Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T12:18:44.087Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Barriers and facilitators of child and guardian attendance in task-shifted mental health services in schools in western Kenya

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 June 2020

Rosemary D. Meza*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Guthrie Hall 119A, Box 351525, Seattle, WA98195, USA
Sharon Kiche
Affiliation:
SMART Center, Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, 6200 NE 74th Street, Suite 110, Seattle, WA98115, USA
Caroline Soi
Affiliation:
Department of Global Health, Harris Hydraulics Laboratory, University of Washington, 1510 San Juan Road, Seattle, WA98195, USA
Alya N. Khairuzzaman
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Guthrie Hall 119A, Box 351525, Seattle, WA98195, USA
Cristian J. Rivera Nales
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Guthrie Hall 119A, Box 351525, Seattle, WA98195, USA
Kathryn Whetten
Affiliation:
Center for Health Policy and Inequalities Research, Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University, Box 90519, Durham, NC27708, USA Terry Sanford Institute of Public Policy, Duke Global Health Institute, Duke University, Box 90239, Durham, NC27708, USA
Augustine I. Wasonga
Affiliation:
Research Department, Ace Africa Kenya, P.O. Box 1185, 50200 Bungoma, Kenya
Cyrilla Amanya
Affiliation:
Research Department, Ace Africa Kenya, P.O. Box 1185, 50200 Bungoma, Kenya
Shannon Dorsey
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, University of Washington, Guthrie Hall 119A, Box 351525, Seattle, WA98195, USA
*
Author for correspondence: Rosemary D. Meza, E-mail: rdmeza@uw.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Background

Globally, nearly 140 million children have experienced the death of one or both parents, and as a result many experience higher rates of mental health problems. Trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (TF-CBT) delivered by lay counselors has been shown to improve mental health outcomes for children experiencing traumatic grief due to parental loss; however, challenges with treatment attendance limit the public health impact of mental health services. This study used qualitative methods to assess barriers and facilitators of child and guardian attendance of school-based lay counselor delivered TF-CBT.

Methods

Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 36 lay counselors (18 teachers; 18 community health volunteers) who delivered TF-CBT to explore their perceptions of barriers of facilitators of child and guardian attendance of group-based sessions delivered in schools.

Results

Counselors identified attendance barriers and facilitators related to the delivery setting, resources, participant characteristics, intervention characteristics and counselor behaviors. The findings revealed a greater number of facilitators than barriers. Common facilitators included participant and counselor resources, counselor commitment behaviors and communication efforts to encourage attendance. Barriers were less frequently endorsed, with participant resources, child or guardian illness and communication challenges most commonly mentioned.

Conclusions

Attention to barriers and facilitators of attendance in the context in which mental health interventions are delivered allows for identification of ways to improve attendance and treatment engagement and achieve the potential promise of providing accessible mental health services.

Type
Original Research Paper
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2020. Published by Cambridge University Press

Background

Globally, nearly 140 million children have experienced the death of one or both parents, with 52 million residing in African countries (UNICEF, 2015). Children orphaned in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) are commonly exposed to multiple traumatic experiences, including child abuse and neglect, early parental death, communicable diseases, inadequate healthcare, poverty, and stigma (Kieling et al., Reference Kieling, Baker-Henningham, Belfer, Conti, Ertem, Omigbodun, Rohde, Srinath, Ulkuer and Rahman2011; Idele et al., Reference Idele, Gillespie, Porth, Suzuki, Mahy, Kasedde and Luo2018). Traumatic experiences are associated with long-lasting negative outcomes, including adverse effects on skill acquisition, decision making, and health outcomes (Monasch and Boerma, Reference Monasch and Boerma2004; Andrews et al., Reference Andrews, Skinner and Zuma2006; Cluver and Gardner, Reference Cluver and Gardner2007). Youth orphaned in African countries have higher rates of mental health problems including maladaptive grief, post-traumatic stress (PTS), anxiety, depression, suicidal thoughts, and behavior problems than youth who have not experienced parental death (Atwine et al., Reference Atwine, Cantor-Graae and Bajunirwe2005; Cluver and Gardner, Reference Cluver and Gardner2007).

Mental health services in LMICs are improving; nonetheless, resources remain extremely limited (Betancourt and Chambers, Reference Betancourt and Chambers2015). High population needs and low tax bases result in most LMIC governments allocating less than 1–2% of health budgets to mental health (Rathod et al., Reference Rathod, Pinninti, Irfan, Gorczynski, Rathod, Gega and Naeem2017). Most resources go to addressing seriously mentally ill adults (Thornicroft et al., Reference Thornicroft, Alem, Antunes Dos Santos, Barley, Drake, Gregorio, Hanlon, Ito, Latimer, Law, Mari, McGeorge, Padmavati, Razzouk, Semrau, Setoya, Thara and Wondimagegn2010), while a median of merely 0.16% of children in LMICs with mental health disorders receive any treatment (World Health Organization, 2009). This treatment gap is exacerbated by shortage of human resources in LMICs, with many African LMICs experiencing significant mental health professional shortages (Bruckner et al., Reference Bruckner, Scheffler, Shen, Yoon, Chisholm, Morris, Fulton, Dal Poz and Saxena2011). Funding and human resource limitations necessitate the identification of scalable and feasible strategies to address the treatment gap for children in LMICs (Eaton et al., Reference Eaton, McCay, Semrau, Chatterjee, Baingana, Araya, Ntulo, Thornicroft and Saxena2011; Betancourt and Chambers, Reference Betancourt and Chambers2015).

