Abstract
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. Dominant thinking about the ‘treatment gap’ was heavily informed by a biomedical paradigm, and associated epistemological order of European Colonial Modernity. There were, however, cracks in this master narrative, which crystalised in the stories that were told by three particular psychiatrists. Their narratives operated within an alternative paradigm, one which appears to be informed by the tradition of phenomenology, and in particular the ideas associated with French philosopher Merleau-Ponty. This more marginalised thinking may offer important insights into reducing the mental health ‘treatment gap’ in Africa in ways very different from those created by current seats of power.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution.
Notes
The names used in this section are all pseudonyms.
References
Armstrong, David 1984 The patients view. Social Science and Medicine 18(9):737–744.
Bemme, Doerte and D’souza, Nicole 2014 Global mental health and its discontents: An inquiry into the making of global and local scale. Transcultural Psychiatry 51(6):850-74.
Bracken, Pat, Philip Thomas, Sami Timimi, Eia Asen, Graham Behr, Carl Beuster, Seth Bhunnoo, Ivor Browne, Navjyoat Chhina, Duncan Double, Simon Downer, Chris Evans, Suman Fernando, Malcolm R Garland, William Hopkins, Rhodri Huws, Bob Johnson, Brian Martindale, Hugh Middleton, Daniel Moldavsky, Joanna Moncrieff, Simon Mullins, Julia Nelki, Matteo Pizzo, James Rodger, Marcellino Smyth, Derek Summerfield, Jeremy Wallace, and David Yeomans 2012 Psychiatry beyond the current paradigm. BJP 201: 430–434.
Campbell, Catherine and Burgess, Rochelle 2012 The role of communities in advancing the goals of the Movement for Global Mental Health. Transcultural Psychiatry 49(3–4):379–395.
Carroll, Lewis 1872 Through the Looking-Glass. Raleigh, NC: Hayes Barton Press.
Clark, Jocalyn 2014 Medicalization of global health: The medicalization of global mental health, Glob Health Action 7:24000.
Comaroff, Jean 1993 The Diseased Heart of Africa: Medicine, Colonialism and the Black Body. In Knowledge, Power and Practice: The Anthropology of Medicine and Everyday Life. S. Lindenbaum and M. Lock, eds., pp. 305-329. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Cooper, Sara 2014 Prising open the ‘black box’: An epistemological critique of discursive constructions of scaling-up the provision of mental health care in Africa. Health. DOI:10.1177/1363459314556905.
Deacon, Brett 2013 The biomedical model of mental disorder: A critical analysis of its validity, utility, and effects on psychotherapy research. Clinical Psychology Review 33: 846–861.
Ethiopian Ministry of Health .2012. National Mental Health Strategy. Ethiopia: Ministry of Health.
Ewick, Patricia and Silbey, Susan 1995 Subversive stories and hegemonic tales: Towards a sociology of narrative. Law and Society Review 29(2):197-226.
Global Mental Health Group. 2007. Scale-up services for mental disorders: A call for action. The Lancet 370:1241–1252.
Good, Byron 1994 Medicine, rationality and experience: An anthropological perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Hollway, Wendy and Jefferson, Tony 2000 Doing qualitative research differently: Free association, narrative and the interview method. London: Sage.
Horton, Richard 2007 Launching a new movement for mental health. The Lancet 370:806.
Husserl, Edmund 1972 Experience and judgement. Evanston:Northwestern University Press.
Issa, Baba 2005 Dearth of Psychiatrists in Nigeria. Nigerian Medical Practitioner 47(6):127-128.
Jackson, Michael 1996 Things as they are: New directions in phenomenological anthropology. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Kigosi, Fred; Ssebunnya, Joshua; Kizza, Dorothy; Cooper, Sara and Ndyanabangi, Sheila 2010 An overview of Uganda’s mental health care system. International Journal of Mental Health Systems 4, 1. doi:10.1186/1752-4458-4-1.
Kirmayer, Laurence J. 2012 Cultural competence and evidence-based practice in mental health: Epistemic communities and the politics of pluralism. Social Science and Medicine 75(2):249–56.
Kleinman, Arthur 2012 The art of medicine: Caregiving as moral experience. Lancet 380(3):1550-1551.
Kleres, Jochen 2010 Emotions and narrative analysis: a methodological approach. J Theory Soc Behav 41(2):182–202.
Krieger, Nancy 2000 Passionate epistemology, critical advocacy, and public health: Doing our profession proud. Critical Public Health 10(3):287-294.
Kuhn, Thomas 1962 The structure of scientific revolutions. Chicago:University of Chicago Press.
Kvale, Steinar 1996 InterViews: An introduction to qualitative research interviewing. California: Sage.
Lamarque, Peter 1990 Narrative and invention: The limits of fictionality. In Narrative in Culture: The Uses of Storytelling in the Sciences, Philosophy and Literature. C Nash, ed., pp.131-53. London: Routledge.
