Tsigebrhan Ruth, Newton Charles R, Selamu Medhin, Hanlon Charlotte
College of Health Sciences, Department of Psychiatry and WHO Collaborating Centre in Mental Health Research and Capacity-Building, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Centre for Innovative Drug Development and Therapeutic Trials for Africa (CDT-Africa), College of Health Sciences, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
PLoS One. 2024 Dec 13;19(12):e0310542. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0310542. eCollection 2024.
Understanding the lived experience of mental health and illness in people with epilepsy has been little investigated in Africa and yet is essential to inform person-centered care. The aim of this study was to explore the experiences mental ill-health in the contexts of the lives of people with epilepsy in rural Ethiopia.
A phenomenological approach was employed using in-depth individual interviews with PWE. Participants were selected purposely. The setting was Gurage Zone in south-central Ethiopia, where efforts had been made to expand access to mental health and epilepsy care through integration in primary health care. Thematic analysis was used.
Twenty-two participant were interviewed (8 women, 14 men). The following themes were identified: expression of ill-health; the essence of emotions; the emotional burden of epilepsy and aspirations and mitigating impacts. Participants reported multiple bodily (e.g., fatigue) and emotional (e.g., irritability, sadness) experiences that were tied up with their experience of epilepsy and not separable into physical vs. mental health. Occupation and social life difficulties were interconnected with emotional and bodily sickness. Emotions were considered inherently concerning, with emotional imbalance spoken of as a cause or trigger for seizures. These emotional burdens resulted in difficulties fulfilling occupational and social life obligations, in turn exacerbating the epilepsy-related stigma experienced by others. Participants sought to mitigate these interconnected psychosocial impacts through finding spiritual meaning in, or acceptance of, their experiences, drawing on family care and, for some, emotional support from health professionals.
People living with epilepsy in this rural Ethiopian setting experience various emotional, financial, occupational and interpersonal problems that are crucially interwoven with one another and with the experience of epilepsy. A people-centered approach to support the recovery of people with epilepsy requires consideration of mental health alongside physical health, as well as interventions outside the health system to address poverty and stigma.
在非洲,对癫痫患者心理健康和疾病的实际体验的了解研究甚少,然而这对于提供以患者为中心的护理至关重要。本研究旨在探索埃塞俄比亚农村癫痫患者生活背景下心理健康不佳的体验。
采用现象学方法,对癫痫患者进行深入的个人访谈。参与者是有目的地挑选的。研究地点是埃塞俄比亚中南部的古拉格地区,该地区已努力通过整合初级卫生保健来扩大心理健康和癫痫护理的可及性。采用了主题分析法。
共访谈了22名参与者(8名女性,14名男性)。确定了以下主题:健康不佳的表现;情绪的本质;癫痫的情感负担以及愿望和缓解影响。参与者报告了多种身体(如疲劳)和情绪(如易怒、悲伤)体验,这些体验与他们的癫痫经历相关联,无法区分为身体健康与心理健康。职业和社会生活困难与情绪和身体疾病相互关联。情绪被认为本质上令人担忧,情绪失衡被认为是癫痫发作的原因或触发因素。这些情感负担导致难以履行职业和社会生活义务,进而加剧了他人对癫痫相关的污名化。参与者试图通过在自身经历中找到精神意义或接受这些经历、依靠家庭照顾以及对一些人来说依靠卫生专业人员的情感支持来减轻这些相互关联的心理社会影响。
在埃塞俄比亚这个农村地区,癫痫患者经历了各种情感、经济、职业和人际问题,这些问题彼此紧密交织,并与癫痫经历相互关联。以患者为中心支持癫痫患者康复的方法需要在关注身体健康的同时考虑心理健康,以及在卫生系统之外采取干预措施来解决贫困和污名化问题。