Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T09:12:59.594Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Stemming the tide: promoting mental health and preventing mental disorders in low- and middle-income countries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 July 2015

W. A. Tol*
Affiliation:
Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 N Broadway, Baltimore, MD, USA Program Director, the Peter C. Alderman Foundation, Bedford, NY, USA
*
* Address for correspondence: W. A. Tol, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 N Broadway, Baltimore, MD, USA. (Email: [email protected])
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The first World Health Organization's global action plan for mental health recognizes the importance of mental health promotion and prevention of mental disorders, through the inclusion of one of four objectives focused on this crucial area of research and practice. This paper aims to provide an ‘aerial view’ of the field of mental health promotion and prevention of mental disorders with a focus on low- and middle-income countries. Starting with reasons why promotion and prevention need to take center stage in global mental health efforts, the paper provides a framework and four general principles to guide such efforts: a socio-ecological perspective (place); an inter-sectoral and interdisciplinary approach (collaboration), a developmental perspective (timing), and a participatory and empowerment approach (strengths), or PaCTS. Evidence-based examples of mental health promotion, universal, selective, and indicated prevention are described.

Type
Review
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/3.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2015

It is time for promotion and prevention efforts to take center stage in the field of global mental health. The inclusion of an objective focused specifically on strategies for promotion and prevention in the first WHO global action plan for mental health (World Health Organization, 2013), is a timely occasion to reflect on what is known about effective interventions, and what the key questions are. This paper aims to provide an ‘aerial view’ of the field of mental health promotion and prevention of mental disorders with a focus on low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). The range of options for action in this field is indicated by highlighting successful interventions that had diverse aims and were implemented across a range of contexts.

Given the breadth of this topic and limited space, the scope of this paper is restricted in several ways. First, when discussing prevention efforts, the focus will be on what are often referred to as the ‘common’ or ‘non-psychotic’ mental disorders (including depression, anxiety, medically unexplained symptoms, and posttraumatic stress symptoms) – disorders such as psychosis and bipolar disorder are not discussed, nor is suicide. This is not to indicate that fruitful prevention efforts for these conditions do not exist (e.g. see van der Feltz-Cornelis et al. Reference van der Feltz-Cornelis, Sarchiapone, Postuvan, Volker, Roskar, Grum and Hegerl2011; Stafford et al. Reference Stafford, Jackson, Mayo-Wilson, Morrison and Kendall2013). Also, the focus is on promotion and prevention aimed at the social determinants of health, rather than in the domain of biology, e.g. through pharmacological methods, diet supplements or considering gene-environment interactions. Again, this is not to neglect the wealth of possibilities that are starting to become apparent in this area (Southwick & Charney, Reference Southwick and Charney2012). Third, where possible the discussion focuses on opportunities for action that have been shown to be associated with benefits in rigorous intervention outcome research.

Definitions

Mental health is commonly defined as ‘a state of wellbeing in which an individual realizes his or her own abilities, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and is able to make a contribution to his or her community’ (World Health Organization, 2004). This definition invokes a broader notion of optimal psychological and social functioning, and not just the absence of psychological symptoms and mental disorders. The term ‘mental health promotion’ is tied to this use of the concept of mental health, as it is generally aimed at strengthening positive aspects of mental health, for example promoting self-esteem in adolescents or strengthening positive coping skills in school-aged children (Barry et al. Reference Barry, Clarke, Jenkins and Patel2013; Fazel et al. Reference Fazel, Patel, Thomas and Tol2014). In contrast, prevention focuses on mental disorders, in that it is aimed at ensuring that mental disorders do not develop. Prevention in turn differs from treatment, as treatment is focused on assisting people with identified mental disorders.

The Institute of Medicine has proposed a useful framework for promotion and prevention in the field of mental health (National Research Council & Institute of Medicine, 2009). This framework builds on the classification developed by Gordon (Reference Gordon1983) and divides prevention into universal, selective, and indicated prevention. Universal prevention refers to interventions with the whole population, regardless of risk and protective factors, for example a mass media campaign aimed at providing information on alcohol abuse. Selective prevention entails interventions with populations exposed to a specific risk factor, for example relaxation exercises in schools or workplaces particularly affected by an earthquake. Indicated prevention targets individuals who may have signs of a mental disorder, but who do not meet a diagnosis, or who have a biological marker for a specific disorder, for example parent-training interventions for children with early aggressive behaviors (National Research Council & Institute of Medicine, 2009).

Why focus on prevention and promotion in global mental health?

