PROJECT SUMMARY
Worldwide, serious mental illnesses (SMI) such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder are major causes of
impairment and disability. In West Africa, the hardships of SMI are compounded by pervasive societal stigma,
scarce treatment options, systematic exclusion, neglect, and abuse. People with SMI in West Africa describe
the experience as akin to “receiving a death sentence.” West African mental healthcare systems have severely
constrained resources that contribute to a large treatment gap. Most people with SMI receive services from
traditional and faith healers who do not provide high quality care. Healers often use practices such as chaining,
seclusion, and forced fasting that often worsen the negative impacts of SMI. Given the shortage of skilled
mental health providers and the prevalence of healers, coupled with the established infrastructure healers have
in place (e.g., referral networks, “prayer camps”, community ties) global health leaders have argued that
healers and prayer camp settings may be leveraged as conduits for treatment, provided they receive
appropriate training and support to provide higher quality care. Our multinational research team has developed
M&M: a dual-pronged intervention package comprised of a mobile health program designed to train healers to
deliver evidence-based psychosocial interventions while maintaining safety and patient dignity in practice (M-
Healer) combined with pharmacotherapy delivered directly to the patients at their prayer camps via visiting
nurse (Mobile Nurse). We have successfully completed usability, acceptability, feasibility and preliminary
clinical testing of the modular elements of the intervention at prayer camps, with very promising results. We
now propose to evaluate the effectiveness of the integrated M&M intervention in a fully-powered trial and share
it widely through a new West African Digital Mental Health Alliance (WADMA), a mission centered network
designed to jumpstart digital mental health research and cross institutional collaboration though grant funded
studies, education, and integration of digital mental health tools in clinical practice. We aim to: 1. Evaluate the
effectiveness of the M&M intervention using a stepped-wedge cluster randomized trial design; 2. Examine
mediators and moderators of M&M intervention effects; and 3. Use qualitative methods to inform M&M
intervention optimization and future implementation. Although focused on West Africa, the dual-pronged model
we are testing to address quality of care needs, the outcomes we will measure, and the methodological
lessons we will learn will all have translational implications for development and implementation of integrated
technology-assisted treatment support packages for paraprofessionals caring for people with SMI in the United
States.
Public Health Relevance Statement
PROJECT NARRATIVE
In West Africa, the hardships of serious mental illnesses (SMI) such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder
are compounded by pervasive societal stigma, scarce treatment options, systematic exclusion, neglect, and
abuse. Most people with SMI in West Africa receive care from traditional and faith healers who have no formal
training in assessment, treatment of SMI, or preservation of human rights and patient safety. Our multinational
team proposes to deploy and evaluate M&M: a dual-pronged intervention package comprised of a smartphone
system designed to train healers and support their delivery of brief evidence-based psychosocial interventions
(M-Healer) combined with pharmacotherapy delivered directly to the patients they are treating via visiting
nurse (Mobile Nurse).
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
AddressAfricaAfricanAftercareAgeAminationBehavioral ModelBiologicalBipolar DisorderCaringCellular PhoneCessation of lifeClinicalCluster randomized trialCodeCognitiveCollaborationsCommunitiesComputer softwareCountryCoupledDataDevelopmentDiagnosisEducationElementsEmpathyEnrollmentExclusionExposure toFaith HealingFastingFeedbackFocus GroupsFundingGhanaGrantHealth AllianceHealth PersonnelHealthcare SystemsHuman RightsImpairmentInfrastructureInstitutionInterventionInterviewInvestigational TherapiesLanguageLearningMeasuresMediatingMediatorMental HealthMental Health ServicesMethodologyMissionModelingMyeloma ProteinsNarrationNational Institute of Mental HealthNursesOutcomePatient-Focused OutcomesPatientsPersonsPharmacotherapyPilot ProjectsPrayersPrevalencePsychiatric HospitalsQualitative MethodsQuality of CareQuality of lifeRelationship-BuildingResearchResortResourcesRewardsSafetySamplingSchizophreniaServicesSeveritiesShameSiteSpecific qualifier valueStrategic PlanningSystemTechniquesTechnologyTerminologyTestingTrainingTreatment outcomeUnited StatesVisiting Nurseanimationclinical practicecommunity engaged researchdesigndigitaldigital healthdigital mental healthdisabilityeffectiveness evaluationevidence baseexperiencefield studyfuture implementationglobal healthimprovedimproved outcomeinnovationintervention effectlow and middle-income countriesmHealthneglectpatient safetypreservationprogramsprototypepsychiatric symptompsychologicpsychological distresspsychosocialresearch clinical testingsevere mental illnesssexskillssocialsocial stigmatheoriestooltraditional caretreatment as usualtrial designusability
John E. Fogarty International Center for Advanced Study in the Health Sciences
$10,000
Year
Funding IC
FY Total Cost by IC
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