Accumulating evidence suggests trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy (TF-CBT) – an evidence-based treatment for child trauma in the USA (Cohen et al., Reference Cohen, Mannarino and Deblinger2006) – is effective at reducing PTS, depression, anxiety and conduct disorder with trauma-exposed populations in LMICs, including those who experienced parental death (Dorsey et al., Reference Dorsey, Lucid, Martin, King, O'Donnell, Murray, Wasonga, Itemba, Cohen, Manongi and Whetten2020b; Murray et al., Reference Murray, Skavenski, Kane, Mayeya, Dorsey, Cohen, Michalopoulos, Imasiku and Bolton2015). To address limited human resources, efforts have utilized task-shifting, a process in which non-specialists with limited to no previous mental health experience provide treatment under supervision (World Health Organization, 2008). Studies utilizing a version of TF-CBT adapted to fit the local context demonstrate TF-CBT can be feasibly delivered using task-shifting and results in mental health symptoms improvements for youth in sub-Saharan Africa (Murray et al., Reference Murray, Dorsey, Skavenski, Kasoma, Imasiku, Bolton, Bass and Cohen2013a, Reference Murray, Familiar, Skavenski, Jere, Cohen, Imasiku, Mayeya, Bass and Bolton2013b; O'Donnell et al., Reference O'Donnell, Dorsey, Gong, Ostermann, Whetten, Cohen, Itemba, Manongi and Whetten2014). To enhance sustainability of these efforts, current research is examining the scale-up of task-shifted TF-CBT in schools (Dorsey et al., Reference Dorsey, Gray, Wasonga, Amanya, Weiner, Belden, Martin, Meza, Weinhold, Soi, Murray, Lucid, Turner, Mildon and Whetten2020a, Reference Dorsey, Lucid, Martin, King, O'Donnell, Murray, Wasonga, Itemba, Cohen, Manongi and Whetten2020b).

The public health impact of efforts to increase access to mental health treatment can only be realized if services are utilized. When treatment dose is diminished by non-attendance, the positive clinical outcomes typically demonstrated in clinical trials are also diminished (Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Lambert and Forman2002). Caregiver treatment attendance is also important. In TF-CBT, caregivers enhance treatment outcomes through reinforcing therapeutic skills and psychoeducation (Dorsey et al., Reference Dorsey, Pullmann, Berliner, Koschmann, McKay and Deblinger2014). Enhancing attendance in group-based services can maximize potential returns on the investment of human and financial resources required for Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) delivery. When utilizing task-shifting in LMICs, non-attendance may lead to wasted human resources, as is the case in traditional outpatient services (Gordon et al., Reference Gordon, Antshel, Lewandowski and Seigers2010).

Treatment attendance often suffers from community-based settings, with clients across diverse settings attending an average of three to five sessions – well below the recommended dose for most EBPs (Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Lambert and Forman2002). Caregivers in US-based publicly funded mental health settings attended an average of 42% of sessions (Wright et al., Reference Wright, Lau and Brookman-Frazee2019). Though school-based services can reduce treatment access barriers and increase treatment enrollment, treatment attendance in schools remains suboptimal (Werner-Seidler et al., Reference Werner-Seidler, Perry, Calear, Newby and Christensen2017). Less research on treatment attendance exists in LMICs; nonetheless, attendance challenges have been documented in LMICs. When examining perceptions of TF-CBT delivery in Zambia, poor attendance was the most common barrier reported (Murray et al., Reference Murray, Skavenski, Michalopoulos, Bolton, Bass, Familiar, Imasiku and Cohen2014).

Attendance barriers have been identified, including client and treatment characteristics, resource requirements, treatment setting, and culture, though these mainly stem from research in high-income country (HIC) settings. Caregiver disappointment with mental health services, distrust of the system (Contractor et al., Reference Contractor, Celedonia, Cruz, Douaihy, Kogan, Marin and Stein2012; Baker-Ericzén et al., Reference Baker-Ericzén, Jenkins and Haine-Schlagel2013) and negative attitudes toward mental health service use (Logan and King, Reference Logan and King2001) are associated with decreased service utilization. While school-based services can reduce cost and transportation barriers (Weist et al., Reference Weist, Bruns, Whitaker, Wei, Kutcher, Larsen, Holsen, Cooper, Geroski and Short2017), they can also engender other barriers. Pella and et al. (Reference Pella, Ginsburg, Casline, Pikulski and Drake2018) studied children's perceived barriers to attending school-based treatment in the USA and found the most common barriers were concerns about missing classroom work and stigma about receiving mental health services. In LMICs, resource barriers including cost, transportation challenges, and the amount of time and opportunity cost from time spent attending sessions interfered with treatment engagement (Patel et al., Reference Patel, Chowdhary, Rahman and Verdeli2011; Murray et al., Reference Murray, Skavenski, Michalopoulos, Bolton, Bass, Familiar, Imasiku and Cohen2014). Low intervention acceptability and stigma about accessing care have also been barriers to treatment use in LMICs (Patel et al., Reference Patel, Chowdhary, Rahman and Verdeli2011).

Current study

The parent study, Building and Sustaining Interventions for Children (BASIC), uniquely examines conditions that create an enabling context to scale-up and sustain TF-CBT in Kenya. Building on that goal, we used qualitative methods to examine barriers and facilitators of child and guardian attendance of lay-counselor delivered TF-CBT to inform our ultimate goal of facilitating a treatment delivery context that supports treatment attendance. Lay counselor perspectives were prioritized due to their familiarity with the treatment delivery context and counselor and consumer behaviors that may have helped or hindered attendance.

Methods

The parent study, BASIC, is a NIMH-funded study of TF-CBT delivered by teachers in the education sector and community health volunteers (CHVs) in the health sector in Western Kenya (see Dorsey et al., Reference Dorsey, Gray, Wasonga, Amanya, Weiner, Belden, Martin, Meza, Weinhold, Soi, Murray, Lucid, Turner, Mildon and Whetten2020a, Reference Dorsey, Lucid, Martin, King, O'Donnell, Murray, Wasonga, Itemba, Cohen, Manongi and Whetten2020b). BASIC is a stepped wedge cluster randomized trial that includes seven sequences. Forty primary schools and their surrounding 40 village clusters, referred to as communities, were randomly selected from the 137 primary schools in Kanduyi Constituency and randomly ordered into seven sequences. Sequences initiate delivery of TF-CBT sequentially. Sequence 1, in this study, has ten schools and 10 communities. Data from sequence 1 is used to inform implementation in sequences 2–7.

Intervention

Counselors delivered an adapted version of TF-CBT, subsequently referred to as Pamoja Tunaweza (PT), for single- or double-orphaned youth and their guardians. PT is delivered by lay counselors and involves eight group-based sessions and two-to-three individual sessions mid-group for imaginal exposure.