Latour, Bruno 1999 Pandora’s hope: Essays on the reality of Science Studies. Cambridge, MA:Harvard University Press.
Law, John 1999 After ANT: Complexity, naming and typology. In Actor network theory and after. J Law and J Hassard, eds., pp. 1–14. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers.
Lucas, Rodney and Barret, Robert 1995 Interpreting culture and psychopathology: Primitivist themes in cross-cultural debate. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 19: 287–326.
Lund, Crick; Kleintjes, Sharon; Kakuma, Ritz and Flisher, Alan 2009 Public sector mental health systems in South Africa: Inter-provincial comparisons and policy implications. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 45(3):393-404.
Matthews, Eric 2002 The philosophy of Merleau-Ponty. Chesham:Acumen.
Merleau-Ponty, Maurice 2004 The world of perception. London:Routledge.
Merleau-Ponty, Maurice 1962 The phenomenology of perception. London:Routledge.
Mills, China and Fernando, Suman 2014 Globalising Mental Health or Pathologising the Global South? Disability and the Global South 1(2):188-202.
Mol, Annemarie 2008 The logic of care: Health and the problem of patient choice. New York:Routledge.
Montgomery, Katherine 2006 How doctors Think: Clinical judgment and the practice of medicine. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Morant, Nicola 2006 Social representations and professional knowledge: The representation of mental illness among mental health practitioners. British Journal of Social Psychology 45:817–838.
Parker, Ian 1992 Discourse dynamics: Critical analysis for social and individual psychology. London:Routledge.
Patel, Vikram; Boyce, Niall; Collins, Pamela; Saxena, Shekhar and Horton, Richard. 2011 A renewed agenda for global mental health. The Lancet 378:1441–1442.
Petersen, Inge, Lund, Crick and Stein Dan 2011 Optimizing mental health services in low-income-and middle-income countries. Current Opinion in Psychiatry 24(4): 318–323.
Pluciennik, Mark 1990 Archaeological narratives and other ways of telling. Current Anthropology, 40(5): 653-94.
Riessman, Catherine K. 2008 Narrative methods for the Human Sciences. London:Sage.
Riessman, Catherine K. 1993 Narrative Analysis. London:Sage.
Summerfield, Dereck 2012 Afterword: Against ‘global mental health’. Transcultural Psychiatry 49(3–4):519–530.
Swartz, Leslie 2007 The virtues of feeling culturally incompetent. Monash Bioeth Rev, 26(4):36-46.
Swartz, Leslie 2012 An unruly coming of age: The benefits of discomfort for global mental health. Transcultural Psychiatry 49(3–4):531–538.
Timimi, Sami 2011 A Reply to ‘Grand Challenges in Mental Health. Science, Medicine, and Anthropology: http://somatosphere.net/?p=2033.
Turnbull, David 2004 Narrative traditions of Space, Time and Trust in Court. In Expertise in Regulation and Law. G Edmond, ed., pp.116-183. Ashgate: Aldershot.
Turnbull, David 2000 Masons, tricksters and cartographers: Comparative studies in the sociology of scientific and indigenous knowledge. The Netherlands:Harwood Academic Publishers.
Vaughan, Megan 1991 Curing their ills: Colonial power and African illness. Cambridge: Polity Press.
Velpry, Livia 2008 The patient’s view: Issues of theory and practice. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 32:238–258.
Weed, Douglas 1995 Epidemiology, the humanities, and public health. American Journal of Public Health 85(7):914-918.
Willig, Carla 2001. Introducing qualitative research: Adventures in theory and method. Berkshire: Open University Press.
World Health Organization 2008 Mental Health Gap Action Programme: Scaling-up care for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders. Geneva:WHO.
World Health Organization 2001 Mental Health: New Understanding, New hope. Geneva:WHO.
Yen, Jeffery and Wilbraham, Lindy 2003. Discourses of culture and illness in South African mental health care and indigenous healing. Part I: Western psychiatric power. Transcultural Psychiatry 40(4): 542–561.
Acknowledgments
This study was funded by the following doctoral research fellowships: Patrick and Margaret Flanagan Award (Rhodes University, South Africa); South African National Research Foundation (Grant no. 74724); Oppenheimer Memorial Trust Award (Reference: 19512/01).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Conflict of Interest
Sara Cooper has received research grants from the Patrick and Margaret Flanagan Trust (Rhodes University, South Africa); the South African National Research Foundation and the Oppenheimer Memorial Trust (South Africa).
Ethical approval
All research procedures performed were in accordance with the ethical standards of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine’s, UK and the University of Cape Town’s, South Africa research ethics committees, and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments.
Informed consent
Informed consent was obtained from all individual participants included in the study.
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Cooper, S. “How I Floated on Gentle Webs of Being”: Psychiatrists Stories About the Mental Health Treatment Gap in Africa. Cult Med Psychiatry 40, 307–337 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11013-015-9474-3
Published:
Issue Date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11013-015-9474-3
Keywords
- Mental health treatment gap
- Africa
- Psychiatrists
- Narrative