To read this content please select one of the options below:

Integrated child mental health care provision in Pakistan: End-user and provider perspectives

Panos Vostanis (School of Media, Communication and Sociology, University of Leicester, Leicester, UK)
Sajida Hassan (Icon for Child and Adult Nurturing (ICAN), Karachi, Pakistan)
Syeda Zeenat Fatima (Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust, Leicester, UK)
Michelle O'Reilly (Leicestershire Partnership NHS Trust, Leicester, UK)

Journal of Integrated Care

ISSN: 1476-9018

Article publication date: 7 December 2023

Issue publication date: 26 April 2024

11

Abstract

Purpose

Children in majority world countries (MWC) have high rates of unmet mental health needs, with limited access to specialist resources. Integration of child mental health in existing psychosocial care can improve provision. Through a Train-the-Trainer (ToT) cascade approach, this study aimed to provide a framework for such integration in resource-constrained communities in Karachi, Pakistan and to establish hindering and enabling factors.

Design/methodology/approach

Eight practitioners attended a child mental health ToT program, including training on a five-domain service transformation framework. Trainers co-designed and implemented interventions that integrated child mental health knowledge and skills on each domain. These were attended by 136 end-users (youth, parents, teachers, managers), of whom a sub-sample of 47 stakeholders, as well as the trainers, attended focus groups on their experiences. Data were analysed through a thematic codebook.

Findings

Established themes reflected common ingredients across all domains/interventions that were deemed important for child mental health care integration. These included child-centric approaches, positive parenting, community mobilization and systemic changes.

Originality/value

Integrated child mental health care informed by the Train-of-Trainer approach can be a useful model for resource-constrained MWC contexts. Integrated interventions should be co-produced with communities.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The study was funded by an Economic and Social Research Council Partnership Grant.

Citation

Vostanis, P., Hassan, S., Fatima, S.Z. and O'Reilly, M. (2024), "Integrated child mental health care provision in Pakistan: End-user and provider perspectives", Journal of Integrated Care, Vol. 32 No. 2, pp. 119-130. https://doi.org/10.1108/JICA-08-2023-0068

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles