WORKING PAPER 08/231
Title:
The mental health of people living with HIV/AIDS in Africa: A systematic review
Author(s): René Brandt
Date of Publication: November 2008
Price: R 5.00
Abstract
This paper reviews published quantitative research on the mental health of HIVinfected
adults in Africa. Twenty-seven articles published between 1994 and
2008 reported the results of 23 studies. Most studies found that about half of
HIV-infected adults had some form of psychiatric disorder, with depression the
most common individual problem. PLWHA tended to have more mental health
problems than non-infected individuals, with those experiencing lower levels
less likely to be poor and more likely to be employed, educated and receiving
ART. Being female, experiencing poor health, receiving poor quality health
services, and a lack of material and emotional support from family and friends
were associated with greater psychiatric morbidity. While some key findings
emerged, the knowledge base was diverse and methodological quality uneven,
thus studies lacked comparability and not all findings were equally robust.
Further, more rigorous research is needed in order to put mental health services
for PLWHA in Africa on the healthcare agenda. Priorities for future research
should include replicating findings regarding common mental health problems
amongst PLWHA, issues for HIV-infected women, and the longer-term mental
health needs of those on ART. Research is also needed into predictors of mental
health outcomes and factors associated with adherence to ART which can be
targeted in interventions.
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