| Literature DB >> 30386422 |
Jessica Spagnolo1, François Champagne1, Nicole Leduc2, Michèle Rivard2, Myra Piat3, Marc Laporta4, Wahid Melki5, Fatma Charfi6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-specialists' involvement in mental health care is encouraged in the field of global mental health to address the treatment gap caused by mental illness, especially in low- and middle-income countries. While primary care physicians (PCPs) are involved in mental health care in Tunisia, a lower-middle-income country in North Africa, it is unclear to what extent they are prepared and willing to address mental health problems, substance use disorders, and suicide/self-harm. In this context, we aim (1) to report on mental health knowledge, attitudes, and self-efficacy among a sample of PCPs working in the Greater Tunis area, prior to the implementation of a mental health training program developed by the World Health Organization; and (2) to identify what characteristics are associated with these competencies.Entities:
Keywords: Attitudes; Knowledge; Mental health; Physicians; Primary care; Self-efficacy; Tunisia
Year: 2018 PMID: 30386422 PMCID: PMC6203218 DOI: 10.1186/s13033-018-0243-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst ISSN: 1752-4458
Attitudes towards mental illness and the field of mental health (n = 112)
| Favorable answers n (%) | |
|---|---|
| 13. If a person with a mental illness complained of physical symptoms (such as chest pain), I would attribute it to their mental illness (R) | 108 (96.4) |
| 15. I would use the terms “crazy,” “nutter,” “mad,” etc. to describe to colleagues people with a mental illness who I have seen in my work | 101 (90.2) |
| 16. If a colleague told me they had a mental illness, I would still want to work with them | 95 (85.6) |
| 1. I just learn about mental health when I have to, and I would not bother reading additional material on it (R) | 95 (85.6) |
| 2. People with severe mental illness can never recover enough to have a good quality of life (R) | 67 (59.8) |
| 4. If I had a mental illness, I would never admit this to any of my friends because I would fear being treated differently (R) | 58 (51.8) |
| 14. General practitioners should not be expected to complete a thorough assessment for people with psychiatric symptoms because they can be referred to a psychiatrist (R) | 57 (50.9) |
| 10. I feel comfortable talking to a person with mental illness as I do talking to a person with physical illness | 47 (42.0) |
| 7. If I had a mental illness, I would never admit this to my colleagues for fear of being treated differently (R) | 46 (41.8) |
| 5. People with mental illness are dangerous more often than not (R) | 31 (27.7) |
| 12. The public does not need to be protected from people with mental illness | 22 (20.0) |
Eleven questions from the original MICA-4 are reported
For reversed scored items (R), suggested answers tend toward the negative (i.e., ‘strongly disagree’ and ‘disagree’), and these negative categories were collapsed into the single category of ‘favorable answers.’ Contrarily, for items not reversed, suggested answers tend toward the positive (i.e., ‘strongly agree’ and ‘agree’), and these positive categories were collapsed into the single category of ‘favorable answers’
Missing data < 5%
Primary care physicians’ socio-demographic and practice characteristics (n = 112)
| Characteristics | Continuous variables | Categorical variables |
|---|---|---|
| Socio-demographic characteristics | M (SD) | n (%) |
| Age (in years) | 49.0 (5.5) | – |
| Women | – | 90 (80.4) |
| Born in Tunisiab | – | 109 (97.3) |
| Mother tongue, Arabicb | – | 111 (99.1) |
| Medical school in Tunisiab | – | 104 (92.9) |
| Practice characteristics | M (SD) | n (%) |
| Governorate—n (%) | ||
| Tunis | – | 43 (38.4) |
| Ariana | – | 28 (25.0) |
| Manouba | – | 21 (18.8) |
