310 likes | 465 Views
WOMEN, SUICIDE AND CULTURE IN TAJIKISTAN: IDENTIFYING AND ADDRESSING CORRELATED FACTORS. Presented at: American Public Health Association 133d Annual Meeting Philadelphia, Pennsylvania December 10-14, 2005. Alisher Latypov, MA, MHS Country Program Director Global Program on Psychiatry
E N D
WOMEN, SUICIDE AND CULTURE IN TAJIKISTAN: IDENTIFYING AND ADDRESSING CORRELATED FACTORS Presented at: American Public Health Association 133d Annual Meeting Philadelphia, Pennsylvania December 10-14, 2005
Alisher Latypov, MA, MHS Country Program Director Global Program on Psychiatry Tajikistan alytypov@gip-global.org Irene Jillson, Ph.D. Adjunct Assistant Professor Georgetown University School of Nursing and Health Studies Washington, D.C. iaj@georgetown.edu
RepublicofTajikistan Khojent Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan SOGD REGION Dushanbe Uzbekistan China GORNO-BADAKHSHAN Kurgan-Tube HATLON REGION Khorog Afghanistan Afghanistan
STUDY RESEARCHERS, LOCATION, AND TIMING • Study conducted • voluntarily by Dr. Alisher Lytypov and Dr. Irene Jillson • in Dushanbe, Tajikistan and surrounding rural areas • in 2004
STUDY PURPOSE • Long-range: to design cost-effective, community-based prevention approaches • Short-term: • To explore the reasons for suicide generally and self-immolation specifically among women in Tajikistan • To explore use of a qualitative approach to exploring this sensitive topic in Tajikistan
STUDY METHODS Qualitative, including • Semi-structured interviews conducted with • 6 health providers at a major burn treatment facility in Dushanbe • 15 women attending a health clinic in Dushanbe • Review of available policy and other documents
"Every month, about 30 women are taken to a Dushanbe hospital with severe burns from such suicide attempts." (Shabad, 1998) • “47 people killed themselves in the Sogd region in the first 6 months of 2003…” • “The average age of suicides is falling, with most victims typically between 14 and 26 years of age, and women account for the vast majority; many of them are cases of self-immolation.” (Zokirova, 2003)
RESPONSES FROM HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS AT THE REPUBLICAN BURN CENTER
REPORTED ATTEMPTED CASES IN RECENT PAST Women attempting suicide presenting to the Dushanbe Burn Center in Dushanbe: • 45 cases in 2001 • 60 cases in 2002 • 48 cases in 2003 • between 15 and 20 cases during the first 5 months of 2004
RESPONSE OF HEALTH CARE SYSTEM • Few mental health services at any level • Few mental health providers • Minimal training of physicians and nurses to respond to attempted suicides in villages • Minimal prevention services
PROFILE OF DOCUMENTED CASES OF ATTEMPTED SUICIDE • Age • between 16 and mid-30s • Education • 8 attended or completed university education • 5 completed 8th grade or less • 2 completed high school • Rural and urban residents
METHODS OF ATTEMPTED SUICIDE Significant differences by rural/urban areas: • Rural: self-immolation and drowning • Urban: gas, overdosing on medications
IN THEIR OWN WORDS: TAJIK WOMEN’S EXPERIENCE WITH ATTEMPTED SUICIDE
PERSONAL EXPERIENCE WITH SUICIDE • All of the respondents have either attempted suicide or have had suicidal thoughts • All of the respondents • personally know at least one woman who has committed suicide and several know more than one; • live in a community in which at least one woman has committed suicide; for several, more than one woman has done so
PERCEPTION OF REASONS THAT WOMEN COMMIT SUICIDE • Domestic violence, polygamy • Financial problems/unemployment of husbands • Problems with mother-in-law/sister(s)-in-law • Adultery (cheating)
PERCEPTION OF REASONS THAT WOMEN COMMIT SUICIDE • Alcohol abuse • Mental disorders • Among young girls, when their boyfriend has sex with them, promising to marry, but does not keep his word • “copycatting” other women’s example (social learning)* *Identified by providers at Burn Center
PERCEPTION OF REASONS THAT WOMEN COMMIT SUICIDE • General Feelings Of Unhappiness and lack of resources/services for care • most women • do nothing, • use “self-care” (e.g., listening to music, talking with friends), or • go to a local healer • none had been to a trained “modern” health provider.
REASONS FOR SUICIDE OF FRIEND/COMMUNITY MEMBERS • Marital discord/problems/arranged marriage • the husband had married “a second wife” • friend had epilepsy; when she was 15 her parents arranged her marriage to a relative
REASONS FOR SUICIDE OF FRIEND/COMMUNITY MEMBERS • Economic situation/family problems • A woman in the village committed suicide because there was no money to buy food, her husband migrated to Russia to find a job, but he married another woman there and was not sending money back home to Tajikistan. • Social strictures • One of the respondent’s best friends committed suicide, leaving a note saying that she did it because her family was too strict with her.
HOPE FOR THE FUTURE • Most respondents said that they did not know about the future. • Those who commented on the future were negative in terms of both their own future and that of women in Tajikistan generally
PROPOSED APPROACHES TO SUICIDE PREVENTION IN LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
Developing/adapting brief screening instruments (ensuring language and cultural relevance) • Developing/adapting practical, evidence-based approaches to treatment of mental health disorders
Training community health workers, primary care physicians and nurses in detection and screening and early intervention techniques • Certifying competency of providers to address needs of both genders and all ages
Collecting data to ensure national-level awareness of problem and serve as basis for policy formulation • Ensuring systems in place to protect confidentiality of women seeking prevention/treatment
Integrating mental health/suicide prevention and care with primary care • Creating a network of community-based mental health services, assuring availability of quality (and safe) services at all levels • Convening community-based groups to discuss contributing factors in the community that can be addressed at the community, regional and national level
PROPOSED APPROACHES TO EVALUATING SUICIDE PREVENTION TO ELICIT CULTURALLY APPROPRIATE, EVIDENCE- BASED PRACTICE
Use of mixed method, participatory evaluation • Develop/adapt language and culturally-appropriate semi-structured instrument to assess services relevant to • suicide prevention, and • treatment of those who have attempted suicide
Develop standard protocol to conduct • ethnographic interviews • gatherings of women (focus groups) • contextual analysis of immediate and surrounding community(ies) • Training and engagement of community health workers to conduct interviews
Engage health and social service decision-makers, providers and community members in evaluation process • Develop process for use of data/information in • planning for health and social services • addressing socio-economic issues that are co-factors in the suicide epidemic