Procedures

Recruitment and consent

Youth aged 11–14 were eligible to receive PT if one or both of their parents had died and they (1) were aware the parent(s) had died, (2) were attending a study-enrolled school, (3) lived at home with at least one adult (v. group home or congregate care setting), and (4) were experiencing PTS and/or prolonged grief. Schools and the local health facility via the Community Health Extension Workers (CHEWs) and CHVs provided the Kenyan research interviewers from Ace Africa with lists of orphaned youth in each village cluster. Guardians of orphaned youth were contacted over a phone, or in-person if a phone number was not available, to describe the study and schedule an in-person appointment. If guardians expressed interest, a pair of Ace Africa interviewers visited the family at their home to describe the study aims and participant involvement. Written informed consent was collected from guardians for themselves and the youth, and upon guardian consent, written assent was collected from youth. If both agreed to participate, youth and guardians completed the Child PTSD Symptom Scale (CPSS) and youth reported on prolonged grief using the Inventory for Complicated Grief (ICG) to determine youth clinical eligibility. Youth were clinically eligible if they scored ⩾18 on the CPSS by youth or guardian report or 35 on the ICG based on youth report. Both measures have demonstrated acceptable reliability among Kenyan youth who experienced parental death (Dorsey et al., Reference Dorsey, Lucid, Martin, King, O'Donnell, Murray, Wasonga, Itemba, Cohen, Manongi and Whetten2020b). The youth and guardian measures were administered simultaneously – one interviewer with the child, one interviewer with the guardian – to reduce the time burden on the family. Interviews typically lasted about 40 min. Guardians received an incentive of 500 Kenyan Shillings (KSh) and youth received 100 KSh. For the initial group, guardians of clinically eligible youth randomly drew an envelope determining their randomization to receive PT in CHV or teacher-led groups. In subsequent groups, after 16 clinically eligible youth were identified (or the maximum available up to 16), study staff used a computer-based randomization tool to assign youth to CHV or teacher groups; guardians were informed of their study condition prior to the start of groups. Of the 280 families who were eligible in sequence 1, no guardians or youth declined participation.

Following an initial BASIC sensitization meeting with each site, Ace Africa worked with site leadership to recruit three lay counselors. Site leaders nominated teachers and CHVs to participate in BASIC who were good with children, may have had counseling experience, had time to deliver PT, and had no immediate plans to leave their school/area. Interviewers met with nominated teachers and CHVs to describe the study aims and to obtain written informed consent.

Intervention training and delivery

The CHV and teacher counselors were trained to deliver PT in January 2018 and delivered two sequential PT groups in schools during two academic terms. The education sector delivered PT in schools and opted to conduct PT during games time, a 1-h period where students participate in clubs and sports. The health sector had autonomy to decide the location of PT delivery given CHVs' services are integrated within the community. During sensitization meetings in schools, Head Teachers welcomed CHVs to deliver PT in schools given the availability of space. To date, all health facilities have opted to deliver PT in schools.

Data collection

Following delivery of two PT groups, qualitative interviews were conducted with a sample of CHV and teacher counselors from twelve sites, six sites per sector, in sequence 1. Sites were purposively sampled to maximize variation in characteristics believed to potentially impact PT delivery. Schools were sampled based on urban and rural classification, supervisors' subjective rating of Head Teacher leadership, number of teachers, student–teacher ratio, and the supervisor for that site. Health facilities were sampled based on urban and rural classification, religious make-up, population size of the village cluster served by CHVs, whether CHV counselors had responsibilities in addition to PT (e.g. involved in sanitation program), sources of CHV funding, and the supervisor for that site. Data were collected between July and August 2018. Teacher counselor interviews were conducted in English, whereas CHV counselor interviews were conducted in Swahili to accommodate language preferences. Procedures were approved by the Institutional Review Boards at Duke University, Kenya Medical Research Institute, and National Commission for Science Technology and Innovation. Counselors received an incentive of 500 KSh, approximately $5, for interview participation and weekly for phone credits to communicate with PT participants. On average, guardians received 200 KSh and children received 50–100 KSh for transportation weekly, depending on weather conditions and distance traveled to school for sessions.

Participants

Participants were 36 lay counselors (18 teachers; 18 CHVs) from six sites per sector. Three lay counselors from each sampled site (two child group counselors; one guardian group counselor) who delivered PT in sequence 1 were interviewed.

Qualitative interviews

Data were collected using a semi-structured interview guide including open-ended questions about counselors' experience delivering PT and specific questions regarding barriers and facilitators of PT delivery related to resources, rewards and incentives, supervision, leadership, workload, and roles within the delivery context. The guide was developed in English and translated to Swahili. Each interview was conducted by an interviewer and notetaker from Ace Africa with previous data collection and qualitative interviewing experience. The interviewer and notetaker took detailed notes of responses during interviews. Notes were reviewed and consolidated to ensure consensus. All interviews were audio-recorded. During initial interviews, the study team reviewed audio recordings and notes immediately post-interview to ensure consistency and provide feedback for interviewers and notetakers to improve interviewing process and notetaking.

Data analysis

Thematic analysis was conducted by initially taking a deductive approach that considered pre-identified multilevel facilitators and barriers that might impact child and guardian treatment attendance by a team of five coders. These included (1) school characteristics, (2) counselor behaviors, (3) youth and guardian characteristics, (4) resources required for treatment participation, and (5) intervention characteristics. Three authors (RM, SK, and CS) initially applied the existing coding framework to a subset of English interviews and emergent codes were compared, refined, and organized into thematic categories iteratively throughout analysis. Senior authors (RM, SK, and CS) reviewed themes and sub-themes that emerged from the final coded data. The updated codebook was applied to 18 Swahili (SK and CS) and 18 English (RM, AN, and CR) interview notes. Interviews were independently coded by two coders and discrepancies were resolved through consensus discussions. If consensus was not reached, a third coder was consulted. The first author (RM) participated in all consensus discussions with Swahili coders to ensure consistency across languages. We calculated frequencies and percentages of codes. Quotes in Swahili were translated into English and marked with an asterisk (*).

Results

Nearly all teacher and CHV counselors reported barriers (93%) and facilitators (98%) of attendance (see Tables 1 and 2). Teachers reported an average of 3.7 (s.d. = 2.2) barriers while CHVs reported an average of 2.0 (s.d. = 1.9) barriers. The average number of facilitators reported was 5.1 (s.d. = 2.1) and 3.9 (s.d. = 2.5) for teachers and CHVs, respectively.