| Ben Arous | – | 20 (17.9) |
| Average number of years working as a PCPc | 17.8 (6.0) | – |
| Hours work/week | 34.1 (5.1) | – |
| Mental health training in the last 12 months (yes) | – | 14 (12.5) |
| Average number of patient consultations/week | 145.3 (57.8) | – |
| Average number of consultations for mental health/week | 17.7 (19.8) | – |
| Average number of consultations for mental health/week: | – | |
| By appointmenta | 3.3 (8.1) | |
| Without appointmenta,d | 14.8 (18.7) | |
| Average number of hours dedicated to mental health care/weeka | 4.5 (3.8) | – |
| % of mental health consultations per week according to diagnosis: types of mental health consultation per week: | ||
| Anxiety | 49.5 (25.5) | – |
| Depression | 33.0 (22.3) | – |
| Alcohol use disorders | 8.8 (14.5) | – |
| Drug use disorders | 6.6 (13.5) | – |
| Psychosis (including schizophrenia) | 5.1 (7.9) | – |
| Suicide/self-harm | 3.7 (7.9) | – |
| % of mental health clientele: | ||
| Referred to specialized carea | 55.6 (30.8) | – |
| Receiving support (ex.: active listening) | 51.8 (36.9) | – |
| Receiving psychoeducation | 40.7 (38.4) | – |
| Receiving pharmacology | 39.6 (36.3) | – |
| Receiving psychotherapy | 18.7 (29.0) | – |
| Average number of follow-up visits/patients with mental health issuesa | 7.1 (8.8) | – |
aMissing values were greater than 5%, but less than 10%
bThe variable is not considered in further analyses given the small number of participants in some groups
cThis variable is not considered in further analyses given the high correlation with the variable ‘age’
dThis variable is not considered in further analyses given the high correlation with the variable ‘average number of consultations for mental health per week’
Incorrect responses to knowledge statements about mental health and illness (n = 112)
| Knowledge of specific mental health conditions and illness manifestation | Incorrect responses: n (%) |
|---|---|
| Depression | |
| Administering antidepressants | 52 (46.4) |
| Depression is always treated with antidepressants | 39 (34.8) |
| Severe chronic depression in a mother and repercussions on children | 20 (17.9) |
| Symptoms of depression | 5 (4.5) |
| Advice for people living with depression | 4 (3.6) |
| Substance use disorders | |
| Symptoms of alcohol use | 84 (75.0) |
| Brief advice to people with alcohol problems is effective | 67 (59.8) |
| Drug use | 62 (55.4) |
| Psychosis | |
| Interventions for people with acute psychosis | 46 (41.1) |
| Symptoms of psychosis | 11 (9.8) |
| Suicide/self-harm | |
| Myths about suicide | 81 (72.3) |
| Best practice after a suicide attempt | 6 (5.4) |
| Manifestation of mental illness | |
| Symptoms of alcohol use | 84 (75.0) |
| Myths about suicide | 81 (72.3) |
| Prevalence of mental illness in youth | 31 (27.7) |
| Severe chronic depression in a mother and repercussions on children | 20 (17.9) |
| Symptoms of psychosis | 11 (9.8) |
| Symptoms of depression | 5 (4.5) |
A total of 112 PCPs completed the questionnaire and there is no missing data. Some items are included in more than one sub-theme. Sub-themes are therefore not mutually exclusive
Self-efficacy in detecting, treating, and managing mental illness in primary care (n = 112)
| Self-efficacy, detection | Agree n (%) |
|---|---|
| I feel confident in my capability to detect: | |
| Problems relating to anxiety | 92 (82.9) |
| Depression | 83 (74.8) |
| Suicide/self-harm | 60 (54.0) |
| Problems relating to alcohol use | 58 (52.8) |
| Problems relating to drug use | 51 (45.9) |
| Psychosis (including schizophrenia) | 41 (37.3) |
| I feel confident in my capability to: | |
| Collect information to detect a mental health problem | 73 (66.4) |
| Explain the diagnosis to patients | 55 (49.1) |
| Diagnose a mental health problem | 43 (38.4) |
| Use tools and techniques to detect a mental health problem | 34 (30.4) |
Missing data < 5%