| Literature DB >> 35078503 |
Stella Mokitimi1,2, Marguerite Schneider3, Petrus J de Vries4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Even though child and adolescent mental health is a global health priority, services are very limited, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), and therefore need comprehensive strengthening. This requires knowledge of the hardware elements of the system (human resources, financing, medicines, technology, organisational structure, service infrastructure, and information systems). This study sought to examine these elements of child and adolescent mental health (CAMH) services and systems in the Western Cape Province of South Africa.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Child; LMIC; Low- and middle-income countries; Mental health; Services; Situational analysis; South Africa; Western Cape
Year: 2022 PMID: 35078503 PMCID: PMC8787885 DOI: 10.1186/s13034-022-00440-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health ISSN: 1753-2000 Impact factor: 3.033
Fig. 1Map of the Western Cape Province showing the metropolitan area (the City of Cape Town and its substructures) and rural health districts. Urban areas are indicated in green; rural areas are indicated in blue. The figure also shows the location of regional hospitals and specialist CAMH units
Population distribution by Western Cape district in 2016 [11]
| 2016 Community Survey | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| General population | Children, adolescents and young adults | |||||
| 0–14 years | 15–34 years* | |||||
| District/municipality | N | % | N | % | N | % |
| West Coast | 436,403 | 6.9 | 113,113 | 25.9 | 153,472 | 35.2 |
| Cape Winelands | 866,001 | 13.8 | 230,708 | 26.6 | 316,210 | 36.5 |
| Overberg | 286,786 | 4.6 | 74,764 | 26.1 | 94,453 | 32.9 |
| Eden | 611,278 | 9.7 | 155,008 | 25.4 | 207,010 | 33.9 |
| Central Karoo | 74,247 | 1.2 | 18,862 | 25.4 | 27,936 | 37.6 |
| City of Cape Town | 4,005,016 | 63.8 | 1,042,259 | 26.0 | 1,331,960 | 33.3 |
| Total | 6,279,730 | 100.0 | 1,521,601 | 24.23 | 1,977,569 | 39.49 |
*The Census data did not provide any disaggregation between adolescents and younger adults in the 15–34-year age groups
Variables of interest adapted from the WHO-AIMS version 2.2 (Brief version) for this situational analysis [14]
| WHO-AIMS Domains | Western Cape provincial data collected |
|---|---|
| 1. Policy and legislative framework | 1.1 CAMH policies, plans, and legislations (B1, B3, B4) 1.2 Human rights legislation relevant to children and adolescents (B5) 1.3 Financing: Expenditure on CAMH by the provincial DoH (B6) |
| 2. Clinical services for children and adolescents with mental health disorders | 2.1 Existence and functions of a regional CAMH authority (B9) 2.2 Organisation of CAMH services in terms of catchment areas (B10) 2.3 Outpatient services: Availability of CAMH outpatient facilities, and number/proportion of children and adolescents treated for mental health problems through outpatient facilities at primary, secondary and tertiary levels of care (B11, B12, B13) 2.4 Inpatient services: Availability of CAMH inpatient facilities, and number/proportion of children and adolescents treated (B15, B16, B17) 2.5 Availability of CAMH day patient facilities, community residential facilities, forensic facilities, or CAMH hospitals (B14, B18, B19, B25) 2.6 Interventions (medications): Psychotropic medicines appropriate for children and adolescents included on the essential medicines list; free access to essential psychotropic medicines, and availability of medicines in outpatient and inpatient settings at secondary and tertiary levels of care (B2, B8, B28, B29) 2.7 Interventions (psychosocial): Access to psychosocial interventions in outpatient and inpatient settings at secondary and tertiary levels of care (B26, B27) |
| 3. CAMH in primary healthcare | 3.1 Refresher training in CAMH provided to PHC doctors, nurses or other staff and interaction of PHC with specialist CAMHS (B31–B35) 3.2 Availability of medicines and psychosocial interventions in PHC facilities (B27, B33) |
| 4. Human resources | 4.1 Human resources in CAMHS (B38–B41) |
| 5. Public education and links with other sectors | 5.1 Public education and awareness campaigns about CAMH (B47) |
| 6. Monitoring and research | 6.1 Monitoring CAMH (B52, B53) 6.2 Research in CAMH (B54) |
CAMH = child and adolescent mental health; B items listed in brackets e.g. (B1) refer to items as listed in the WHO-AIMS Brief Version
Data sources for the situational analysis
| Data Source Number (DSN) | Data source | Website link | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| DSN01 | Policy guidelines. Child and Adolescent Mental Health, 2003 | [ | |
| DSN02 | Healthcare 2030. The Road to Wellness, Western Cape Department of Health | [ | |
| DSN03 | Mental Health Act no.17 of 2002. National Department of Justice | [ | |
