Acceptability of Mental Health Facilities and De-addiction Centers in India.

Epidemiology acceptability alcohol awareness depression diarrhea fever mental health public health schizophrenia

Journal

Journal of experimental neuroscience
ISSN: 1179-0695
Titre abrégé: J Exp Neurosci
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101517658

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2019
Historique:
received: 13 11 2018
accepted: 01 03 2019
entrez: 20 4 2019
pubmed: 20 4 2019
medline: 20 4 2019
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Not much is known about disease prevalence, treatment outcomes, trained manpower, programs, and patients' awareness of diseases from South Asia, compared with the Western world. While other aspects are improving, the quantitative evaluation of awareness of diseases is lagging. Compared with other diseases, the situation for mental health disorders and addiction is worse. While no single study can fully quantify all aspects of awareness, a good starting point is to understand if increasing the number of mental health facilities is beneficial by understanding people's perception toward the likelihood of contracting various diseases, their preferred approach to treatment, and their perception of whether there are enough current facilities. We surveyed over 8000 families across several states of India and asked if they would treat a particular problem at home, visit a local healer, seek religious council, or go to a modern hospital for treatment. Our questions also included non-medical options to assess how likely people are to avoid trained medical help. We also asked people about their perceived likelihood of a family member ever suffering from (1) diarrhea, (2) high fever, (3) alcoholism, and (4) schizophrenia and other mental health problems. We reversed the order of diseases in our questions for a fraction of the population to evaluate the effect of order of questioning. Finally, we asked, if people feel they have enough local healers, religious places, general hospitals, de-addiction centers, and mental health facilities. Despite the taboo around mental health, many people claimed that their family members were unlikely to contract mental health or addiction problems, people recognized the severe paucity of mental health facilities and de-addiction centers. This raises hope for improving the mental health situation in India. We also found a significant relation between education levels and choices people make, underscoring the positive role education has in improving mental health.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31001063
doi: 10.1177/1179069519839990
pii: 10.1177_1179069519839990
pmc: PMC6454643
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

1179069519839990

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

Declaration of conflicting interests:The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

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Auteurs

Pahul Preet Singh (PP)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Ishan Goel (I)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Amit Mondal (A)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Farooq Ali Khan (FA)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Ashish Kumar Singh (AK)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Preeti Dubey (P)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Sushma Chaudhary (S)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

P Venkata Anil Kumar Reddy (PVAK)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Viola Rodrigues (V)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Vidhi Bassi (V)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Karan Ahuja (K)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Abhidith Shetty (A)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Anjan Kumar Sahu (AK)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Karan Jodha (K)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Nilesh Singh (N)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Suprabhat Das (S)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Rimi Sharma (R)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Ria Bagaria (R)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Sushmitha Poojary (S)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Shrey M Gohil (SM)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Abhilash Bonu (A)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Sushmita Vazirani (S)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Leila Esfandiari (L)

Independent Researchers, Lucknow, India.

Sunil Shukla (S)

Department of Zoology, Government Meera Girls College, Udaipur, India.

Shubha Shukla (S)

Department of Pharmacology, CSIR-Central Drug Research Institute (CSIR-CDRI), Lucknow, India.

Sukant Khurana (S)

Department of Pharmacology, CSIR-Central Drug Research Institute (CSIR-CDRI), Lucknow, India.

Classifications MeSH