| Literature DB >> 26473008 |
Alemayehu Negash1, Mubarek Abera1, Christine Gruber-Frank2, Reiner Frank2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ethiopia is a country in which child and adolescent mental health needs are often not met. In order to promote capacity building, a Collaborative International Exchange Programme has been established between Jimma University at Jimma, Ethiopia, and Ludwig-Maximilian University in Munich, Germany. The programme focuses on training non-physician health professionals in mental health speciality. One of the courses in the training programme, child psychiatry, involves a child psychiatrist and a children's nurse supporting the management of a patient described in this case report. Its conceptual framework is based on the section "significant emotional and medically unexplained complaints" of the "WHO mental health GAP intervention guide for mental, neurological and substance use disorders in non-specialized health settings".Entities:
Keywords: Child mental health; Collaborative international training programme; Conversion disorder; Ethiopia; Psychosocial intervention; WHO mental health GAP intervention guide
Year: 2015 PMID: 26473008 PMCID: PMC4607000 DOI: 10.1186/s13034-015-0080-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health ISSN: 1753-2000 Impact factor: 3.033
Protocol of a stepwise approach: problem-oriented interventions: social-emotional, eating, motility
| Day | Safety | Social-emotional | Eating | Motility | Autonomy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bedside evaluation mental state antipsychotic medication | Crying, retching | Passive: infusion | Sits in bed if supported | |
| 2 | Build alliance with family, establish supportive relationship with patient | Nurse gets in contact with patient, offers contact, occupation at frequent short intervals | Infusion | Continued, able to sit alone in bed | Patient decides when to stop (some minutes) |
| 3 | Weight control, check caloric supply nasogastric tube | Breathing exercises by nurse, explore cognition: how does it feel in your stomach? Cognitive stimulation: school work at bedside | Sensory input, water in mouth without swallowing, mashed soup via tube, initially administered by nurse, then by father | Sensory input wash feet twice a day by father | Breathe slowly for self regulation reflection on inner state |
| 4 | Weight gain, antipsychotic medication stopped | Occupation continued, variety of tasks | Continued | Sits at bedside for a moment | Crying diminishes |
| 5 | Continued variety of tasks, longer attention span | Continued | Crying stops, is getting calm | ||
| 6 | Safe relationship to nurse | Praised by family and professionals | Active: able to swallow liquid | Active intake of food—very proud | |
| 7 | Takes part in group painting | Sits in group at table | |||
| 8 | Active: eats solid food nasogastric tube removed | Passive: massage of legs; active: guided movements, relaxation exercises | Expresses wish for favourite food, active movements of legs despite being anxious | ||
| 9 | Occupation for 1 h needle work fast, skilful | Able to sit in group for 1 h, stands with support | Able to ask for material, persists on own ideas in painting, able to say no, assertive behaviour, confident | ||
| 10 | Some steps on her own without support |