Community mental health care in Mexico: a regional perspective from a mid‑income country
Author
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Carmona Huerta, Jaime
Author
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Durand Arias, Sol
Author
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Rodríguez, Allen
Author
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Guarner Catalá, Carmen
Author
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Cardona Muller, David
Author
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Madrigal de León, Eduardo
Author
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Alvarado Muñoz, Rubén Vladimir
Admission date
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2021-11-16T14:36:51Z
Available date
dc.date.available
2021-11-16T14:36:51Z
Publication date
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2021
Cita de ítem
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Int J Ment Health Syst (2021) 15:7
es_ES
Identifier
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10.1186/s13033-020-00429-9
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/182713
Abstract
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Background: Access to mental health care is a worldwide public health challenge. In Mexico, an unacceptably high percentage of the population with mental disorders does not receive the necessary treatment, which is mainly due to the lack of access to mental health care. The community mental health care model was created and has been implemented to improve this situation. In order to properly plan and implement this model a precise situational diagnosis of the mental health care network is required, thus this is a first approach to evaluate the community mental health networks in the state of Jalisco.
Methods: Two components from the EvaRedCom-TMS instrument were used including a general description and accessibility of the community mental health care network. A geographic and economic accessibility evaluation was carried out for the different regions of the state ranging from scattered rural to urban communities using information gathered from health institutions, telephone interviews and computer applications.
Results: Jalisco's community mental health network includes a total of 31 centers and 0.64 mental health workers for every 10,000 inhabitants > 15 years of age. The mean transportation cost required to access mental health care was 16.25 USD per visit. The time needed to reach the closest mental health center in 7 of the 13 analyzed regions was more than 30 min and the mean time required to reach a prolonged stay center was 172.7 min with transportation cost (taxi, private and public transport) of 22.3 USD. Some marginalized regions in the state have a mean 114 min required to reach the closest mental health care center and 386 min to reach a prolonged stay center.
Conclusions: This first approach to evaluate the mental health networks in Mexico showed that there are multiple barriers to access its care including an unfavorable number of human resources, long distances, and high costs. The identification of Jalisco's mental health network deficiencies is the first step towards establishing a properly planned community mental health care model within the country.
es_ES
Lenguage
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en
es_ES
Publisher
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BMC
es_ES
Type of license
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States