Table 1. Barriers of youth and guardian attendance (teacher: N = 18; CHV: N = 18)

Table 2. Facilitators of youth and guardian attendance (teacher: N = 18; CHV: N = 18)

Delivery setting

Structure and procedures

School structures and procedures were identified as attendance barriers, though they occurred infrequently. The most frequently endorsed procedural barrier was the primary school national graduation exams. Grade (class) 8 students sit for exams at the end of the school year to advance to secondary school. These students were busy throughout the year with exam preparation activities which were prioritized over other extracurricular activities, including PT.

One counselor explained, ‘Those candidates… you find that sometimes you need them, but they are doing an exam… In most cases, the problem came from these candidates. Yeah, so you might need them and find that maybe they are worn out. Like the last two weeks, class 8 were to go to [school]on the day you were supposed to have a session, they were to go there so that they could release… the results of the exams… so you find that some of these pupils miss the session. But we organized and make them up on the following day to give them what the others had done’. (Teacher Counselor)

Though Kenyan government-funded primary schools do not require tuition, non-tuition fees are required to support school activities. Schools often send students with unpaid fees home until fees are paid. When students from PT groups were sent home, counselors often were unaware until groups began and had to hire a motorbike to bring students back in time for session. Similarly, if students were absent from school for other reasons, their absence precluded them from attending session. Other infrequent context-based barriers to attendance included not adjusting the school or class schedule when school activities interfered with a PT session and holidays coinciding with PT session resulting in school closure.

Describing the impact of youth being sent home for unpaid fees, one counselor stated, ‘And then sometimes some children have been sent home due to [non-tuition fees]… if the child has been sent home [he/she] will not return back to school and when you go for PT sessions you don't find them and I was forced to go and look for the child at their home and bring them back for PT session’. (CHV counselor)*

Staff behaviors

Staff releasing students from classes or school activities to attend PT was among the most frequently endorsed attendance facilitators by teacher counselors. Students were often in class when sessions began, requiring the cooperation of teachers to release them. Occasionally, teacher counselors also identified students not being released from class as a barrier. They often addressed this barrier by gaining the Head Teacher's support for releasing students, prompting teachers to comply. Among CHVs, wide-ranging staff support was identified as facilitating attendance, including teachers locating PT participants and ensuring timely attendance. A variety of staff, including administration, teachers and gatekeepers, collaborated to ensure students and guardians were able to attend sessions.

Leader support

Support from leadership was characterized as facilitating attendance, especially among CHV counselors. This involved the Head or Deputy Head Teacher ensuring students were in session and sending other students to find youth not in session. When CHVs conducted individual visits in youth's homes, the Village Elder provided assistance in gaining access to their homes to conduct sessions. School leaders also occasionally adjusted school policies to allow students with unpaid fees to remain at school to attend session.

Resources

Many barriers and facilitators were identified related to resources required to attend session, motivate attendance, or for counselors to travel or speak to participants who missed sessions.

PT participant resources: The transportation stipend for guardians and youth was commonly noted as facilitating attendance. However, one counselor noted the stipend was insufficient and others reported hiring a motorbike to pick up youth or guardians unable to afford transportation. During the rainy season, heavy rain significantly increased transportation fees and made roadways to schools impassable, posing a barrier to guardian attendance.

Counselor resources:

Counselors reported resources facilitated their ability to support participant attendance. These primarily included phone credits to call and remind guardians about sessions or schedule make-up sessions with absent participants. On occasion, counselors were able to borrow a phone or received transportation funds to conduct make-up sessions. Though uncommon, some counselors reported phone credits or transportation funds were insufficient. In a demonstration of their commitment to delivering PT to participants, some counselors used their own money to support attendance. This was primarily used for transportation funds to reach participants. One teacher counselor reported they and other staff used their own money to cover medical expenses for a youth who was absent due to illness.

The counselor noted, ‘One of the children was… not feeling well … The [youth] was supposed to attend the session … So, the [youth] was sick but one of the staff members, in fact, they contributed some amount. They said, ‘we don't want [youth] to miss, because we've been seeing this child since last year. [The youth] was so traumatized with the loss of the parents because [the youth] lost both parents.’ So, we talked about it, we gave out some amount, the [youth] was taken to the hospital, and the next day [the youth] came back’. (Teacher Counselor)

Participant characteristics

Buy-in/engagement. PT participants' buy-in and engagement, competing demands, and mental and physical health emerged as barriers and facilitators of attendance. Some guardians and, to a lesser extent, youth expressed an unwillingness to attend due to a lack of interest or understanding of the value of PT.

Describing guardians' unwillingness to attend, a counselor stated, ‘And then on the side of the guardians, it was also a bit challenging because some of them would not come, they would have a lot of excuses. So, you keep on calling them, calling them, you call a guardian like four times. [A guardian is] telling you ‘I'm on the way coming.’ And then, maybe [they don't] show up’. (Teacher Counselor)

One CHV counselor noted attendance improvements when youth and guardians recognized the non-monetary benefits of participating in PT, including improvements to mental health.

Competing demands. Competing demands were a barrier, especially for guardians. Several counselors reported guardians had conflicts including funerals, community events, and appointments. Since groups occurred during business hours, some guardians' work schedules conflicted with attendance. Though rare, some youth missed sessions due to farming or housework responsibilities.

Physical and Mental Health. Participants' poor physical and mental health were noted as barriers to attendance. PT participant illness was noted as a barrier, especially by teacher counselors. Less commonly, guardian alcohol use interfered with attendance. To address this, counselors reported speaking with and warning guardians who arrived intoxicated. One counselor quizzed guardians on content from missed sessions to encourage attendance. In rare cases, a participant's symptom severity impacted their ability to attend session.

Intervention characteristics

Details related to the intervention location, timing, participant guidelines and supervision emerged as barriers and facilitators. Holding PT sessions during the school day was identified as a facilitator due to the availability of youth. However, in some regions – especially rural areas – some families did not live near school. This distance posed a barrier to attendance, especially for guardians who traveled to school for sessions.

