Publications by authors named "Sithabisile Gugulethu Gigaba"

Article Synopsis
  • The treatment gap for mental health in low- and middle-income countries, including South Africa, persists despite effective task-sharing interventions due to a lack of supportive policies and overwhelmed health systems.
  • The Mental health INTegration Programme (MhINT) aims to incorporate mental health care into primary health care by utilizing a structured care package delivered by trained personnel in KwaZulu-Natal, focusing on psycho-education, assessments, and counselling.
  • The program employs a learning health systems approach with continuous quality improvement strategies, implemented in five phases to identify barriers, build capacity, and assess the sustainability and impact of integrated mental health care.
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Integration of mental health into routine primary health care (PHC) services in low-and middle-income countries is globally accepted to improve health outcomes of other conditions and narrow the mental health treatment gap. Yet implementation remains a challenge. The aim of this study was to identify implementation strategies that improve implementation outcomes of an evidence-based depression care collaborative implementation model integrated with routine PHC clinic services in South Africa.

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Objective: Integration of mental health and chronic disease services in primary care could reduce the mental health treatment gap and improve associated health outcomes in low-resource settings. Low rates of nurse identification and referral of patients with depression limit the effectiveness of integrated mental health care; the barriers to and facilitators of identification and referral in South Africa and comparable settings remain undefined. This study explored barriers to and facilitators of nurse identification and referral of patients with depressive symptoms as part of integrated mental health service delivery in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

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Background: Integration of depression treatment into primary care could improve patient outcomes in low-resource settings. Losses along the depression care cascade limit integrated service effectiveness. This study identified patient-level factors that predicted detection of depressive symptoms by nurses, referral for depression treatment, and uptake of counseling, as part of integrated care in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa.

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