Improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in Nairobi, Kenya: extending practice-based research model for LMICs

Abstract Background Psychotherapy and mental health services in Nairobi’s public hospitals are increasing. Rather than prematurely imposing psychotherapy protocols developed in Western countries to Kenya, we argue that first studying psychological interventions as they are practiced may generate und...

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Main Authors: Manasi Kumar, Mary Wangari Kuria, Caleb Joseph Othieno, Fredrik Falkenström
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-12-01
Series:International Journal of Mental Health Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13033-018-0254-7
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spelling doaj-1530cd4e4ee74ca885303aecba0b660f2020-11-25T02:00:06ZengBMCInternational Journal of Mental Health Systems1752-44582018-12-0112111110.1186/s13033-018-0254-7Improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in Nairobi, Kenya: extending practice-based research model for LMICsManasi Kumar0Mary Wangari Kuria1Caleb Joseph Othieno2Fredrik Falkenström3Department of Psychiatry, College of Health Sciences, University of NairobiDepartment of Psychiatry, College of Health Sciences, University of NairobiDepartment of Psychiatry, College of Health Sciences, University of NairobiDepartment of Behavioural Sciences and Learning, Linköping UniversityAbstract Background Psychotherapy and mental health services in Nairobi’s public hospitals are increasing. Rather than prematurely imposing psychotherapy protocols developed in Western countries to Kenya, we argue that first studying psychological interventions as they are practiced may generate understanding of which psychological problems are common, what interventions therapists use, and what seems to be effective in reducing psychiatric problems in a lower and middle income country like Kenya. Method We present preliminary findings from a process-outcome study involving 345 patients from two public institutions, Kenyatta National and Mathare National Hospitals. We asked our patients to fill out a brief personal information questionnaire, Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation-Outcome Measure (Evans et al. in Br J Psychiatry 180:51–60, 2002, and the Session Alliance Inventory (Falkenström et al. in Psychol Assess 27:169–183, 2015) after each session. We present descriptives for CORE-OM, patient-therapist concordance on the SAI, and using longitudinal mixed-effects model, test change in CORE-OM over time with various therapy and patient factors as predictors in regression analyses. Results The majority of patients who attended the outpatient care clinics were young males. Our regression analysis suggested that patients with depression reported higher initial distress levels (2.75 CORE-OM scores, se = 1.11, z = 2.48, p = 0.013, 95% CI 0.57–4.93) than patients with addictions, anxiety, or psychosis. Older clients improved slower (0.08 CORE-OM scores slower improvement per session per year older age; se = 0.03, z = 3.02 p = 0.003, 95% CI 0.03, 0.14). Female patients reported higher initial distress than men (2.62 CORE-OM scores, se = 1.00, z = 2.61, p = 0.009, 95% CI 0.65, 4.58). However, interns had patients who reported significantly higher initial distress (3.24 CORE-OM points, se = 0.90, z = 3.60, p < 0.001, 95% CI 1.48, 5.00), and improved more over time (− 1.20 CORE-OM scores per session, se = 0.51, z = − 2.35, p = 0.019, 95% CI − 2.20, − 0.20) than patients seeing mental health practitioners. The results showed that at average alliance, CORE-OM decreased by 1.74 points per session (se = 0.21, p < 0.001). For each point higher on the SAI at session 2, the CORE-OM decreased by an additional 0.58 points per session (se = 0.25, p = 0.02). Discussion Our objective was to study psychotherapies as they are practiced in naturalistic settings. The overall significant finding is that our participants report improvement in their functioning mental health condition and distress reduced as psychotherapy progressed. There were many more male than female participants in our sample; younger patients improved more than older ones; and while interns had patients with higher distress, their patients improved better than those patients attended by professionals. Conclusions These are preliminary observations to consider for a larger sample follow-up study. Before changing practices, evaluating the existing practices by mapping clinical outcomes is a helpful route.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13033-018-0254-7PsychotherapiesMental illnessPractice-informed researchImplementation challengesKenyaPoverty
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manasi Kumar
