Providing Mental Healthcare through Faith-based Entities in Africa: A Systematic Review

RESOURCE / Journal Article

Providing Mental Healthcare through Faith-based Entities in Africa: A Systematic Review

2024

By Dr. Nadine Nanji and Dr. Jill Olivier of the University of Cape Town

This article, published in the Christian Journal for Global Health, shares the results of a review of evidence on faith-based health providers of mental health services in Africa looking at types, magnitude, and quality, and included both peer-reviewed and grey literature, published between 2007 and 2024. A mixed-methods systematic review was conducted in two phases to synthesize qualitative and quantitative data.

The review identified 55 relevant items from 13 African countries, showing that faith-based mental health providers deliver a range of six types of alternative mental health care, faith-based home care and faith-based biomedical mental health care. The author advises leveraging culturally influenced practices for mental health care that faith-based care offers, and integrating faith-based mental health care into primary health system to attain universal health coverage. However, there are limitations regarding the vast array of faith-based health providers and the mental health care they provide, which include harmful practices used in Africa. Training interventions are recommended to avoid these practices.

 

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