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Pathways to mental healthcare in south-eastern Nigeria
Ikwuka, Ugo ; Galbraith, Niall ; Manktelow, Ken ; Chen-Wilson, Josephine ; Oyebode, Femi ; Muomah, Rosemary Chizobam ; Igboaka, Anulika
Ikwuka, Ugo
Galbraith, Niall
Manktelow, Ken
Chen-Wilson, Josephine
Oyebode, Femi
Muomah, Rosemary Chizobam
Igboaka, Anulika
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2016-07-26
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Abstract
In sub-Saharan Africa, traditional and faith healers provide competing services alongside biomedical professionals. This may be associated with delays in reaching specialised mental health services, and hence with longer duration of untreated illness. As first line care constitutes a crucial stage in accessing of psychiatric care, investigating pathways to mental healthcare can highlight help-seeking choices. This study explored the pathways to care for mental illness preferred by a non-clinical sample of the population in south-eastern Nigeria. Multistage sampling was used to select participants (Nā=ā706) who completed questionnaires on help-seeking. Results showed a significant preference for biomedical (90.8%) compared to spiritual (57.8%) and traditional (33.2%) pathways. Higher education predicted preference for the biomedical model, while low education was associated with traditional and spiritual pathways. Protestants preferred the spiritual pathway more than did Catholics. The use of biomedical care is potentially undermined by poor mental health infrastructure, a lack of fit between the culture of biomedical care and the deep-seated cultural/religious worldviews of the people, stigma surrounding mental illness, and the likelihood of a social desirability bias in responses. A complementary model of care is proposed.
Citation
Ikwuka, U. et al. (2016) āPathways to mental healthcare in south-eastern Nigeriaā, Transcultural Psychiatry, 53(5), pp. 574ā594. doi: 10.1177/1363461516660903.
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Research Unit
PubMed ID
27460986
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Journal article
Language
en
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ISSN
1363-4615
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States