| Literature DB >> 30083225 |
Liana E Chase1, Kedar Marahatta2, Kripa Sidgel3, Sujan Shrestha3, Kamal Gautam4, Nagendra P Luitel4, Bhogendra Raj Dotel5, Reuben Samuel2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organization's 'building back better' approach advocates capitalizing on the resources and political will elicited by disasters to strengthen national mental health systems. This study explores the contributions of the response to the 2015 earthquake in Nepal to sustainable mental health system reform.Entities:
Keywords: Building back better; Disaster; Earthquake; Intervention; Mental health and psychosocial support; Mental health systems; Nepal; Sustainability
Year: 2018 PMID: 30083225 PMCID: PMC6071401 DOI: 10.1186/s13033-018-0221-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst ISSN: 1752-4458
Overview of documents reviewed
| Document characteristics | Number of documentsa |
|---|---|
|
| |
| MHPSS.net | 141 |
| Humanitarianresponse.info | 26 |
| Response coordinator | 1 |
|
| |
| Situation report | 42 |
| MHPSS intervention tool | 16 |
| Cluster/working group meeting minutes and updates | 24 |
| Resource list | 6 |
| Report on response activities | 10 |
| 4W or 5W mastersheetb | 3 |
| Screening tool | 4 |
| Research report/article | 24 |
| Disaster response guidelines/reference document (not specific to MHPSS) | 16 |
| MHPSS response guidelines/reference document | 21 |
| Other | 2 |
|
| |
| Nepali | 7 |
| English | 155 |
| Nepali and English | 5 |
| Other | 1 |
|
| |
| Has been adapted for or is specific to use in Nepali context | 124 |
| Contains information about response activities | 47 |
aAfter manually excluding duplicates
bSpreadsheet integrating information from all 5W (4W in earlier versions) forms submitted to subcluster coordinators
Stakeholders in post-earthquake MHPSS response
| Stakeholder type | Number identified |
|---|---|
| National NGO | 22 |
| International NGO | 20 |
| UN body | 7 |
| Hospital | 4 |
| Independent practitioner | 1 |
| Other | 2 |
| Total | 56 |
NB: A ‘stakeholder’ was defined as any organization that reported funding and/or implementing one or more post-earthquake MHPSS response activities
MHPSS response activity outcomes of three most active mental health organizations
| Activity type | Activity | Beneficiaries |
|---|---|---|
| Direct service provision | Psychological first aid (PFA) | 66,175 |
| Psychosocial Counselling or Supporta | 69,987 | |
| Psychiatric treatment | 363 | |
| Mental health services from trained primary health providerb | 3655 | |
| Total | 140,180 | |
| Capacity building | Training on providing psychological first aid | 2098 |
| New community psychosocial workersc | 741 | |
| New psychosocial counsellorsd | 56 | |
| Supplementary Training for Psychosocial Counsellors | 66 | |
| Primary Health Care Providers (Prescribers) Trainede | 642 | |
| Primary Health Care Providers (Non-Prescribers) Trainede | 348 | |
| Female Community Health Volunteers and Auxiliary Nurse Midwivesf | 2285 | |
| Total | 6236 | |
| Awareness raising | Trainings/orientations for frontline workers and community leadersg | 7018 |
| Psychoeducation/orientation for general community membersh | 131,701 | |
| Total | 138,719 | |
| All activities | Total | 285,135 |
aIncludes individual, family, and group counselling and psychosocial support provided by psychosocial counsellors, community psychosocial workers, and other facilitators who had received training comparable to or longer than that of community psychosocial workers
bRefers to number of people who received consultation, assessment, and management as needed for mental health problems from primary care workers trained in mental health (see ‘Capacity building’); data reported by only one organization for four districts in which it was working
cTrainings ranged from 3 days (with follow-up module) to 20 days
dThis is generally a 6-month course, with some variation in ratio of practical to theoretical content
eTraining was based on mhGAP Humanitarian Intervention Guide (HIG) with some additional modules on psychosocial care
fTrainings of several days focused on identification and referral and basic psychosocial support skills
gIncludes trainings and orientations targeting teachers, traditional healers, frontline workers, police, local politicians, social mobilisers, protection actors, and various other health workers and community leaders
hIncludes participants at community meetings and orientations and individuals who were directly provided psychoeducational paper materials
Pre- and post-earthquake developments in MHPSS system building
| Health system building block | Pre-earthquake developments | Post-earthquake developments | Contribution of the post-earthquake MHSS response: representative quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Governance | • National mental health policy endorsed (1997) | • Revised mental health policy drafted by MOH; endorsement by cabinet pending |
|
| Financing | • Government funding for mental health mainly limited to one state psychiatric institution | • Government allocated a separate budget for mental health for the first time, which will cover implementation of the Community Mental Health Care Package in seven additional districts |
|
| Human resources | • Limited training on mental health in government health education system | • Primary health care workers in public system in 14 affected districts trained using mhGAP |
|
| Psychotropic drugs | • 6c psychotropic drugs on the government list of freely available essential drugs | • 12c psychotropic drugs on free drugs list to be provided free of cost in districts where service providers have been trained on assessment and management of mental disorders |
|
| Information and research | • PFA and Inter-Agency Standing Committee (IASC) guidelines had been translated in Nepali | • Consolidation of information/research available before the earthquakes |
|
| Service delivery | • Community mental health model/training curricula existed | • Translation and adaptation of mhGAP version 2 under PHCRD and design of training manual for medical officers and health assistants under National Health Training Centrea |
|
aThese developments were not explicitly mentioned in focus group but were added subsequently by authors of this article who were present at the focus group and directly contributed to these initiatives
bmhGAP had been integrated into the government system in one district (Chitwan) prior to the earthquakes [26–28]
cThis list includes two forms of the same drug, Diazepam (injection and tablet), so some stakeholders considered the total number of psychotropic drugs on this list to be 5 and 11 before and after the earthquake, respectively