The Child Mental Health Treatment Gap in an Urban Low-Income Setting: Multisectoral Service Use and Correlates

被引:5
|
作者
Duarte, Cristiane S. [1 ]
Lovero, Kathryn L. [1 ]
Sourander, Andre [1 ,2 ]
Ribeiro, Wagner S. [3 ]
Bordin, Isabel A. S. [4 ]
机构
[1] Columbia Univ, Dept Psychiat, New York State Psychiat Inst, New York, NY 10027 USA
[2] London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Care Policy & Evaluat Ctr, London, England
[3] Univ Turku, Dept Child Psychiat, Turku, Finland
[4] Univ Fed Sao Paulo, Dept Psychiat, Sao Paulo, Brazil
关键词
FAMILY FACTORS; YOUNG-PEOPLE; PRIMARY-CARE; ADOLESCENTS; DISORDERS; PREVALENCE; BEHAVIOR; IMPROVE; BURDEN; LATINO;
D O I
10.1176/appi.ps.202000742
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: To efficiently target capacity-building efforts for child mental health services in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), it is critical to define how care is structured across sectors and individual-level factors. Methods: In a community-based sample of 1,408 children and adolescents (ages 6-15 years) from Itaborai, Brazil, the authors assessed need and service use across four care systems (mental health specialty, health, welfare, and informal). Individual-level factors included child gender and age, maternal perception of child mental health need, paternal absence, maternal education, and maternal anxiety and depression. Results: The mental health treatment gap was 88%, with only 12% of children with psychiatric problems using mental health services. Children with mental health problems were more likely than those without these problems to use health and other sectors of care and to use services in more than one sector of care. Overall, 46% of the children with any clinical mental health problems and 31% of those with only internalizing problems were identified by their mothers as having a mental health need. Among those with clinical mental health problems, factors associated with mental health service use were being a boy and paternal absence but not mental health problem type or maternal awareness. Conclusions: Closing the child mental health treatment gap in urban settings in LMICs where resources are scarce will likely require system-level changes, such as engagement of diverse service sectors of care. Interventions need to target increased maternal awareness about mental health problems and encourage provision of mental health services to girls.
引用
收藏
页码:32 / 38
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Treatment of Depression in a Low-Income Primary Care Setting With Colocated Mental Health Care
    Uebelacker, Lisa A.
    Smith, Marcia
    Lewis, Angelique W.
    Sasaki, Ryan
    Miller, Ivan W.
    FAMILIES SYSTEMS & HEALTH, 2009, 27 (02) : 161 - 171
  • [2] Improving Adherence to Mental Health Treatment in a Low-Income Clinic
    Gandy, Janice
    Sawin, Erika Metzler
    Zook, Sharon
    Eggert, Lynne
    SAGE OPEN, 2019, 9 (02):
  • [3] Demographic and economic predictors of mental health problems and contact with treatment resources among adults in a low-income primary care setting
    Wray, Tyler B.
    Dvorak, Rob D.
    Martin, Sheila L.
    PSYCHOLOGY HEALTH & MEDICINE, 2013, 18 (02) : 213 - 222
  • [4] Closing the Mental Health Gap in Low-income Settings by Building Research Capacity: Perspectives from Mozambique
    Sweetland, Annika C.
    Oquendo, Maria A.
    Sidat, Mohsin
    Santos, Palmira F.
    Vermund, Sten H.
    Duarte, Cristiane S.
    Arbuckle, Melissa
    Wainberg, Milton L.
    ANNALS OF GLOBAL HEALTH, 2014, 80 (02): : 126 - 133
  • [5] A pediatric asthma management program in a low-income setting resulting in reduced use of health service for acute asthma
    Andrade, W. C. C.
    Camargos, P.
    Lasmar, L.
    Bousquet, J.
    ALLERGY, 2010, 65 (11) : 1472 - 1477
  • [6] Maternal mental health, and child growth and development, in four low-income and middle-income countries
    Bennett, Ian M.
    Schott, Whitney
    Krutikova, Sofya
    Behrman, Jere R.
    JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY AND COMMUNITY HEALTH, 2016, 70 (02) : 168 - 173
  • [7] Correlates of Mental Health Service Use and Type Among Asian Americans
    Ihara, Emily S.
    Chae, David H.
    Cummings, Janet R.
    Lee, Sunmin
    ADMINISTRATION AND POLICY IN MENTAL HEALTH AND MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES RESEARCH, 2014, 41 (04) : 543 - 551
  • [8] Perinatal mental health in low-income urban and rural patients: The importance of screening for comorbidities
    Craemer, Katherine A.
    Garland, Caitlin E.
    Sayah, Lauren
    Duffecy, Jennifer
    Geller, Stacie E.
    Maki, Pauline M.
    GENERAL HOSPITAL PSYCHIATRY, 2023, 83 : 130 - 139
  • [9] PERCEIVED RACIAL DISCRIMINATION AND MENTAL HEALTH IN LOW-INCOME, URBAN-DWELLING WHITES
    Bower, Kelly M.
    Thorpe, Roland J., Jr.
    LaVeist, Thomas A.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEALTH SERVICES, 2013, 43 (02): : 267 - 280
  • [10] Global Mental Health 4 Scale up of services for mental health in low-income and middle-income countries
    Eaton, Julian
    McCay, Layla
    Semrau, Maya
    Chatterjee, Sudipto
    Baingana, Florence
    Araya, Ricardo
    Ntulo, Christina
    Thornicroft, Graham
    Saxena, Shekhar
    LANCET, 2011, 378 (9802) : 1592 - 1603