When enrolling in groups, a single guardian was asked to participate in all sessions to ensure guardians learned the full intervention content and create a cohesive guardian group. Counselors reported not allowing guardians to share the role of attending groups occasionally obstructed consistent attendance. Support received from PT supervisors was occasionally identified as facilitating participant attendance. This primarily involved reminding counselors to call and remind guardians about upcoming sessions and helping counselors to solve problems related to participant attendance.

Counselor behaviors

Counselor commitment. Counselors reported engaging in various behaviors to facilitate attendance or mitigate the effect of non-attendance. Over half of counselors reported conducting make-up sessions with families to cover missed content. This involved calling guardians to coordinate a separate time to deliver content in schools, at home or in a location convenient to the participant, such as the marketplace. Make-up sessions emerged as an important method for participants to receive the full intervention, but also increased burden on counselors. In some cases, counselors temporarily delivered two sessions per week to accommodate class 8 youth who were unable to attend sessions during exam preparation. Counselors also adjusted PT session times to facilitate participant attendance. Examples include, delaying session until all guardians arrived and rescheduling or extending sessions to allow guardians enough time to share. Adjustments could result in significant delays to sessions starting, requiring a greater time commitment from counselors and participants.

Counselors often exceeded expectations to ensure participants received PT. These extra effort behaviors were more common among CHVs, who had greater flexibility and time, including repeatedly visiting homes to find participants for make-up sessions and individual visits, staying long past scheduled session times to ensure participants received the full content, waiting hours until exams ended to deliver PT, and repeatedly delivering in-home sessions for sick guardians.

Describing efforts to conduct an individual visit, one counselor stated, ‘I had a challenge during individual visits. Sometimes you don't find the child at home and when you ask the guardian, she tells you ‘oh the child went to such and such a place.’ I am then forced to take a bicycle or motor bike to go and look for that child. I can arrive there and they tell me ‘oh the child has gone back home’ so I am looking for the child until the evening and you don't find her and you have to go back the next day because you want to speak with that child… and since you are committed you will look for the child until you talk to her’. (CHV counselor)*

Communication. Efforts to communicate with and encourage participants to attend sessions were the most common facilitators of attendance. Counselors repeatedly encouraged attendance and reminded participants. They also recruited others to help with encouraging attendance, including Head Teachers, supervisors, school staff and other youth and guardians.

Describing collaborative efforts to encourage guardian attendance, one counselor stated, ‘We had to involve the supervisor. She went into [their] house. They sat, she explained [the] importance of [the guardian] attending the meetings and try[ing] to come early. So, to some extent [they] adjusted… [The supervisor] went three times… and other times [the supervisor] would call [them] personally on the phone… There's a staff mate of ours who is [their] neighbor. So, we also told her to tell [them]… to try to be coming for the meetings and try to be coming early. So, through those – all those efforts is when we realized [they] changed a bit, but not like fully like those [other guardians]. But we pushed on until we completed the session with perseverance’. (Teacher Counselor)

To facilitate attendance, counselors clarified program expectations and informed families about session changes. However, communication challenges were a common barrier, including difficulty reaching guardians by phone or in-person and occasionally lacking phone credits to remind guardians. Counselors reported some miscommunication about session schedules that negatively impacted attendance.

Discussion

This study examined barriers and facilitators of attendance in a task-shifted intervention delivered in schools to inform development of strategies future implementing sites could use to improve attendance. Task-shifting and school-based delivery hold promise for increasing youths' access to mental health care (Fazel et al., Reference Fazel, Patel, Thomas and Tol2014), but benefits of increased access can only be realized if participants attend and engage in care.

Schools are recommended settings for scaling up of youth mental health services in LMICs (Patel et al., Reference Patel, Belkin, Chockalingam, Cooper, Saxena and Unützer2013a, Reference Patel, Kieling, Maulik and Divan2013b); however, some features of school-based delivery can create challenges for attendance if unaddressed. In our study, the greatest number of unique barriers were related to school structure and procedures. Competing education priorities in schools occasionally interfered with attendance, with preparation for national primary school graduation exams noted most frequently. Striking a balance between education priorities and treatment attendance will be necessary in schools where education is the primary priority and competing initiatives often arise (Owens et al., Reference Owens, Lyon, Brandt, Warner, Nadeem, Spiel and Wagner2014). Some academic activities may have to take priority. For instance, counselors opted to exclude graduating grade 8 students from future PT groups because schedule conflicts were unresolvable. Other structural and procedural barriers may be resolved by gaining support from teachers and school leadership, as their support has been essential in incorporating mental health interventions in schools in the literature (Forman and Barakat, Reference Forman and Barakat2011) and in our study (e.g. releasing students to attend).

Financial resources provided to counselors and participants were among the most commonly endorsed facilitators. These included financial resources for counselors to schedule and provide make-up sessions and individual visits as well as transportation funds for participants. While the parent study intentionally kept study-provided financial resources to a minimum for sustainability (Rathod et al., Reference Rathod, Pinninti, Irfan, Gorczynski, Rathod, Gega and Naeem2017), results suggest some financial resources are important. Previous studies have found transportation costs to be a barrier to attending sessions in low-resource settings (Murray et al., Reference Murray, Skavenski, Michalopoulos, Bolton, Bass, Familiar, Imasiku and Cohen2014; Patel et al., Reference Patel, Chowdhary, Rahman and Verdeli2011) and without some transportation assistance for guardians, attendance may suffer. Similarly, the increased cost of transport during heavy rains was a barrier to attendance. A cost analysis conducted as part of the parent study (Dorsey et al., Reference Dorsey, Gray, Wasonga, Amanya, Weiner, Belden, Martin, Meza, Weinhold, Soi, Murray, Lucid, Turner, Mildon and Whetten2020a, Reference Dorsey, Lucid, Martin, King, O'Donnell, Murray, Wasonga, Itemba, Cohen, Manongi and Whetten2020b) will calculate all costs associated with PT delivery, which may aid policymakers as they consider integrating services into their budget. Though funding transportation may not be a funding priority, the return on investment will be greater for governments if participants can attend services.

