Literature DB >> 22722982

"I want the one that will heal me completely so it won't come back again": the limits of antipsychotic medication in rural Ghana.

Ursula Read1.   

Abstract

Campaigns to scale up mental health services in low-income countries emphasise the need to improve access to psychotropic medication as part of effective treatment yet there is little acknowledgement of the limitations of psychotropic drugs as perceived by those who use them. This paper considers responses to treatment with antipsychotics by people with mental illness and their families in rural Ghana, drawing on an anthropological study of family experiences and help seeking for mental illness. Despite a perception among health workers that there was little popular awareness of biomedical treatment for mental disorders, psychiatric services had been used by almost all informants. However, in many cases antipsychotic treatment had been discontinued, even where it had been recognised to have beneficial effects such as controlling aggression or inducing sleep. Unpleasant side effects such as feelings of weakness and prolonged drowsiness conflicted with notions of health as strength and were seen to reduce the ability to work. The reduction of perceptual experiences such as visions was less valued than a return to social functioning. The failure of antipsychotics to achieve a permanent cure also cast doubt on their efficacy and strengthened suspicions of a spiritual illness which would resist medical treatment. These findings suggest that efforts to improve the treatment of mental disorders in low-income countries should take into account the limitations of antipsychotic drugs for those who use them and consider how local resources and concepts of recovery can be used to maximise treatment and support families.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22722982     DOI: 10.1177/1363461512447070

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Transcult Psychiatry        ISSN: 1363-4615


  18 in total

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Review 2.  Mental health research in Ghana: a literature review.

Authors:  U M Read; V C K Doku
Journal:  Ghana Med J       Date:  2012-06

3.  Falling, Dying Sheep, and the Divine: Notes on Thick Therapeutics in Peri-Urban Senegal.

Authors:  Anne M Lovell; Papa Mamadou Diagne
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4.  Seeking Healing for a Mental Illness: Understanding the Care Experiences of Service Users at a Prayer Camp in Ghana.

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5.  "Now he walks and walks, as if he didn't have a home where he could eat": food, healing, and hunger in Quechua narratives of madness.

Authors:  David M R Orr
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2013-12

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Journal:  Glob Health Action       Date:  2014-05-16       Impact factor: 2.640

Review 7.  Medication nonadherence and psychiatry.

Authors:  Sarah C E Chapman; Rob Horne
Journal:  Curr Opin Psychiatry       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 4.741

8.  Conceptualizing and contextualizing functioning in people with severe mental disorders in rural Ethiopia: a qualitative study.

Authors:  Kassahun Habtamu; Atalay Alem; Charlotte Hanlon
Journal:  BMC Psychiatry       Date:  2015-03-04       Impact factor: 3.630

9.  A Digital Toolkit (M-Healer) to Improve Care and Reduce Human Rights Abuses Against People With Mental Illness in West Africa: User-Centered Design, Development, and Usability Study.

Authors:  Dror Ben-Zeev; Suzanne Meller; Jaime Snyder; Dzifa A Attah; Liam Albright; Hoa Le; Seth M Asafo; Pamela Y Collins; Angela Ofori-Atta
Journal:  JMIR Ment Health       Date:  2021-07-02

10.  Spiritual and religious beliefs: do they matter in the medication adherence behaviour of hypertensive patients?

Authors:  Irene Kretchy; Frances Owusu-Daaku; Samuel Danquah
Journal:  Biopsychosoc Med       Date:  2013-10-18
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