Title of article
Public perceptions, explanatory models and service utilisation regarding mental illness and mental health care in Kenya
Author/Authors
Florence A. Muga، نويسنده , , Rachel Jenkins، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
8
From page
469
To page
476
Abstract
The degree to which the mental health
services are utilized depends partly on the public’s
views about mental illness and the public’s perceptions
about the roles of the providers of the services.
Therefore, effective implementation of Kenya’s mental
health policy during the 1990s was likely to be influenced
in some degree by how far it was compatible
with the public’s concepts of mental illness. The aim of
this study was thus to explore the conceptual model
underlying the views of the Kenyan public about
mental illness and relate it to the national mental
health policy of 1994. A household survey was conducted
using a Key Informant Interview schedule.
Results showed that the public subscribed to a biopsychosocial
view of mental illness and health care,
which was indeed compatible with the mental health
policy, which was rooted in the concepts of Primary
Health Care, as articulated at Alma Ata. However, the
public did not expect biopsychosocial care from the
health services, but rather only the biological/pharmacological
component, relying on other care providers
for psychosocial management. This discrepancy
could have impeded the implementation of the 1994
policy.
Keywords
public perceptions – explanatorymodels – service utilisation – mental health care –Kenya
Journal title
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Record number
849360
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