| Literature DB >> 29423279 |
Davy Vancampfort1,2, Brendon Stubbs3,4, Michel Probst1, James Mugisha5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a need for psychosocial interventions to address the escalating mental health burden in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). Physiotherapists could have a central role in reducing the burden and facilitating recovery within the multidisciplinary care of people with mental health problems. The aim of this systematic review was to explore the role of physiotherapists within the current mental health policies of SSA countries and to explore the current research evidence for physiotherapy to improve functional outcomes in people with mental health problems in SSA.Entities:
Keywords: Mental health services; Physical therapy; Physiotherapy; Sub-Sahara Africa
Year: 2018 PMID: 29423279 PMCID: PMC5787323 DOI: 10.1186/s40945-018-0043-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Physiother ISSN: 2057-0082
Overview of the presence of a mental health policy/plan, whether there was a role for physiotherapists and physiotherapy research results in Sub-Saharan African countries (n = 48)
| Country | Official mental health policy or plan | Role for physiotherapists | PubMed search results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Angola (2011) | Yes | No | 0/10 |
| Benin (2014) | No | / | 0/65 |
| Botswana (2014) | Yes | No | 0/38 |
| Burkina Faso (2014) | Yes | No | 0/25 |
| Burundi (2014) | Yes | No | 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 | 0/37 |
| Comoros (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/5 |
| Congo (2014) | No | / | 0/76 |
| Côte d’Ivoire (2014) | Yes | No | 0/21 |
| Democratic Rep. of the Congo (2011) | Yes | No | 0/36 |
| Djibouti (2014) | No | / | 0/6 |
| Equatorial Guinea (2014) | No | / | 0/0 |
| Eritrea (2011) | No | / | 0/19 |
| Ethiopia (2014) | Yes | No | 0/277 |
| Gabon (2011) | No | / | 0/1 |
| Gambia (2014) | Yes | No | 0/17 |
| Ghana (2014) | Yes | No | 1/127 |
| Guinea (2014) | Yes | NA | 0/3151 |
| Guinea-Bissau (2011) | No | / | 0/0 |
| Kenya (2011) | Yes | No | 0/207 |
| Lesotho (2014) | No | / | 0/7 |
| Liberia (2014) | Yes | No | 0/14 |
| Madagascar (2014) | Yes | No | 0/12 |
| Malawi (2014) | Yes | No | 0/59 |
| Mauritania (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/7 |
| Mauritius (2014) | No | / | 0/16 |
| Mozambique (2014) | Yes | No | 0/13 |
| Namibia (2014) | Yes | Yes | 0/16 |
| Niger (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/94 |
| Nigeria (2014) | Yes | Yes | 5/878 |
| Rwanda (2014) | Yes | No | 1/65 |
| São Tomé and Príncipe (2014) | Yes | NA | 0/0 |
| Senegal (2014) | No | / | 0/50 |
| Seychelles (2014) | No | / | 0/9 |
| Sierra Leone (2014) | Yes | No | 1/16 |
| Somalia (2014) | No | / | 0/54 |
| South-Africa (2014) | Yes | No | 6/1632 |
| South-Sudan (2014) | No | / | 0/7 |
| Sudan (2011) | Yes | Not checkeda | 0/89 |
| Swaziland (2014) | No | / | 0/13 |
| Togo (2014) | Yes | NA | 0/55 |
| Uganda (2014) | Yes | No | 2/294 |
| United Republic of Tanzania (2011) | Yes | NA | 0/123 |
| Zambia (2014) | Yes | No | 0/44 |
| Zimbabwe (2014) | Yes | NA | 0/102 |
| Summary | 69% (33/48) has an official mental health policy | % (2/22) described a role for physiotherapists | 16/7859 |
UN Unknown, NA Not available
aplan written in Arabic
The role of physiotherapists in mental health plans of Sub-Saharan African countries
| Country | Role of physiotherapists |
|---|---|
| Namibia | Physiotherapists should: |
| Nigeria | Physiotherapists are involved in mental health care services, but a specific role was not defined. |
Mental and/or physical health outcomes in physiotherapy related studies in Sub-Saharan Africa
| First author | Country | Design | Participants | Physiotherapy intervention | Mental and/or physical health outcomes* | MQ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aweto 2016 | Nigeria | RCT | 18 (32.1 ± 5.4 years) outpatients with HIV; BMI = 26.1 ± 1.4 vs 15 controls with HIV with care as usual (30.7 ± 5.8 years); 10♂/33 | 6 weeks, 3*week, 30 min moderate intensity aerobic exercise on a cycle ergometer provided by a physiotherapist | The Beck Depression Index score only reduced significantly in the exercise group [10.3 ± 6.5 vs.3.5 ± 1.3;P < 0.001] | |
| Balchin 2016 | South-Africa | RCT | 30♂ moderately depressed; mean age = 25.4 years, mean BMI = 26.9 | 6 weeks, 3*week, 60 min high vs moderate vs low intensity aerobic exercise; providers unknown | The HAM-D (15.9 ± 1.8 vs. 5.7 ± 5.8 and 16.4 ± 1.4 vs. 6.6 ± 5.0 vs. 17.1 ± 1.2 vs. 11.8 ± 3.9, respectively) and MADRS 12.7 ± 4.0 vs. 7.0 ± 6.7 and 14.4 ± 4.3 vs. 9.0 ± 6.7 vs. 18.8 ± 6.4 vs. 15.0 ± 5.2, respectively) only reduced significantly in the high and moderate intensity aerobic exercise | + |
| Maharaj 2011 | South-Africa | RCT | 26 (16♂) (19–58 years) outpatients on antiviral therapy vs 26 (18♂) (22–51 years) | weekly aerobic exercise on cycle ergometer (2*10 min) and treadmill (2*10 min) at 50–70% of the age predicted maximum heart rate for 3 months | Significant improvements in all SF-36 domains ( | + |
| Mutimura 2008 | Rwanda | RCT | 50 (20♂) (37.5 ± 6.9 years) outpatients with HIV; 88% employed; BMI = 24.4 ± 2.7; 20% smoking vs 50 (20♂) controls with HIV with care as usual (37.8 ± 5.5 years) | 26 weeks, 3*week, 90 min moderate intensity aerobic and resistance training; providers unknown | At 6 months, scores on psychological quality of life [1.3 ± 0.3 vs. 0.5 ± 0.1; | |
| Harris 2007 | Sierra Leone | Qualitative | Three studies: [ | 9 to 16 weekly sessions of dance movement therapy with body awareness exercises within psychotherapy | Reduction in self-reported post-traumatic stress symptoms (avoidance and arousal), anxiety and depression | NA |
RCT Randomized controlled trial, HAM-D Hamilton depression score, MADRS Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale, SF-36 Health Related Quality of Life Short Form – 36. MQ Methodological quality: risk of bias was assessed on random sequence generation, allocation concealment, blinding of participants, blinding of those delivering the intervention, blinding of outcome assessors, incomplete data outcome, selective reporting or others. Studies presenting adequate allocation concealment and complete presentation of outcome data (intention-to-treat analysis) and blinding outcome assessors are considered studies with low risk of bias (high quality trials, coded with “+”); NA = not applicable (no RCT)