There are a number of reasons why promotion and prevention efforts should be central to mental health policies and programs. First, there are limitations to what a strategy focused on treatment alone can offer. Given the current burden of mental disorders, it is unlikely that enough therapists can be trained to completely reduce the gap between people in need of services and the services that are available, also if applying a task sharing model. For example, Andrews et al. (Reference Andrews, Sanderson, Corry and Lapsley2000) estimated that with maximum coverage of current services in Australia, only 36% of the burden of depression can be treated.

Second, the global mental health movement has been criticized for placing too much emphasis on the treatment of mental disorders, when there is evidence that social conditions play an important role in the genesis of mental disorders (Kirmayer & Pedersen, Reference Kirmayer and Pedersen2014). Although social conditions, for example poverty, have been of interest to global mental health researchers and practitioners (World Health Organization, 2001, 2004; Patel & Kleinman, Reference Patel and Kleinman2003; Herrman et al. Reference Herrman, Saxena and Moodie2005; Patel et al. Reference Patel, Araya, Chatterjee, Chisholm, Cohen, De Silva and van Ommeren2007; Lund et al. Reference Lund, De Silva, Plagerson, Cooper, Chisholm, Das and Patel2011; World Health Organization & Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, 2014) and prevention has been a key item in global mental health research agendas (Tomlinson et al. Reference Tomlinson, Rudan, Saxena, Swartz, Tsai and Patel2009; Collins et al. Reference Collins, Patel, Joestl, March, Insel, Daar and Stein2011), scaling-up treatments appears to remain the key focus (Lancet Mental Health Group, 2007).

It is important to note that there are important synergies between treatment and prevention (Patel, Reference Patel2014). For example, cognitive behavioral treatments have been shown to reduce physical and psychological intimate partner violence (Tirado-Munoz et al. Reference Tirado-Munoz, Gilchrist, Farre, Hegarty and Torrens2014), a key risk factor for various mental disorders. In the same vein, treatment of mental disorders in caregivers may contribute to improved indicators of child development (Petersen et al. Reference Petersen, Flisher, Bhana, Petersen, Bhana, Flisher, Swartz and Richter2011). Nevertheless, it seems irresponsible to treat mental disorders in contexts of chronic poverty or violence without also throwing ones full weight behind proactive efforts to reduce these structural forces that bring people to health care clinics in the first place. Clearly, this makes pragmatic sense from a public health perspective. In addition, addressing the social determinants of mental health is essential from a rights-based perspective. Addressing the social determinants of mental health is critical to address health inequities (i.e. the fact that health risks and the burden of ill health are unfairly distributed across populations) – a hallmark interest of global health in general (Koplan et al. Reference Koplan, Bond, Merson, Reddy, Rodriguez, Sewankambo and Wasserheit2009). Bringing prevention and promotion research and intervention to the heart of the global mental health agenda would contribute to address calls for a more inclusive global mental health field that pays attention to macro-level socio-cultural processes rather than approaching mental health purely as a technical biomedical problem to be solved through globally uniform solutions (Kirmayer & Pedersen, Reference Kirmayer and Pedersen2014).

A third reason for why promotion and prevention should be of central interest to global mental health is that cost-effective interventions are available. There is an existing body of research supporting the effectiveness of interventions aiming to prevent mental disorders and promote mental health. A recent review of mental health promotion and universal prevention found 46 studies employing randomized controlled trial or quasi-experimental designs in LMICs (Barry et al. Reference Barry, Clarke, Jenkins and Patel2011). For children and adolescents specifically, 22 studies were identified: 14 focused on school-based interventions, with overall strong quality of evidence; and eight studies on community-based interventions, with moderate to strong quality of evidence (Barry et al. Reference Barry, Clarke, Jenkins and Patel2013). Economic analyses are starting to emerge (Knapp et al. Reference Knapp, McDaid and Parsonage2011; Roberts & Grimes, Reference Roberts and Grimes2011). Evidence of cost-effectiveness is promising, but limited to a smaller number of interventions with restricted scope for generalizability across socio-cultural settings. Evidence of cost-effectiveness is most promising for early childhood development programs (Zechmeister et al. Reference Zechmeister, Kilian and McDaid2008). Overall, more evaluation research is necessary to cover interventions across the breadth of this field, but enough evidence exists to enable action now.

