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Depression in Southern Africa: Lessons from Zimbabwe. Vikram Patel Senior Lecturer, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Sangath Society,Goa, India. The focus. Depression: the commonest mental disorder
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Depression in Southern Africa:Lessons from Zimbabwe Vikram Patel Senior Lecturer, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Sangath Society,Goa, India
The focus • Depression: the commonest mental disorder • Term used synonymous to Common Mental Disorders, i.e. Includes the broad spectrum of depressive and anxiety disorders • Single most important cause of disability amongst mental disorders (Global Burden of Disease Report 1996)
The nature of the evidence Series of research studies conducted since the 1980s with the shared features: • multidisciplinary • intersectoral (academic, health services, NGOs) • locally evolved agenda of priorities • most studies based in Harare city
The authors of the evidence • Melanie Abas, Jeremy Broadhead & colleagues • Tony Reeler & colleagues • Vikram Patel, Charles Todd & colleagues • Sekai Nhiwatiwa
The type of evidence Ethnographic Studies • explanatory models of primary and traditional care attenders • explanatory models of nurses and traditional healers • Shona models of depression
The type of evidence (2) Pathways to Care • Pathways to primary care • Pathways to traditional healers • Pathways to tertiary care
The type of evidence (3) Clinical & Diagnostic Studies • Phenomenology of depression • Development of Shona measures of depression • Comparison of emic and etic models of depression
The type of evidence (4) Epidemiological Studies • Prevalence and risk factors in community, primary care and traditional healer populations • Incidence and outcome in primary care, traditional healer and GP attenders • Life events and depression in women
The type of evidence (5) Special Populations • Motherhood and Post-natal depression • Refugees from Mozambique & survivors of torture
The type of evidence (6) Interventions • Training Program for City of Harare Health Department Nurses • Psychotherapy for survivors of torture
The Lessons Learned • The symptoms of depression are largely universal, but the construct is not • Depression is commonest amongst marginalized populations • Depression has a profound adverse impact on the lives of the sufferers
Lesson#1Many symptoms are Universal... • Somatic presentations typical, e.g. Tiredness, heart-ache and sleep problems • On inquiry, emotional and cognitive symptoms can be elicited • Local idioms common, e.g. Kufungisisa • Some “typical symptoms” e.g. Loss of appetite not specific due to physical causes • Some symptoms culturally explained, e.g. Visual hallucinations at night
..but the construct is not • No Shona term conceptually equivalent for depression • Local models, esp. Kufungisisa, show high concordance with depression • Causal attributions include relationship problems and supernatural causes; not a “mental” disorder
So What? • Case finding measures developed in Western cultures can be used with emphasis on conceptual translation • Include local idioms in research and training programs • The clinical and cultural validity of categorical and “psychiatric” models of depression and anxiety not sustained
Lesson#2The marginalized are vulnerable Women Refugees and torture survivors The poor
Women • Risk in primary care populations twice that for men • @16% of mothers and women living in the community suffer from depression • Severe life events, e.g. Marital crises, violence, bereavement, infertility and unwanted pregnancy common • Support from close family member protective
Survivors of Torture & Trauma • Experience of violence common both as a result of war, civil conflict and crime • Rates of depression high amongst those who had been victims as well as witnesses
The poor • Hunger (due to lack of money) and low income risk factors for depression • Incidence in those who had experienced hunger due to lack of money: 30% vs 12% • Persistence in those whose economic problems had resolved compared to those who had new problems: 31% vs 56%
So What? • Active efforts to remove the myths that depression are a luxury for the marginalized • Integrate mental health into existing health and development activities targeted to the marginalized • Potential strategies for prevention in high-risk groups e.g. the bereaved, women with infertility, for poor (micro-credit)
Lesson#3The profound impact Under-recognition & inappropriate treatment Chronicity & Disability Costs of Illness
Recognition and Treatment • More than 75% of morbidity not diagnosed by health providers, but often recognized • Symptomatic treatments predominate (e.g. Vitamins for tiredness; hypnotics for sleep) • Minimal efforts to link symptoms with psychosocial stressors • Recognition linked to improved outcome in traditional and biomedical health attenders
Chronicity & Disability • In primary and traditional healer attenders, 40% show morbidity at 12 months • In community populations, 30% remain ill at 12 months • Twice the number of days spent out of work or in bed both in cross-sectional and longitudinal studies
Costs of Illness • Multiple consultations with range of health care providers • Traditional healers and private GPs expensive • Disability impairs economic productivity: A cycle of poverty, disability and depression
A Vicious cycle of poverty and mental illness Economic Deprivation: Malnutrition, Low Education, Domestic Violence, Indebtedness etc • Ill-Health • e.g. Depression & Anxiety, • physical ill-health, • Alcohol abuse • Economic Impact • Reduced productivity • Disability • Increased health costs
So What? • Aggressive program to raise diagnostic and management skills in health providers • Greater availability of antidepressants and non-medical counselors in health facilities • Consolidate collaborative linkages between different health sectors (e.g. NGOs, traditional healers, GPs)
Secondary Prevention: Educating Health & Social Welfare Professionals • Depression is a health priority because it is common, chronic, costly and disabling • Patients are already flooding health services: providing care will not increase workload • There are effective treatments for Depression • Depression is a general health problem, not a psychiatric (or specialist) illness
Key Message to health workers Just as we treat other diseases associated with poverty, so too we must treat mental disorders for they are not the “natural” outcome of impoverishment… most poor people are mentally healthy
Implications for Policy • To realize agenda of integrating mental health in primary health, there is limited scope for stand alone or add-on programs • Linkages must be built with other health and social sectors, e.g. Women’s health, Violence prevention, Child Education • Policies aimed at increasing gender equality and poverty alleviation will have a profound effect in improving mental health
Implications for Research • Priorities must be intervention research and linkage research (to date, no trials for depression in primary care from Africa) • Regional research priorities with participatory evolution of agendas • Collaborations with other developing countries which share similar health systems to avoid reinventing the wheel
Shared Health System Characteristics of DCs • History of Psychiatry • Concepts of Mental Illness • Communicable diseases burden • Income and gender inequality • Globalization and economic reform • Medical Pluralism and few specialists • Violence and Political Instability
Outstanding Research Questions • What are the protective factors in those who remain in good mental health, despite stressful circumstances? • What interventions speed recovery from depression?
Full reference list can be obtained from the paper based on this lecture: Patel, V et al (2001) Depression in Developing Countries: Lessons from Zimbabwe. British Medical Journal or from the author on vikpat@goatelecom.com