Mary Wangari Kuria
Caleb Joseph Othieno
Fredrik Falkenström
spellingShingle Manasi Kumar
Mary Wangari Kuria
Caleb Joseph Othieno
Fredrik Falkenström
Improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in Nairobi, Kenya: extending practice-based research model for LMICs
International Journal of Mental Health Systems
Psychotherapies
Mental illness
Practice-informed research
Implementation challenges
Kenya
Poverty
author_facet Manasi Kumar
Mary Wangari Kuria
Caleb Joseph Othieno
Fredrik Falkenström
author_sort Manasi Kumar
title Improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in Nairobi, Kenya: extending practice-based research model for LMICs
title_short Improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in Nairobi, Kenya: extending practice-based research model for LMICs
title_full Improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in Nairobi, Kenya: extending practice-based research model for LMICs
title_fullStr Improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in Nairobi, Kenya: extending practice-based research model for LMICs
title_full_unstemmed Improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in Nairobi, Kenya: extending practice-based research model for LMICs
title_sort improving psychotherapies offered in public hospitals in nairobi, kenya: extending practice-based research model for lmics
publisher BMC
series International Journal of Mental Health Systems
issn 1752-4458
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Abstract Background Psychotherapy and mental health services in Nairobi’s public hospitals are increasing. Rather than prematurely imposing psychotherapy protocols developed in Western countries to Kenya, we argue that first studying psychological interventions as they are practiced may generate understanding of which psychological problems are common, what interventions therapists use, and what seems to be effective in reducing psychiatric problems in a lower and middle income country like Kenya. Method We present preliminary findings from a process-outcome study involving 345 patients from two public institutions, Kenyatta National and Mathare National Hospitals. We asked our patients to fill out a brief personal information questionnaire, Clinical Outcomes in Routine Evaluation-Outcome Measure (Evans et al. in Br J Psychiatry 180:51–60, 2002, and the Session Alliance Inventory (Falkenström et al. in Psychol Assess 27:169–183, 2015) after each session. We present descriptives for CORE-OM, patient-therapist concordance on the SAI, and using longitudinal mixed-effects model, test change in CORE-OM over time with various therapy and patient factors as predictors in regression analyses. Results The majority of patients who attended the outpatient care clinics were young males. Our regression analysis suggested that patients with depression reported higher initial distress levels (2.75 CORE-OM scores, se = 1.11, z = 2.48, p = 0.013, 95% CI 0.57–4.93) than patients with addictions, anxiety, or psychosis. Older clients improved slower (0.08 CORE-OM scores slower improvement per session per year older age; se = 0.03, z = 3.02 p = 0.003, 95% CI 0.03, 0.14). Female patients reported higher initial distress than men (2.62 CORE-OM scores, se = 1.00, z = 2.61, p = 0.009, 95% CI 0.65, 4.58). However, interns had patients who reported significantly higher initial distress (3.24 CORE-OM points, se = 0.90, z = 3.60, p < 0.001, 95% CI 1.48, 5.00), and improved more over time (− 1.20 CORE-OM scores per session, se = 0.51, z = − 2.35, p = 0.019, 95% CI − 2.20, − 0.20) than patients seeing mental health practitioners. The results showed that at average alliance, CORE-OM decreased by 1.74 points per session (se = 0.21, p < 0.001). For each point higher on the SAI at session 2, the CORE-OM decreased by an additional 0.58 points per session (se = 0.25, p = 0.02). Discussion Our objective was to study psychotherapies as they are practiced in naturalistic settings. The overall significant finding is that our participants report improvement in their functioning mental health condition and distress reduced as psychotherapy progressed. There were many more male than female participants in our sample; younger patients improved more than older ones; and while interns had patients with higher distress, their patients improved better than those patients attended by professionals. Conclusions These are preliminary observations to consider for a larger sample follow-up study. Before changing practices, evaluating the existing practices by mapping clinical outcomes is a helpful route.
topic Psychotherapies
Mental illness
Practice-informed research
Implementation challenges
Kenya
Poverty
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13033-018-0254-7
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