| DSN04 | Child Care Act 74 of 1983, National Department of Social Development | [ | |
| DSN05 | Western Cape Provincial Deputy Director for Mental Health and Substance Abuse | Interview on 9 February 2017 (data available from the author) | [ |
| DSN06 | Provincial Mental Health Directory, Department of Health, 2015 | [ | |
| DSN07 | Budget 2016 Summary, Western Cape Department of Health | [ | |
| DSN08 | Budget Overview of Provincial Revenue and Expenditure 2016, Treasury of the Western Cape Government | [ | |
| DSN09 | Budget Estimates of Provincial Revenue and Expenditure 2016, Treasury of the Western Cape Government | [ | |
| DSN10 | Mental Health Services in the Western Cape, Western Cape Department of Health | [ | |
| DSN11 | Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (DCAP), Western Cape Department of Health | [ | |
| DSN12 | Mental Health Hospital Services, Western Cape Department of Health | [ | |
| DSN13 | Catchment Areas for Tertiary Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Units in the Western Cape | Data provided by the Head of Clinical Unit, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (12 March 2020) (data available from the author) | [ |
| DSN14 | Western Cape Mental Health Data and Facilities List 2016, Western Cape Department of Health | Mental Health provincial information system. The information is not publicly available but was provided by the Provincial Data Management Office for the purposes of this study (data available from the author) | [ |
| DSN15 | Tygerberg Hospital Annual Report 2016, Western Cape Department of Health | [ | |
| DSN16 | Court Diversion in the Western Cape Province | [ | |
| DSN17 | Standard treatment guidelines and essential medicines list for South Africa. Hospital level paediatrics, 2017 edition | [ | |
| DSN18 | First 1,000 Days Campaign, Western Cape Government | [ | |
| DSN19 | 2016 Annual Report, Salesian Life Choices | [ | |
| DSN20 | How to handle bullying, Western Cape Education Department | [ | |
| DSN21 | 16 Days of Activism for no violence against women and children, Western Cape Department of Social Development | [ | |
| DSN22 | Web of Science (version 5.34) data search, April 2020 | (articles added in the reference list) | [ |
Western Cape provincial budget for 2016/17 [22–24]
| Total health budget in South African Rand | Primary and secondary level | Tertiary level | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| District Health Services | Provincial Hospital Services | Central Hospital Services | ||
R19.983 billion (US$1.307 billion) | R7.826 billion (US $511.140 million) (39.2%) | R3.199 billion (US$ 208.849 million) (16%) | R5.697 billion (US$371.82 million) (28.5%) | |
R2.610 billion (US $170.427 million) (13.1%) | R589 million (US$38.505million) (2.9%) | |||
R = South African Rand; At the time of submission (Aug 2020), R1 was equivalent to US$0.058
Catchment areas for specialist child and adolescent mental health services [28]
| Specialist CAMH unit | Metropolitan (urban) | Rural | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metro catchment area | District hospitals | Rural catchment area | Regional hospital | |
| Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (DCAP) | Southern Western Portion of Klipfontein | New Somerset Hospital Victoria Hospital False Bay Hospital Groote Schuur Hospital Red Cross District Service | Eden | George Hospital |
| Tygerberg Child and Adolescent Psychiatry team | Northern Tygerberg Portion of Eastern | Karl Bremer Hospital Eerste River Hospital Tygerberg Hospital district service | Portion of Cape Winelands West Coast | Paarl Hospital |
| Lentegeur Child and Family Unit (CFU) | Khayelitsha Mitchell’s Plain Portion of Eastern Portion of Klipfontein | Khayelitsha Hospital Mitchell’s Plain Hospital Helderberg Hospital | Overberg Central Karoo Portion of Cape Winelands | Worcester Hospital |
The number and proportion of children and adolescents seen in 2016 in primary healthcare (level 1) outpatient settings for mental health problems in the Western Cape [29]
| Geographic service areas | Age distribution | Total (% children) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| > 18 years | < 18 years | ||
| City of Cape Town | 131,836 | 6330 | 138,166 (4.58%) |
| Cape Winelands District | 16,986 | 609 | 17,595 (3.46%) |
| Central Karoo District | 3066 | 49 | 3115 (1.57%) |
| Eden District | 16,347 | 850 | 17,197 (4.94%) |
| West Coast District | 11,834 | 462 | 12,296 (3.76%) |
| Total | 180,069 | 8300 | 188,369 (4.4%) |
The number and proportion of children and adolescents seen in 2016 in secondary care (level 2) outpatient settings for mental health problems in the Western Cape [29]
| Geographic service area | Age distribution | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| > 18 years | < 18 years | Total (% children) | |
| City of Cape Town | 10,242 | 561 | 10,803 (5.19%) |
| Cape Winelands District | 1083 | 132 | 1215 (12.19%) |
