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Global Mental Health: How Do Our Metrics Fail Us?

Global Mental Health: How Do Our Metrics Fail Us?. Anne E. Becker, M.D., Ph.D., Sc.M. October 8, 2009 SW 25. Why Fiji?. Why mental health in Fiji?. Why eating disorders?. Where is Fiji?. What can Fiji teach us about key challenges in global mental health care delivery?.

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Global Mental Health: How Do Our Metrics Fail Us?

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  1. Global Mental Health: How Do Our Metrics Fail Us? Anne E. Becker, M.D., Ph.D., Sc.M. October 8, 2009 SW 25

  2. Why Fiji?

  3. Why mental health in Fiji?

  4. Why eating disorders?

  5. Where is Fiji?

  6. What can Fiji teach us about key challenges in global mental health care delivery?

  7. Global mental health:Resource and allocation gap

  8. Burden of mental disorder* % of health budget for mental health† Low-income countries 7.88% Lower-middle-income 14.50% Higher-middle-income 19.56% High-income 21.37% All countries 11.48% †Median values for proportion of total health budget allocated to mental health. Inequitable allocation of resources for mental health 2.26% 2.62% 4.27% 6.88% 3.76% Saxena S, Thornicroft G, Knapp M et al, Resources for mental health: scarcity, inequity, and inefficiency. Lancet 2007; published online Sept 4. DOI:10.1016/S0140-6736(07)61239-2.

  9. GMH shortfalls are especially pronounced for children and adolescents • The prevalence of mental disorders is high (20%) in children and adolescents • Only 7% of countries worldwide have child and adolescent mental health policiesSource: Child Mental Health Atlas, WHO, 2005

  10. Strategies for global risk assessment and response • Global School-based Health Survey • Includes dietary behaviors • Implemented in 89 countries • 13 languages • Validity or reliability examined in: • 0 populations Becker AE, Roberts AL, Perloe A, Bainivualiku A, Richards LK, Gilman SE, Striegel-Moore RH. Youth health risk behavior assessment in Fiji: The reliability of Global School-based Health Survey content adapted for ethnic Fijian adolescent girls. Under review at Ethnicity & Health;

  11. How reliable is youth behavioral risk assessment? (Brener et al., 2001)

  12. How reliable is youth behavioral risk assessment? (Brener et al., 2001; Becker et al., under review)

  13. Complementary signals and limitations: Epidemiologic data Data from: Cornelius M, Cecourten M, Pryor J, Saketa S, Waqanivalu T, Laqeretabua A, Chung E. Fiji Non-communicable diseases (NCD) STEPS Survey 2002. Ministry of Health: Shaping Fiji's Health 2002: 1-65. Becker AE, Perloe A, Richards L, Roberts AL, Bainivualiku A, Khan AN, Navara K, Gilman SE, Aalbersberg W, Striegel-Moore RH for the HEALTHY Fiji Study Group Prevalence and Socio-demographic Correlates of Cigarette Smoking, Alcohol Use, and Unsafe Sexual Behavior among Ethnic Fijian Secondary Schoolgirls. Fiji Medical Journal; 2009, in press.

  14. How do we measure impact of socio-cultural environment on mental health?

  15. Ethnographic study of body, self, and society in Fiji Traditional economy based upon subsistence agriculture Ethnographic data from: Becker AE. Body, Self, and Society: The View from Fiji. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 1995. pp. 1-206.

  16. Rigid social hierarchy & expectations

  17. Ethnographic study of body, self, and society in Fiji Family and social life revolved Around food preparation, food exchange, and feasting

  18. Ethnographic study of body, self, and society in Fiji Mealtimes in Fiji were highly structured and socialized, featuring rhetoric that encouraged people to eat abundantly

  19. Ethnographic study of body, self, and society in Fiji A number of social mechanisms encouraged a hypervigilance for appetite or weight loss, including an appetite disorder, macake, and the locally identified illness, “going thin”

  20. Ethnographic study of body, self, and society in Fiji Traditional aesthetic body ideals favored a robust body, which reflected a dense social network Bodies were less a site for personal identity than social identity

  21. Ethnographic study of body, self, and society in Fiji Prior to 1995, eating disorders were thought to be rare in Fiji

  22. Ethnographic study of body, self, and society in Fiji Until the mid 1980’s, rural areas of Fiji had no access to electricity

  23. The impact of mass media and rapid social transition Television was only introduced to these areas as recently as 1995

  24. Would Western-based mass media exposure undermine resilience against eating disorders? Data on the following slides from: Becker AE, Burwell RA, Gilman SE, Herzog DB, Hamburg P. Eating behaviours and attitudes following prolonged television exposure among ethnic Fijian adolescent girls. TheBritish Journal of Psychiatry 2002; 180: 509-14. Becker AE. Television, disordered eating, and young women in Fiji: Negotiating body image and identity during rapid social change. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 2004; 28:533-59.

