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Health care professionals' perspectives on barriers to treatment seeking for formal health services among orphan children and adolescents with HIV/AIDS and mental distress in a rural district in central, Uganda.

Health care professionals' perspectives on barriers to treatment seeking for formal health services among orphan children and adolescents with HIV/AIDS and mental distress in a rural district in central, Uganda.

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dc.contributor.author James Mugisha
dc.contributor.author Eugene Kinyanda
dc.contributor.author Joseph Osafo
dc.contributor.author Winfred Nalukenge
dc.contributor.author Birthe Loa Knizek
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-10T11:55:51Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-10T11:55:51Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.issn 17532000
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49238
dc.description.abstract Background Little/no research has been conducted in Uganda in particular and sub-Saharan Africa in general on the health professional's perspectives on barriers to treatment seeking for formal health services among orphan children and adolescents with a double burden of HIV/AIDS and mental distress. Aim To explore health professionals' perspectives on barriers to treatment seeking for formal health services among orphan children and adolescents with HIV/AIDS and mental distress in Masaka, Uganda. Method Qualitative research design using key informant interviews with health service managers and staff in agencies working with children and adolescents with HIV/AIDS in Masaka district, Uganda. Results Barriers to treatment seeking reported by health care professionals were quite enormous and are summarized under: family, individual, community and health systems level barriers. The crosscutting finding here is that the societal informal and formal systems of care had been affected by the HIV/AIDs epidemic, and, mental distress aggravates this challenge for the individuals afflicted and families affected by mental distress. Conclusion Children and adolescents with both HIV/AIDS and mental distress are vulnerable due to constraints at family, community and health systems levels. Effective public health interventions to address the double burden of HIV/AIDS and mental distress will be vital in the study communities addressing the constraints at family, community and institutional level. Public health interventions should aim at increased access and effective utilization of services for both HIV/AIDS and mental health services. Stigma reduction strategies at individual, family and community levels are also recommended.
dc.description.sponsorship The data collection and transcription, as well as research meetings were funded by MRC/DFID African Leadership Award
dc.publisher BioMed Central
dc.relation.ispartof Child and adolescent psychiatry and mental health
dc.subject Children
dc.subject HIV/AIDS
dc.subject Mental distress
dc.subject Uganda
dc.title Health care professionals' perspectives on barriers to treatment seeking for formal health services among orphan children and adolescents with HIV/AIDS and mental distress in a rural district in central, Uganda.
dc.type journal article
dc.identifier.doi 10.1186/s13034-020-00332-8
dc.identifier.pmid 32518588
dc.identifier.mag 3032918815
dc.identifier.pmc PMC7271468
dc.identifier.lens 086-955-830-975-168
dc.identifier.volume 14
dc.identifier.issue 1
dc.identifier.spage 26
dc.subject.lens-fields Mental health
dc.subject.lens-fields Psychology
dc.subject.lens-fields Health care
dc.subject.lens-fields Qualitative research
dc.subject.lens-fields Mental distress
dc.subject.lens-fields Double burden
dc.subject.lens-fields Forensic psychiatry
dc.subject.lens-fields Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS)
dc.subject.lens-fields Family medicine
dc.subject.lens-fields Child and adolescent psychiatry


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