| Central Karoo District | 162 | 29 | 191 (15.18%) |
| Eden District | 2064 | 248 | 2312 (10.73%) |
| West Coast District | 1059 | 175 | 1234 (14.18%) |
| Total | 14,610 | 1145 | 15,755 (7.27%) |
Fig. 2Number and sex of children and adolescents treated as outpatients in the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Cape Town in 2016
Fig. 3Self-declared ethnicity of children and adolescents treated as outpatients in the Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Cape Town in 2016
Children and adolescents with mental health problems admitted to secondary care (level 2) inpatient facilities per geographic service area in the Western Cape [29]
| Geographic service area | Age distribution | Total (% children) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| > 18 years | < 18 years | ||
| City of Cape Town | 13,824 | 473 | 14,297 (3.31%) |
| Cape Winelands District | 1339 | 105 | 1444 (7.27%) |
| Central Karoo District | 131 | 14 | 145 (9.66%) |
| Eden District | 889 | 82 | 971 (8.44%) |
| Overberg District | 487 | 42 | 529 (7.93%) |
| West Coast District | 795 | 79 | 874 (9.03%) |
| Total | 17,465 | 795 | 18,260 (4.35%) |
Fig. 4Profile of mental health services staff in the Western Cape in 2016
Fig. 5Profile of mental health services staff in specialist child and adolescent mental health units in the Western Cape in 2016
Publications of research relevant to child and adolescent mental health that included authors from the Western Cape or a focus on the Western Cape in 2016
| Research theme | Topic of research | Reference (First author, journal, volume: pages) |
|---|---|---|
| Infant Mental Health | Infant mental health and early childhood [ | Worthman, |
| Reflective practice in infant mental health [ | Berg, | |
| Autism and ADHD | Autism in Africa [ | de Vries, |
| Performance of South African children on the CSBS, a tool for autism [ | Chambers, | |
| Theory of mind in autism [ | Hamilton, | |
| Management of ADHD in children and adolescents: clinical audit of ADHD assessment and treatment [ | Vrba, | |
| HIV/AIDS | HIV-associated neurocognitive disorders in 6–16-year olds [ | Hoare, |
| The impact of household HIV on child development [ | Sherr, | |
| Mental health resilience in children who lost parents to HIV/AIDS [ | Collishaw, | |
| Social support for children affected by HIV/AIDS [ | Sharer, | |
| Resilience in HIV-affected adolescents in South Africa [ | Bhana, | |
| Correlates of emotional and behavioural problems in children with perinatally-acquired HIV [ | Louw, | |
| Adolescent Mental Health | Mental health inequalities in adolescents [ | Das-Munshi, |
| Adolescent substance abuse [ | Weybright, | |
| Impact of family structure on adolescent psychological profile [ | Davids, | |
| Social protection and adolescent health [ | Cluver, | |
| Parenting programme to prevent abuse of adolescents [ | Cluver, | |
| Reducing adolescent abuse in LMIC [ | Cluver, | |
| Factors associated with readmission of adolescents discharged from inpatient units [ | Pieterse, | |
| Tuberous Sclerosis Complex (TSC) | Clinical trial of everolimus for epilepsy in TSC [ | French, |
| Everolimus for neurocognitive problems in TSC [ | Randell, | |
| Long-Term use of everolimus for SEGA in TSC [ | Franz, | |
| Towards an improved understanding of TSC-Associated Neuropsychiatric Disorders [ | Leclezio, | |
| Everolimus for renal angiomyolipomas in TSC [ | Bissler, | |
| Other themes | Fatal child abuse [ | Mathews, |
| Theory of mind in children with FASD [ | Lindinger, | |
| Cultural adaptation of the DISC-IV for Sotho-speaking South Africans [ | Skinner, |
Health system gaps in child and adolescent mental health in the Western Cape as identified in this situational analysis
| WHO-AIMS Domain | Gaps in CAMHS |
|---|---|
Policy and legislative framework | • No provincial CAMH policy or implementation plans • No dedicated financing for CAMH |
Clinical services for children and adolescents with mental health disorders | • No dedicated leadership and governance structure for CAMH • No dedicated CAMH services and lack of psychosocial interventions at secondary level • No specialist CAMH services in rural districts |
CAMH in primary healthcare | • Inadequate documentation on training of professionals on CAMHS at primary care level • Lack of dedicated resources at secondary and tertiary care levels to support and train colleagues at primary level, particularly in rural districts • Lack of psychosocial interventions at primary care level |
Human resources | • Limited information systems to access human resources data on CAMH • Limited human resources for CAMH at secondary and tertiary care levels |
Public education and links with other sectors | • Limited public health campaigns on CAMH • Limited intersectoral collaboration about CAMH |
Monitoring and research | • Lack of disaggregated and accessible information systems for CAMH |