| Literature DB >> 23700389 |
Sylvia Kaaya1, Eddy Eustache, Ilana Lapidos-Salaiz, Seggane Musisi, Christina Psaros, Lawrence Wissow.
Abstract
In the fourth article of a five-part series providing a global perspective on integrating mental health, Sylvia Kaaya and colleagues discuss the importance of integrating mental health interventions into HIV prevention and treatment platforms.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23700389 PMCID: PMC3660252 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001447
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Standardized Depression and Alcohol Use Disorder Screening Tools, Training Required, and Administration Time.
| Instrument | Languages Available | Training Required | Other |
| Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) | English and more than 40 additional languages | None/minimal | Approximately 10 minutes to complete and 5 minutes to score. Contains fewer somatic items than other depression self-report measures. ≥16 is used as cut-off score for likely depression. |
| Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9) | Arabic, Assamese, Chinese (Cantonese, Mandarin), Czech, Dutch, Danish, English, Finnish, French, French Canadian, German, Greek, Gujarati, Hindi, Hebrew, Hungarian, Italian, Malay, Malayalam, Norwegian, Oriya, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, and Telugu | None/minimal | Approximately 5 minutes to complete and score. Designed for use in primary care settings. ≥10 is used as the cut-off for likely depression. Includes a suicide screening question. |
| Hopkins Symptom Checklist Depression Scale | English, Bosnian, Cambodian, Croatian, Japanese, Laotian, and Vietnamese | None/minimal | Approximately 10 minutes to administer and score; scoring requires computing an average. >1.75 is used as a cut-off for likely depression. |
| Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) | English, Catalan and Spanish, Dutch, French, Portuguese, Russian, Slovenian, Swedish | None/minimal | Approximately 4 minutes to administer and score; >7 warrants further assessment; scores provide 4 levels of AUD severity |
| CAGE Questionnaire | English and several other languages because four items are straightforward in translation | None/minimal | Approximately 1–2 minutes to administer and score; ≥2 is used to assess for alcohol dependence |
Integrating Mental Health Services into Primary HIV Care For Women: The Whole Life Project.
| System Integration Characteristics | Service Integration Characteristics | Integration Outcomes |
| Inter-domain coordination For example: How can relevant managers coordinate across mental health and HIV services? | Shared commitment to comprehensive care, prevention, and early intervention | Collaborative development of a comprehensive service packages (client's physical, psychological, social and cultural dimensions acknowledged) in a context comprising family, neighborhoods, and larger institutions aimed at prevention and early interventions |
| Collaborative planning, programming, resources sharing, and communication | Collocation of services and staff | Accessible and seamless service delivery, perceived unified and non-redundant by users |
| Administrative sanctioning of integration | Administrative and programmatic activities that reflect integration, including joint planning, resource and information sharing; staff cross-training and team building | Effective and shared patient management, case referrals, and follow-up procedures; joint supportive supervision and outcome monitoring, quality assessment, and re-planning for service quality improvements |
Source: Adapted from Dodds et al. [42].
Recommendations for Delivering Mental Health Services in HIV Care.
| Strengthening Mental Health Packages of Care | Mental Health Components for HIV Care |
| • Establish sustainable training and supervision models to maintain proficiency in mental health intervention delivery among non-specialists• Utilize evidence-based interventions after adequate situational analysis/needs assessment• Utilize a collaborative approach between HIV and mental health providers to adapt interventions to the cultural context as needed• Ensure adequate monitoring, evaluation, and feedback of information to generate intervention improvements• Educate communities about mental disorders and mental health to increase community uptake of interventions• Ensure effective referral and linkage systems to mental health specialist consultation when needed• Ensure availability of antidepressant, antipsychotic, and anticonvulsant medications | • Strengthen HIV policies, guidelines, and curricula by including relevant mental health service components• Increase access to interventions for early recognition of depression, alcohol abuse, and HAND among persons accessing HIV care• Provide cost-effective brief psychological interventions for depression and alcohol abuse• Re-enforce strategies for HIV screening, earlier access to cART, and early recognition and treatment of opportunistic infections to prevent HAND in children and adults• Monitor the effect of the mental health interventions on adherence to HIV care• Strengthen existing psychosocial interventions for social support• Strengthen systems for supply of antidepressant and antipsychotic medications in HIV primary care• Provide interventions as seamlessly integrated, routine components of care at the point of service for persons accessing HIV care |
HAND, HIV-associated neurocognitive disorder.