A strong movement has emerged recently which is highlighting the high levels of untreated mental illness in Africa and making proposals for reducing this 'gap' in mental health care. This movement has been criticised for insufficiently attending to the epistemologies embedded in its recommendations, and inadequately considering the views of practitioners 'on the ground'. Employing a narrative-based approach, I accessed the stories about the mental health 'treatment gap' of 28 psychiatrists all working clinically in public mental health care settings in South Africa, Uganda, Nigeria or Ethiopia. Rather than focusing on the content of these stories, I was more interested in their underpinning meaning-codes and epistemological politics. Domina...
Background: Despite decades of disagreement among mental health practitioners and researchers in the...
This thesis is based on 13 months of ethnographic fieldwork with groups of mental-health activists i...
Pills hidden under tongues, inside socks, flushed down toilets. Pretending to ‘ feel better’ , prete...
In this research I surface the epistemological assumptions underpinning thinking on the apparent hig...
Global mental health research is increasingly highlighting the high levels of untreated mental illne...
People with mental illness (PWMI) are faced with a number of social and health-related challenges es...
This open access book investigates psychiatry in Uganda during the years of decolonisation. It exami...
Mental illness is a burden of disease that, in many countries, is neglected; South Africa is no exce...
Mental illness is a burden of disease that, in many countries, is neglected; South Africa is no exce...
This thesis describes the family experience of mental illness in Kintampo, Ghana. Beginning from the...
This open access book investigates psychiatry in Uganda during the years of decolonisation. It exami...
© 2018 Dr. Mythily MeherAny expression of medical pluralism will reflect the organisation and hierar...
Mental illness is considered a silent epidemic throughoutAfrica due to substantial financial and sys...
© 2023 The author. This is an open access article available under a Creative Commons licence. The pu...
Background Concepts of ‘what constitutes mental illness’, the presumed aetiology and preferred treat...
Background: Despite decades of disagreement among mental health practitioners and researchers in the...
This thesis is based on 13 months of ethnographic fieldwork with groups of mental-health activists i...
Pills hidden under tongues, inside socks, flushed down toilets. Pretending to ‘ feel better’ , prete...
In this research I surface the epistemological assumptions underpinning thinking on the apparent hig...
Global mental health research is increasingly highlighting the high levels of untreated mental illne...
People with mental illness (PWMI) are faced with a number of social and health-related challenges es...
This open access book investigates psychiatry in Uganda during the years of decolonisation. It exami...
Mental illness is a burden of disease that, in many countries, is neglected; South Africa is no exce...
Mental illness is a burden of disease that, in many countries, is neglected; South Africa is no exce...
This thesis describes the family experience of mental illness in Kintampo, Ghana. Beginning from the...
This open access book investigates psychiatry in Uganda during the years of decolonisation. It exami...
© 2018 Dr. Mythily MeherAny expression of medical pluralism will reflect the organisation and hierar...
Mental illness is considered a silent epidemic throughoutAfrica due to substantial financial and sys...
© 2023 The author. This is an open access article available under a Creative Commons licence. The pu...
Background Concepts of ‘what constitutes mental illness’, the presumed aetiology and preferred treat...
Background: Despite decades of disagreement among mental health practitioners and researchers in the...
This thesis is based on 13 months of ethnographic fieldwork with groups of mental-health activists i...
Pills hidden under tongues, inside socks, flushed down toilets. Pretending to ‘ feel better’ , prete...