| Literature DB >> 28428816 |
James Mugisha1,2, Marc De Hert3, Brendon Stubbs4,5, David Basangwa1, Davy Vancampfort3,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a need for interventions to address the escalating mental health burden in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Addressing physical health needs should have a central role in reducing the burden and facilitating recovery in people with severe mental illness (SMI). We systematically investigated (1) physical health policies in the current mental health plans, and (2) the routine metabolic screening rates for people with SMI in SSA.Entities:
Keywords: Mental health; Metabolic; Physical health; Somatic; Sub-Sahara Africa
Year: 2017 PMID: 28428816 PMCID: PMC5395896 DOI: 10.1186/s13033-017-0141-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst ISSN: 1752-4458
Overview of the presence of a mental health plan, a physical health component/policy and metabolic screening research results in sub-Saharan African countries (n = 48)
| Country | Official mental health plan | A physical health component/policy | PubMed search results (potential relevant/obtained) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Angola (2011) | Yes | No | 0/9 |
| Benin (2014) | No | – | 0/58 |
| Botswana (2014) | Yes | No | 0/37 |
| Burkina Faso (2014) | Yes | No | 0/19 |
| Burundi (2014) | Yes | Yes | 0/14 |
| Cameroon (2011) | No | – | 0/48 |
| Cape Verde (2011) | Yes | No | 0/6 |
| Central African Republic (2014) | Yes | No | 0/4 |
| Chad (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/36 |
| Comoros (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/5 |
| Congo (2014) | No | – | 0/70 |
| Côte d’Ivoire (2014) | Yes | No | 0/21 |
| Democratic Rep. of the Congo (2011) | Yes | No | 0/30 |
| Djibouti (2014) | No | – | 0/6 |
| Equatorial Guinea (2014) | No | – | 0/0 |
| Eritrea (2011) | No | – | 0/17 |
| Ethiopia (2014) | Yes | Yes | 0/238 |
| Gabon (2011) | No | – | 0/1 |
| Gambia (2014) | Yes | No | 0/19 |
| Ghana (2014) | Yes | Yes | 1/121 |
| Guinea (2014) | Yes | NA | 0/3161 |
| Guinea-Bissau (2011) | No | – | 0/2 |
| Kenya (2011) | Yes | No | 1/180 |
| Lesotho (2014) | No | – | 0/6 |
| Liberia (2014) | Yes | No | 0/10 |
| Madagascar (2014) | Yes | No | 0/12 |
| Malawi (2014) | Yes | No | 0/46 |
| Mauritania (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/7 |
| Mauritius (2014) | No | – | 0/16 |
| Mozambique (2014) | Yes | No | 0/12 |
| Namibia (2014) | Yes | No | 0/12 |
| Niger (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/90 |
| Nigeria (2014) | Yes | Yes | 0/816 |
| Rwanda (2014) | Yes | No | 0/56 |
| São Tomé and Príncipe (2014) | Yes | NA | 0/0 |
| Senegal (2014) | No | – | 0/46 |
| Seychelles (2014) | No | – | 0/8 |
| Sierra Leone (2014) | Yes | No | 0/14 |
| Somalia (2014) | No | – | 0/50 |
| South-Africa (2014) | Yes | Yes | 3/1505 |
| South-Sudan (2014) | No | – | 0/7 |
| Sudan (2011) | Yes | Not checkeda | 0/86 |
| Swaziland (2014) | No | – | 0/12 |
| Togo (2014) | Yes | NA | 0/54 |
| Uganda (2014) | Yes | No | 0/266 |
| United Republic of Tanzania (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/116 |
| Zambia (2014) | Yes | Yes | 0/41 |
| Zimbabwe (2014) | Yes | NA | 0/99 |
| Summary | 69% (33/48) has an official mental health policy | 27% (6/22) described a physical health component/policy | 5/7439 |
NA not available
aPlan written in Arabic
Physical health components/policies in mental health plans of sub-Saharan African Countries
| Country | Physical health components/policies |
|---|---|
| Burundi | The focus should also be on the physical well-being |
| Ethiopia | Providing physical health care to persons with mental disorders is needed. By integrating mental health services into the primary health care system it is envisioned that those with both physical and mental health related needs will be treated in a seamless and comprehensive manner |
| Ghana | The Mental Health Authority should ensure there is implementation of legislation to protect the mentally ill with regards to employment, accommodation and access to treatment which should include access to physical health care treatment for those who cannot afford to be part of the National Health Insurance Scheme |
| Nigeria | People with mental illness have a higher premature mortality than the general population from physical illness. It is therefore extremely important to ensure adequate physical health care and health promotion to people with mental illness, particularly those being looked after in psychiatric units and hospitals |
| South-Africa | Mental and substance use disorders are closely correlated with physical diseases including both communicable diseases such as HIV and AIDS and non-communicable diseases such as heart disease and cancer. The aim is to implement a routine screening and treatment of physical illness in all consultations for people with mental illness |
| Zambia | Improved access to care and treatment of co-morbid physical conditions is an aim |
Metabolic screening in people with severe mental illness in sub-Saharan Africa
| First author | Country | Design | Participants | Metabolic screening rates patients | Metabolic screening rates controls |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saloojee et al. [ | South-Africa | Cross-sectional | 331 (167♂) outpatients with SMI; 35.2 ± 12.0 years | 0.6% waist circumference | – |
| 3.9% fasting glucose | |||||
| 1.8% fasting lipids (triglycerides, HDL-cholesterol) | |||||
| 99% blood pressure | |||||
| Ludwick and Oosthuizen [ | South-Africa | Cross-sectional | 100 (39♂) community patients with SMI; 42.9 ± 11.1 years | 25.7% weight | 68% weight |
| 0% waist circumference | 86% blood pressure | ||||
| 38.6% blood pressure |
SMI severe mental illness