It takes a village: what lessons can the UK learn from rural community mental health services in Ghana?
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Journal of Integrated Care
Abstract
Purpose – This paper aims to provide new insights into and offer potential solutions to the challenges
encountered by mental health services working with remote, rural or underserved communities in the UK.
Design/methodology/approach – In this paper, the authors reflect on the utility of integrating conventional
clinical approaches, with preventive care and empowering work within the community, to provide culturally
sensitive and accessible mental health services. The authors describe an example of community intervention
from a mental health service in Ghana designed to enhance reach within remote and rural communities and
identify potential lessons for practice in the UK.
Findings – The partnership between community mental health services and the rural communities, including
families and existing social frameworks, applies collaborative care to overcome the lack of resources and
facilitate the acceptability of mental health services to the local population. There are a series of important
lessons from this experience including the importance of understanding the culture of a community to optimise
reach and the importance of working IN the community and WITH the community.
Originality/value –This paper is novel because it provides learning from a model of care applied in the global
south that has potential for implementation with underserved populations in the UK. The authors suggest a
reframing of the notion of community care to encompass existing frameworks of community, not merely a
biomedical conceptualisation
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Research Article