The importance of financial resources to support attendance highlights a tension in scale-up efforts. EBT scale-up has been limited, in part, by a lack of funding (Eaton et al., Reference Eaton, McCay, Semrau, Chatterjee, Baingana, Araya, Ntulo, Thornicroft and Saxena2011). Minimizing implementation costs is essential, but mental health trials in LMICs have often required some financial support. For instance, funds have been provided for communication between counselors and their supervisors when clinical emergencies arose and to contact participants for follow-up (e.g. Murray et al., Reference Murray, Familiar, Skavenski, Jere, Cohen, Imasiku, Mayeya, Bass and Bolton2013b; Weiss et al., Reference Weiss, Murray, Zangana, Mahmooth, Kaysen, Dorsey, Lindgren, Gross, McIvor Murray, Bass and Bolton2015). Without such support, ethical challenges arise regarding expecting lay counselors to deliver services as they may face trade-offs between using their own money or neglecting certain delivery activities such as contacting supervisors for support. The financial resources provided for counselors and families – though limited – may hinder the sustainability of PT delivery and family attendance. In the parent study, this tension is addressed by continuously aiming to reduce costs where possible and also measuring all costs to inform efforts to attain locally sustainable funding. To this end, subsequent sequences no longer provided incentive payments for child and guardian attendees. Anecdotally, supervisors report this reduced guardian, but not child attendance. Building on Kenya's recent National Mental Health Policy (Republic of Kenya, 2014), the parent study aims to use these cost calculations to aid in acquiring sustainable funding.

Findings revealed CHVs played a unique role in supporting attendance and demonstrated the importance of collaboration across sectors. CHVs are a bridge between the community and health facilities (Ayala et al., Reference Ayala, Vaz, Earp, Elder and Cherrington2010), bringing services directly to the community. CHVs described engaging in behaviors that exceeded counselor expectations to bring PT to participants. This involved meeting participants at home or in the marketplace to ensure those who missed sessions received the content. Despite the increased time and effort this required, CHVs reported PT delivery was highly feasible (Dorsey et al., Reference Dorsey, Meza, Martin, Gray, Triplett, Soi, Woodard, Lucid, Amanya, Wasonga and Whetten2019). It is possible that CHVs' extra-effort behaviors have been motivated, in part, by the external oversight from study-imposed structures such as tracking and supervision – potentially limiting their sustainability. To support the sustainability of PT and the investment of the individuals who have made it possible, the project has fostered local ownership of PT among the schools and communities where it is being implemented. To that end, local stakeholders, including a subset of counselors from sequence 1, guided the development of strategies to support PT implementation, including attendance. Teacher and CHV counselors from sequence 1 function as volunteer coaches for sites that implement PT after them, to provide guidance and support the use of sustainable methods to deliver PT and encourage attendance. Support CHVs received from school staff and leadership also facilitated attendance. Partnerships across healthcare platforms or between health, academic and non-governmental organizations have improved mental health treatment access (Acharya et al., Reference Acharya, Maru, Schwarz, Citrin, Tenpa, Hirachan, Basnet, Thapa, Swar, Halliday, Kohrt, Luitel, Hung, Gauchan, Pokharel and Ekstrand2017), but fewer examples of health and education collaboration exist. Collaborative efforts between both sectors may be a promising method to increase access by delivering treatment in an accessible setting and using CHVs to bridge treatment gaps through their community engagement role.

Few barriers related to intervention characteristics were identified, and those that emerged were not related to intervention content, which may reflect attention to PT's acceptability (O'Donnell et al., Reference O'Donnell, Dorsey, Gong, Ostermann, Whetten, Cohen, Itemba, Manongi and Whetten2014). This is promising as the acceptability of western-based interventions has been a barrier to treatment engagement in LMICs (Patel et al., Reference Patel, Chowdhary, Rahman and Verdeli2011). Similarly, although stigma associated with accessing care has been a barrier to attendance in LMICs (Patel et al., Reference Patel, Chowdhary, Rahman and Verdeli2011) and school-based HIC settings (Pella et al., Reference Pella, Ginsburg, Casline, Pikulski and Drake2018), stigma did not emerge as a barrier in our study. Delivery by CHVs has been shown to reduce stigma and increase service engagement (Balaji et al., Reference Balaji, Chatterjee, Koschorke, Rangaswamy, Chavan, Dabholkar, Dakshin, Kumar, John, Thornicroft and Patel2012). Features of the delivery model, including school-based delivery by familiar teachers and CHVs may have reduced stigma in the current study.

Study findings were used to assist stakeholders in selecting strategies to improve attendance in subsequent sites implementing PT, with emphasis on addressing modifiable barriers without using additional resources. Stakeholders engaged in a method for developing tailored strategy plans (Lewis et al., Reference Lewis, Scott and Marriott2018) that were used to coach future sites in supporting attendance and PT implementation (Dorsey et al., Reference Dorsey, Gray, Wasonga, Amanya, Weiner, Belden, Martin, Meza, Weinhold, Soi, Murray, Lucid, Turner, Mildon and Whetten2020a, Reference Dorsey, Lucid, Martin, King, O'Donnell, Murray, Wasonga, Itemba, Cohen, Manongi and Whetten2020b). Some aimed to directly impact attendance, such as developing procedures for regular attendance reminders and using the first session to thoroughly sensitize participants about PT benefits and expectations to motivate attendance. Others intended to indirectly target attendance. Leadership support has aided in the integration of interventions in schools (Forman and Barakat, Reference Forman and Barakat2011), therefore one indirect strategy involved gaining Head Teacher buy-in to resolve schools' structural and procedural barriers to attendance by inviting them to PT training.

Strengths and limitations

Study strengths include the in-depth examination of treatment attendance barriers and facilitators in LMICs. The realistic study conditions, including lay counselor delivery in school-based settings is a particular strength. Purposive sampling prioritized data collection across diverse sites. However, additional themes may have emerged from unsampled sites. Due to the parent study's focus on implementation, our study includes only counselor perspectives on barriers and facilitators of attendance. The inclusion of youth and guardian perspectives would have likely enriched the study findings and not including their perspective may have resulted in missed themes. Finally, we were unable to link themes to attendance rates.

Conclusions

The findings revealed a predominance of facilitators of child and guardian attendance in lay counselor delivered PT in Kenyan schools. Common facilitators included resources, counselor commitment behaviors and communication efforts to encourage attendance. Barriers were less frequently endorsed, with participant resources, illness and communication challenges most commonly mentioned. Attention to barriers and facilitators of attendance in the context in which mental health interventions are delivered allows for identification of ways to improve attendance and treatment engagement and achieve the potential promise of providing accessible mental health services.

