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Journal ArticleDOI

Collaboration between traditional practitioners and primary health care staff in South Africa: developing a workable partnership for community mental health services.

TLDR
Perceptions of service users and providers of current interactions between the two systems of care and ways in which collaboration could be improved in the provision of community mental health services are explored.
Abstract
The majority of the black African population in South Africa utilize both traditional and public sector Western systems of healing for mental health care. There is a need to develop models of collaboration that promote a workable relationship between the two healing systems. The aim of this study was to explore perceptions of service users and providers of current interactions between the two systems of care and ways in which collaboration could be improved in the provision of community mental health services. Qualitative individual and focus group interviews were conducted with key health care providers and service users in one typical rural South African health sub-district. The majority of service users held traditional explanatory models of illness and used dual systems of care, with shifting between treatment modalities reportedly causing problems with treatment adherence. Traditional healers expressed a lack of appreciation from Western health care practitioners but were open to training in Western biomedical approaches and establishing a collaborative relationship in the interests of improving patient care. Western biomedically trained practitioners were less interested in such an arrangement. Interventions to acquaint traditional practitioners with Western approaches to the treatment of mental illness, orientation of Western practitioners towards a culture-centred approach to mental health care, as well as the establishment of fora to facilitate the negotiation of respectful collaborative relationships between the two systems of healing are required at district level to promote an equitable collaboration in the interests of improved patient care.

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Citations
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TL;DR: An overview of the key issues facing those who are in a position to influence the planning and provision of mental health systems, and who need to address questions of which staff, services and sectors to invest in, and for which patients, is given.
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Traditional, complementary and alternative medicine use in Sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review

TL;DR: TCAM use in SSA is significant, although most studies emerge from a few countries, but further research may be required to further elucidate challenges and opportunities related to TCAM use specific to SSA.
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Cultural Diversity and Mental Health: Considerations for Policy and Practice

TL;DR: This paper will excavate some of the key considerations that lie at the intersection of cultural diversity and mental health with a view to raising possible ways in which mental health systems and professionals can engage across cultures more equitably and sustainably.
References
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Book ChapterDOI

Qualitative data analysis for applied policy research

Jane Ritchie, +1 more
TL;DR: The last two decades have seen a notable growth in the use of qualitative methods for applied social policy research as discussed by the authors, which is underpinned by the persistent requirement in social policy fields to understand complex behaviours, needs, systems and cultures.
BookDOI

Patients and healers in the context of culture : an exploration of the borderland between anthropology, medicine, and psychiatry

TL;DR: This book discusses the construction of Illness Experience and Behavior in Chinese Culture in the context of Health Care Systems, Culture, Health Care systems, and Clinical Reality and its consequences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Poverty and common mental disorders in developing countries

TL;DR: A review of English-language journals published since 1990 and three global mental health reports identified 11 community studies on the association between poverty and common mental disorders in six low- and middle-income countries that showed an association between indicators of poverty and the risk of mental disorders.
Journal ArticleDOI

Depression, somatization and the “new cross-cultural psychiatry”

TL;DR: Material from field research in Taiwan and data from recent anthropological and clinical investigations are used to support the opposite view that such differences exist and are a function of the cultural shaping of normative and deviant behavior.
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