  25. Two wave cohort comparison:No TV exposure vs. TV exposure 1995 1998 Interview confirmed purging for weight 0% 11.3% p<.05

  26. What mischief did mass media exposure bring?

  27. Narrative data: Transformation of body ideals • “. . . the actresses and all those girls, especially those European girls, I . . . just admire them and want to be like them. I want their body, I want their size. I want myself to be in the same position as they are.”S-64

  28. Shortland Street

  29. Narrative data: Television-based role models • I like Shortland Street because of the many young adults involved with it. [. . .] I want to be like that, I want to imitate them—the way they live, the type of food they eat [. . .] and also the ideas they have

  30. X-Files

  31. Narrative data: Television-based role models • [. . . X Files] gives me ideas of how to solve problems when being in this world(s-64).

  32. Golden Country

  33. Narrative data: Transformation of ideals: competitive social positioning Because every teenager, I think, . . . she has to lose weight, and she has to attain a size . . . to be in competitive world . . . because in this age, teenage girls are competing with others. . .(S- 62)

  34. Narrative data Transformation of body ideals . . . most of us Fijians are . . . getting fat. And now, we are feeling [ . . .] that it is bad to have this huge body. We have to have those thin, slim bodies.S-64

  35. Narrative data: Emerging pathology . . . when I eat, I sometimes want to vomit it out. [. . .] so I can know for myself I am losing weight. S-62

  36. Community and parents’ primary concern with social health

  37. Glue sniffing high on agenda Thursday, October 09, 2008 THE increasing number of students turning to glue sniffing and other substance abuse is a worrying trend for the country's principals. Rural-urban drift a huge strain on jobs Monika SinghSunday, November 02, 2008 THE rural-urban movement has increased the gap between productive jobs available and increased social problems. Taking risks Tuesday, October 07, 2008 THE most recent statistic on sexually transmitted infections in this country shows an alarming and staggering trend. Most of our people afflicted by sexually transmitted infections are between the ages of 20 and 29 –– the period during which we expect them to be productive and preparing to settle into family life. More worrying is the fact that despite the many workshops on STIs, the young continue to treat sex with reckless abandon and apparent disregard for others. Youths populating Pacific prisons Tuesday, October 14, 2008 Update: 6:13PM Youths are dominating the prisons population in almost all Pacific Island countries. Figures disclosed by the national reports tabled at the Prisons Conference held at the Forum Secretariat today, stated inmates ages representing the bulk of the population is between 19 to 20 years. Text excerpts from the Fiji Times Online. 2008

  38. Autonomy, self-agency, & ambition: More social disruption

  39. Multiple dimensions of social disruption • Social dislocation of the clan • Shifts in distribution

  40. Stimulation of consumerism with little opportunity to generate income

  41. How do we measure impact of socio-cultural environment on mental health?

  42. Uniformity of social environment obscures relation between exposures and outcome

  43. Methodologic advantages of heterogeneous social infrastructure

  44. Heterogeneous social environment offers unique methodologic advantage • Opportunity to examine effects of exposure as compared with a “counterfactual” non-exposure • Heterogeneous social environment

  45. School-based study on Social change & health risk behaviors • Survey and narrative data collected at all schools within an administrative area of the Ministry of Education

  46. School-based study on Social change & health risk behaviors

  47. School-based study on Social change & health risk behaviors • Global School-based Health Survey • Proxies for social adversity and exposures developed based on ethnographic data • Translation/back translation • Psychometric evaluation • Narrative data collected by interview

  48. School-based study on Social change & health risk behaviors • 523 eligible ethnic Fijian high school girls enrolled and completed • 71% response rate • > 300 interviews

  49. Results:Disordered eating remains prevalent • (Concomitant) appetite stimulants frequently used • 45% of respondents reported having purged in the last month

  50. Prevalent and Paradoxical Symptoms • Parents appear to be managing weight to enhance their daughters’ social opportunities

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