Acknowledgements

We thank the Ace Africa TF-CBT supervisors and interviewers: Elijah Agala, Lilian Aluka, Oliver Hillary, Moses Malaba, Emmanuel Muli, Micah Nalianya, Bernard Nabalia, Michael Nangila, Sheila Nderitu, Daisy Okoth, Omariba Nya-boke, Victor Shalakha, Annette Sulungai, Sylvia Wafula, and Nelly Wandera. We also thank the project staff from the University of Washington, Duke University, and ACE Africa Kenya. We are grateful to the Ministry of Health, Ministry of Education, Teachers Service Commission, participating schools, communities, children, and families who are taking part in BASIC.

Financial support

This work was supported by grants from the National Institute of Mental Health (S.D. and K.W., R01 MH112633, R01 MH112633-02S1); and The Center for Evidence and Implementation (Ace Africa).

Conflict of interest

Dorsey has received honoraria for providing TF-CBT training and has received grant funding to test TF-CBT. Whetten also has received grant funding to test TF-CBT. Other authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Ethical standards

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.

References

Acharya, B, Maru, D, Schwarz, R, Citrin, D, Tenpa, J, Hirachan, S, Basnet, M, Thapa, P, Swar, S, Halliday, S, Kohrt, B, Luitel, NP, Hung, E, Gauchan, B, Pokharel, R, Ekstrand, M(2017) Partnerships in mental healthcare service delivery in low-resource settings: developing an innovative network in rural Nepal. Globalization and Health 13, 17.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Andrews, G, Skinner, D and Zuma, K (2006) Epidemiology of health and vulnerability among children orphaned and made vulnerable by HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa. AIDS Care – Psychological and Socio-Medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV 18, 269276.Google ScholarPubMed
Atwine, B, Cantor-Graae, E and Bajunirwe, F (2005) Psychological distress among AIDS orphans in rural Uganda. Social Science and Medicine 61, 555564.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ayala, GX, Vaz, L, Earp, JA, Elder, JP and Cherrington, A (2010) Outcome effectiveness of the lay health advisor model among Latinos in the United States: an examination by role. Health Education Research 25, 815840.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Baker-Ericzén, MJ, Jenkins, MM and Haine-Schlagel, R (2013) Therapist, parent, and youth perspectives of treatment barriers to family-focused community outpatient mental health services. Journal of Child and Family Studies 22, 854868.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Balaji, M, Chatterjee, S, Koschorke, M, Rangaswamy, T, Chavan, A, Dabholkar, H, Dakshin, L, Kumar, P, John, S, Thornicroft, G, Patel, V (2012) The development of a lay health worker delivered collaborative community based intervention for people with schizophrenia in India. BMC Health Services Research 12, 112.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Betancourt, TS and Chambers, DA (2015) Optimizing an era of global mental health implementation science. JAMA Psychiatry 73, 99100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruckner, TA, Scheffler, RM, Shen, G, Yoon, J, Chisholm, D, Morris, J, Fulton, BD, Dal Poz, MR and Saxena, S (2011) The mental health workforce gap in low- and middle-income countries: a needs-based approach. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 89, 184194.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cluver, L and Gardner, F (2007) The mental health of children orphaned by AIDS: a review of international and Southern African research. Journal of Child and Adolescent Mental Health 19, 117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cohen, JA, Mannarino, AP and Deblinger, E (2006) Treating Trauma and Traumatic Grief in Children and Adolescents. New York: Guilford Publications.Google Scholar
Contractor, LFM, Celedonia, KL, Cruz, M, Douaihy, A, Kogan, JN, Marin, R and Stein, BD (2012) Mental health services for children of substance abusing parents: voices from the community. Community Mental Health Journal 48, 2228.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dorsey, S, Gray, CL, Wasonga, AI, Amanya, C, Weiner, BJ, Belden, M, Martin, P, Meza, RD, Weinhold, AK, Soi, C, Murray, LK, Lucid, L, Turner, EL, Mildon, R, Whetten, K (2020a) Advancing successful implementation of task-shifted mental health care in low-resource settings (BASIC): protocol for a stepped wedge cluster randomized trial. BMC Psychiatry 20, 114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dorsey, S, Lucid, L, Martin, P, King, KM, O'Donnell, K, Murray, LK, Wasonga, AI, Itemba, DK, Cohen, JA, Manongi, R, Whetten, K (2020b) Effectiveness of task-shifted trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy for children who experienced parental death and posttraumatic stress in Kenya and Tanzania: a randomized clinical trial. JAMA Psychiatry 77, 464473. doi: https://doi.org/10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2019.4475.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dorsey, S, Meza, RD, Martin, P, Gray, CL, Triplett, NS, Soi, C, Woodard, GS, Lucid, L, Amanya, C, Wasonga, A, Whetten, K (2019) Lay counselor perspectives of providing a child-focused mental health intervention for children: task-sharing in the education and health extension sectors in Kenya. Frontiers in Psychiatry 10, 115.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dorsey, S, Pullmann, MD, Berliner, L, Koschmann, E, McKay, M and Deblinger, E (2014) Engaging foster parents in treatment: a randomized trial of supplementing trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy with evidence-based engagement strategies. Child Abuse and Neglect 38, 15081520.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eaton, J, McCay, L, Semrau, M, Chatterjee, S, Baingana, F, Araya, R, Ntulo, C, Thornicroft, G, Saxena, S (2011) Scale up of services for mental health in low-income and middle-income countries. The Lancet 378, 15921603.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fazel, M, Patel, V, Thomas, S and Tol, W (2014) Mental health interventions in schools in low-income and middle-income countries. The Lancet Psychiatry 1, 377387. doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/S2215-0366(14)70357-8.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Forman, SG and Barakat, NM (2011) Cognitive-behavioral therapy in the schools: bringing research to practice through effective implementation. Psychology in the Schools 48, 283296.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gordon, M, Antshel, KM, Lewandowski, L and Seigers, D (2010) Predictors of missed appointments over the course of child mental health treatment. Psychiatric Services 61, 657659.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hansen, NB, Lambert, MJ and Forman, EM (2002) The psychotherapy dose-response effect and its implications for treatment delivery services. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice 9, 329343.Google Scholar
