Publications by authors named "Tanvi Kankan"

Article Synopsis
  • A qualitative study explored the barriers and facilitators of implementing a pilot trial of Critical Time Intervention-Task-Shifting for individuals with psychosis in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, and Santiago, Chile, using 40 semi-structured interviews.
  • Analysis revealed that barriers and facilitators were categorized into five domains: Personal, Interpersonal, Intervention, Mental Health System, and Contextual.
  • Key findings indicated that while mental health stigma and community violence posed challenges, the intervention is generally seen as acceptable and feasible, presenting a valuable opportunity to enhance mental health care systems in Latin America.
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The personal impact of COVID-19 on mental health care workers (MHWs) has received scarce attention despite their work addressing the emotional wellbeing of those affected by the pandemic. This study aims to analyze Latin American and Caribbean's MHWs' subjective impact in connection to working during the initial times of the pandemic. One hundred and fifty-five persons ( = 155) from seventeen countries were contacted in May-June 2020 through a snowball approach.

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Background: Few studies provide clear rationale for and the reception of adaptations of evidence-based interventions. To address this gap, we describe the context-dependent adaptations in critical time intervention-task shifting (CTI-TS), a manualized recovery program for individuals with psychosis in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil and Santiago, Chile. Implications of the adaptations - incorporating a task-shifting approach and modifying the mode of community-based service delivery - are examined from users' perspectives.

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This study explores the beliefs and attitudes about the psychosocial mechanisms of peer support work among users who participated in Critical Time Intervention-Task Shifting (CTI-TS), which tested the acceptability and feasibility of a peer support work model to improve community-based mental health care for individuals with psychosis in Latin America. We conducted a secondary analysis of 15 in-depth interviews with CTI-TS participants in Chile, using the framework method and defined the framework domains based on five major mechanisms of peer support work identified by a recent literature review. The analysis revealed that users' perceptions of peer support work mechanisms were strongly shaped by personal motivations, beliefs about professional hierarchies, familial support, and the Chilean mental health system's incipient recovery orientation.

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Background: Latin America, and Chile in particular, has a rich tradition of community mental health services and programs. However, in vivo community-based psychosocial interventions, especially those with a recovery-oriented approach, remain scarce in the region. Between 2014 and 2015, a Critical Time Intervention-Task Shifting project (CTI-TS) was implemented in Santiago, Chile, as part of a larger pilot randomized control trial.

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