Literature DB >> 26759416

Research on help-seeking for mental illness in Africa: Dominant approaches and possible alternatives.

Sara Cooper1.   

Abstract

There is growing concern within the global mental health arena that interventions currently being executed to scale up mental health services in Africa will be ineffective unless simultaneous steps are taken to address people's help-seeking behaviour. Drawing upon two conceptual tools arising from science and technology studies (STS), those of a "classification system" and "the black box," this paper looks critically at discursive constructions of help-seeking in Africa within mental health research over the last decade. Research in this area can be divided into two dominant traditions: the knowledge-belief-practice survey and indigenous-knowledge-system approaches. Although the content and value-codes between these approaches differ, structurally they are very similar. Both are mediated by the same kind of system of classification, which demarcates the world into homogenous entities and binary oppositions. This system of ordering is one of the most stubborn and powerful forms of classification buried in the "black box" of the modernist/colonial knowledge archive and is fraught with many questionable Eurocentric epistemological assumptions. I consider whether there might be other ways of understanding help-seeking for mental illness in Africa and discuss two studies that illustrate such alternative approaches. In conclusion, I discuss some of the challenges this alternative kind of research faces in gaining more influence within contemporary global mental health discourse and practice.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Africa; epistemological assumptions; help-seeking; mental health research

Mesh:

Year:  2016        PMID: 26759416     DOI: 10.1177/1363461515622762

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


  8 in total

1.  Class-Based Chronicities of Suffering and Seeking Help: Comparing Addiction Treatment Programs in Uganda.

Authors:  Julia Vorhölter
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2017-12

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

Authors:  Anne M Lovell; Papa Mamadou Diagne
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2019-12

3.  Seeking Professional Help for Mental Illness: A Mixed-Methods Study of Black Family Members in the UK and Nigeria.

Authors:  Ifeanyichukwu Anthony Ogueji; Maia Makeda Okoloba
Journal:  Psychol Stud (Mysore)       Date:  2022-05-11

4.  Genealogies and Anthropologies of Global Mental Health.

Authors:  Anne M Lovell; Ursula M Read; Claudia Lang
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2019-12

Review 5.  Considering culture, context and community in mhGAP implementation and training: challenges and recommendations from the field.

Authors:  Neda Faregh; Raphael Lencucha; Peter Ventevogel; Benyam Worku Dubale; Laurence J Kirmayer
Journal:  Int J Ment Health Syst       Date:  2019-08-24

6.  Rights as Relationships: Collaborating with Faith Healers in Community Mental Health in Ghana.

Authors:  Ursula M Read
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2019-12

7.  Pathways to mental health care for patients with severe mental illness in Tunisia.

Authors:  Houyem Khiari; Uta Ouali; Yosra Zgueb; Ali Mrabet; Fethi Nacef
Journal:  Pan Afr Med J       Date:  2019-10-29

8.  "We are like co-wives": Traditional healers' views on collaborating with the formal Child and Adolescent Mental Health System in Uganda.

Authors:  Angela Akol; Karen Marie Moland; Juliet N Babirye; Ingunn Marie S Engebretsen
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2018-04-10       Impact factor: 2.655

  8 in total

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