Idele, P, Gillespie, A, Porth, T, Suzuki, C, Mahy, M, Kasedde, S and Luo, C (2018). Epidemiology of HIV and AIDS among adolescents: current status, inequities, and data gaps. Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes, 78, 155162.Google Scholar
Kieling, C, Baker-Henningham, H, Belfer, M, Conti, G, Ertem, I, Omigbodun, O, Rohde, LA, Srinath, S, Ulkuer, N, Rahman, A (2011) Child and adolescent mental health worldwide: evidence for action. The Lancet 378, 15151525.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lewis, CC, Scott, K and Marriott, BR (2018) A methodology for generating a tailored implementation blueprint: an exemplar from a youth residential setting. Implementation Science 13, 113.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Logan, DE and King, CA (2001) Parental facilitation of adolescent mental health service utilization: a conceptual and empirical review. Clinical Psychology: Science and Practice 8, 319333.Google Scholar
Monasch, R and Boerma, JT (2004) Orphanhood and childcare patterns in sub-Saharan Africa: an analysis of national surveys from 40 countries. AIDS (London, England) 18, S55S65.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Murray, LK, Dorsey, S, Skavenski, S, Kasoma, M, Imasiku, M, Bolton, P, Bass, J , Cohen, JA (2013a) Identification, modification, and implementation of an evidence-based psychotherapy for children in a low-income country: the use of TF-CBT in Zambia. International Journal of Mental Health Systems 7, 24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, LK, Familiar, I, Skavenski, S, Jere, E, Cohen, J, Imasiku, M, Mayeya, J, Bass, JK , Bolton, P (2013b) An evaluation of trauma focused cognitive behavioral therapy for children in Zambia. Child Abuse and Neglect 37, 11751185.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Murray, LK, Skavenski, S, Kane, JC, Mayeya, J, Dorsey, S, Cohen, JA, Michalopoulos, LTM, Imasiku, M, Bolton, PA (2015) Effectiveness of trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy among trauma-affected children in Lusaka, Zambia. JAMA Pediatrics 169, 761.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Murray, LK, Skavenski, S, Michalopoulos, LM, Bolton, PA, Bass, JK, Familiar, I, Imasiku, M, Cohen, J (2014) Counselor and client perspectives of trauma-focused cognitive behavioral therapy for children in Zambia: a qualitative study. Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology 43, 902914.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
O'Donnell, K, Dorsey, S, Gong, W, Ostermann, J, Whetten, R, Cohen, JA, Itemba, D, Manongi, R, Whetten, K (2014) Treating maladaptive grief and posttraumatic stress symptoms in orphaned children in Tanzania: group-based trauma-focused cognitive-behavioral therapy. Journal of Traumatic Stress 27, 664671.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Owens, JS, Lyon, AR, Brandt, NE, Warner, CM, Nadeem, E, Spiel, C and Wagner, M (2014) Implementation science in school mental health: key constructs in a developing research agenda. School Mental Health 6, 99111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patel, V, Belkin, GS, Chockalingam, A, Cooper, J, Saxena, S and Unützer, J (2013a) Grand challenges: integrating mental health services into priority health care platforms. PLoS Medicine 10. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1001448.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Patel, V, Chowdhary, N, Rahman, A and Verdeli, H (2011) Improving access to psychological treatments: lessons from developing countries. Behaviour Research and Therapy 49, 523528.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Patel, V, Kieling, C, Maulik, PK and Divan, G (2013b) Improving access to care for children with mental disorders: a global perspective. Archives of Disease in Childhood 98, 323327.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pella, JE, Ginsburg, GS, Casline, E, Pikulski, PJ and Drake, KL (2018) Children's perceptions of barriers to session attendance in school-based treatment for anxiety. School Mental Health 10, 417427.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rathod, S, Pinninti, N, Irfan, M, Gorczynski, P, Rathod, P, Gega, L and Naeem, F (2017) Mental health service provision in low- and middle-income countries. Health Services Insights 10. https://doi.org/10.1177/1178632917694350.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Republic of Kenya (2014) The Mental Health Bill, Nairobi: National Assembly Bills.Google Scholar
Thornicroft, G, Alem, A, Antunes Dos Santos, R, Barley, E, Drake, RE, Gregorio, G, Hanlon, C, Ito, H, Latimer, E, Law, A, Mari, J, McGeorge, P, Padmavati, R, Razzouk, D, Semrau, M, Setoya, Y, Thara, R, Wondimagegn, D (2010) WPA Guidance on steps, obstacles and mistakes to avoid in the implementation of community mental health care. World Psychiatry 9, 6777.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
UNICEF (2015) No Title. State of the World's Children: Statistical Tables.Google Scholar
Weiss, WM, Murray, LK, Zangana, GAS, Mahmooth, Z, Kaysen, D, Dorsey, S, Lindgren, K,Gross, A, McIvor Murray, S, Bass, JK, Bolton, P (2015) Community-based mental health treatments for survivors of torture and militant attacks in Southern Iraq: a randomized control trial. BMC Psychiatry 15, 116.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Weist, MD, Bruns, EJ, Whitaker, K, Wei, Y, Kutcher, S, Larsen, T, Holsen, I, Cooper, JL, Geroski, A, Short, KH (2017) School mental health promotion and intervention: experiences from four nations. School Psychology International 38, 343362.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Werner-Seidler, A, Perry, Y, Calear, AL, Newby, JM and Christensen, H (2017) School-based depression and anxiety prevention programs for young people: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Clinical Psychology Review 51, 3047.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
World Health Organization (2008) Integrating mental health into primary care: a global perspective. https://doi.org/10.1097/01.NAJ.0000508676.69402.4c.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2009) Mental Health Systems in Selected Low- and Middle-Income Countries: A WHO-AIMS Cross-National Analysis. World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
Wright, B, Lau, AS and Brookman-Frazee, L (2019) Factors associated with caregiver attendance in implementation of multiple evidence-based practices in youth mental health services. Psychiatric Services 70, 808815.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. Barriers of youth and guardian attendance (teacher: N = 18; CHV: N = 18)

Figure 1

Table 2. Facilitators of youth and guardian attendance (teacher: N = 18; CHV: N = 18)