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Journal Article

Citation

Maulik PK, Devarapalli S, Kallakuri S, Bhattacharya A, Peiris D, Patel A. J. Med. Internet. Res. 2020; 22(2): e15553.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Centre for Global eHealth Innovation)

DOI

10.2196/15553

PMID

32130125

PMCID

PMC7068463

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although around 10% of Indians experience depression, anxiety, or alcohol use disorders, very few receive adequate mental health care, especially in rural communities. Stigma and limited availability of mental health services contribute to this treatment gap. The Systematic Medical Appraisal Referral and Treatment Mental Health project aimed to address this gap.
OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of an intervention in increasing the use of mental health services and reducing depression and anxiety scores among individuals at high risk of common mental disorders.
METHODS: A before-after study was conducted from 2014 to 2019 in 12 villages in Andhra Pradesh, India. The intervention comprised a community antistigma campaign, with the training of lay village health workers and primary care doctors to identify and manage individuals with stress, depression, and suicide risk using an electronic clinical decision support system.
RESULTS: In total, 900 of 22,046 (4.08%) adults screened by health workers had increased stress, depression, or suicide risk and were referred to a primary care doctor. At follow-up, 731 out of 900 (81.2%) reported visiting the doctor for their mental health symptoms, compared with 3.3% (30/900) at baseline (odds ratio 133.3, 95% CI 89.0 to 199.7; P<.001). Mean depression and anxiety scores were significantly lower postintervention compared with baseline from 13.4 to 3.1 (P<.001) and from 12.9 to 1.9 (P<.001), respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: The intervention was associated with a marked increase in service uptake and clinically important reductions in depression and anxiety symptom scores. This will be further evaluated in a large-scale cluster randomized controlled trial.


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Adult; Female; Male; Middle Aged; Young Adult; India; Rural Population; Mental Health; rural; Referral and Consultation; mental disorders; mental health services; Mental Health Services; primary health care; mHealth; Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic

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