法的角度进行研究。在此,我们通过进一步评估和背景化利比里亚NTDs(特别是其相关残疾)与精神痛苦之间的综合征关系,推进对综合征的理解。参与性定性方法,包括身体绘图(56名参与者)、社会绘图(28名参与者)和深入访谈(12名),为受NTDs影响的人提供了叙述其经历的空间。同时,201份调查问卷探讨了受皮肤NTDs影响者的常见心理健康状况。在分析中采用了交叉性方法,对定性和定量方法均采用了迈耶少数群体压力模型,并针对NTDs进行了调整。定性数据进行了主题分析并按性别分类,对调查数据应用单变量和多变量分析,以得出抑郁(PHQ-9)和焦虑(GAD-7)的结果指标。残疾与更高水平的抑郁和焦虑相关(<0.001)。残疾与女性身份之间的相互作用增加了抑郁的发病风险比(<0.001)。与定性研究结果一致,受影响者在不同程度上经历了额外的普遍性(经济担忧)、外部(耻辱经历)和内部(疼痛和身体症状经历)少数群体压力源,这些都导致了他们的精神痛苦和心理健康状况。这些研究结果被用于共同制定一个以综合征为依据、以人为本的卫生系统应对措施,以解决与NTDs和精神痛苦相关的苦难,包括注重加强正规和非正规社区卫生行为者与更广泛卫生系统之间的关系。