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Providing quality mental health nursing in primary health care settings in Kenya : A discussion paper.

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conference contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Elijah Marangu, A Karani, Natisha SandsNatisha Sands, S Elsom
Kenya, a country of 38 million people in East Africa has about 75 Psychiatrists and 500 Psychiatric Nurses, the majority work in the private sector and mainly in urban areas. Mental illness is common in Kenya, however, specialist services are sparse and primary care struggles to cope, and this has been worsened by general health programs which have been slow to appreciate the significance of mental health. The World Health Organisation recommends that provision of good quality mental health care does not only involve increasing the number of health workers but changing the skill mix and developing new competencies among existing workers. Successful implementation of mental, neurological and substance abuse disorder services in Kenya will depend on nurses, who constitute majority of the workforce located in provinces, districts and community clinics. <br><br>This discussion paper will address s key workforce issues affecting the up-scaling of mental health services, and the delivery of quality mental health nursing care in primary health care settings in Kenya. Strategies to develop skills and competencies of new and existing personnel will be discussed.<br><br>

History

Location

Melbourne, Vic.

Open access

  • Yes

Language

eng

Publication classification

EN.1 Other conference paper

Copyright notice

2011, The University of Melbourne : Centre for Psychiatric Nursing

Pagination

1 - 21

Start date

2011-08-11

End date

2011-08-12

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the 12th Victorian Collaborative Conference, 2011

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