Integration of mental health into primary care and community health working in Kenya: context, rationale, coverage and sustainability
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Date
2010Author
Jenkins, Rachel
Kiima, David
Okonji, Marx
Njenga, Frank
Kingora, James
Lock, Sarah
Language
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Integration of mental health into primary care is essential to meet population needs yet faces many challenges if such projects are to achieve impact and be sustainable in low income countries alongside other competing priorities. This paper describes the rationale and progress of a collaborative project in Kenya to train primary care and community health workers about mental health and integrate mental health into their routine work, Within a health systems strengthening approach. So far 1877 health workers have been trained. The paper describes the multiple challenges faced by the project, and reviews the mechanisms deployed which have strengthened its impact and sustainability to date.
Citation
Jenkins, Rachel, et al. "Integration of mental health into primary care and community health working in Kenya: context, rationale, coverage and sustainability." Mental Health in Family Medicine 7.1 (2010): 37.Publisher
University of Nairobi
Collections
- Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS) [10387]
- Journal Articles [329]