Principles for action

Four key principles may be distilled from the current literature on prevention and promotion in mental health in LMICs (see Box 1) (for helpful overviews, see Petersen et al. Reference Petersen, Bhana, Flisher, Swartz and Richter2010, Reference Petersen, Barry, Lund, Bhana, Patel, Minas, Cohen and Prince2014; Beardslee et al. Reference Beardslee, Chien and Bell2011; World Health Organization, 2012; World Health Organization & Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, 2014). First, since mental health is shaped by the context in which people live, efforts need to target known modifiable risk, protective, and promotive factors for mental health in the social environment. These are existent at the individual level (e.g. coping styles and self-esteem), as well as at family- (e.g. parental mental health and parenting styles), peer- (e.g. peer pressure and social support), school- or work place- (e.g. opportunities for skill development), and community-levels (e.g. social capital and communal violence). A socio-ecological framework has been helpful in disentangling the reciprocal influences between the individual and their environment, providing insight into which social variables may be targeted to promote mental health and prevent mental disorders (Bronfenbrenner, Reference Bronfenbrenner1994; Lynch & Cicchetti, Reference Lynch and Cicchetti1998).

Box 1. PaCTS – core principles for the promotion of mental health and prevention of mental disorders in LMICs

  1. (1) Place. A socio-ecological perspective.

  2. (2) Collaboration. An inter-sectoral and interdisciplinary perspective.

  3. (3) Timing. A developmental perspective.

  4. (4) Strengths. Community-based and empowering.

Second, prevention and promotion interventions need to take into account a developmental perspective. Since almost half of lifetime mental disorders start before age 14 (and up to 75% before age 24), childhood and adolescence are important periods to start prevention and promotion programs (Beardslee et al. Reference Beardslee, Chien and Bell2011). Given that development proceeds sequentially, with later skills dependent on successful acquisition of earlier skills, the early childhood period has been advocated as a particularly cost-effective period for intervention (Heckman, Reference Heckman2006). At the same time, a developmental perspective entails viewing different developmental stages – throughout the life span – as periods with unique confluences of risk, protective, and promotive factors and as potential windows for prevention and promotion.

Third, a critical principle for action in this field concerns the need to work in an inter-sectoral and inter-disciplinary manner. The social determinants of mental health are often inter-related and exist in domains that are traditionally catered for by different sectors (e.g. poverty in the social welfare sector; early childhood education in the education sector; violence prevention in the protection sector) as well as different academic disciplines. For effective action, it is important that actors in different sectors and disciplines work together. Many of the social determinants for mental health also affect physical health, creating opportunities for coalitions providing integrated prevention strategies for both simultaneously.

Fourth, a strength-based approach is vital. For prevention and promotion interventions to be successful and sustainable, it is essential that they build on needs that are felt by local actors as critical to address. Furthermore, prevention and promotion are more compelling and sustainable when they can build on resources that are locally available, or when they build on resources that are valued and can be feasibly introduced in new intervention settings. Petersen et al. (Reference Petersen, Flisher, Bhana, Petersen, Bhana, Flisher, Swartz and Richter2011) in this regard refer to a competency-enhancement approach, and emphasize the importance of recruiting communities as partners in the design, implementation, and evaluation of prevention and promotion interventions. Or, as Allen et al. (Reference Allen, Balfour, Bell and Marmot2014) put it, prevention and promotion ‘needs national policies, but local actions’.

Together, these principles indicate the need for a collaborative and context-sensitive approach (rather than a one-size-fits-all approach), in which (a) detailed assessments of context (to identify key risk, protective, and promotive factors) are coupled with (b) a life-span developmental perspective on how action across the life span can promote mental health and prevent disorders (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Song and Jordans2013b ); and (c) in which local communities are empowered to build on their strengths in a participatory manner.

Below examples of evidence-based promotion and prevention interventions in accordance with the different types of intervention are provided: mental health promotion, universal, selective, and indicated prevention. The examples chosen differ in terms of age groups in which they are implemented, and have been implemented in different types of settings in LMICs. These examples were selected to illustrate the breadth of promotion and types of prevention activities across the life span, not necessarily because they have the strongest comparative evidence base in LMICs.

Mental health promotion: positive parenting in the early childhood period

Early childhood is a critical period in life, in which negative environments may solidify in life-long risks to health and human development, or in which foundations for positive health may be laid. The last decades have seen an upsurge in research in the neurobiological, behavioral, and social sciences, which has greatly increased our understanding of the importance of this period. This research has shown that biology and experience shape each other in a continuous interaction, making the nature v. nurture debate outdated. The early childhood period presents a period of plasticity in which the developing nervous system architecture is particularly sensitive to outside influences. In addition, research has shown that relationships with caregivers and others are critical in this period, either for the promotion of health and development or by constituting central risks (Shonkoff & Phillips, Reference Shonkoff and Phillips2000). For example, the stress response system is highly malleable in the fetal and early childhood period. Frequent activation of the stress response system, in the absence of supportive caregivers, may result in sustained elevated levels of the stress hormone cortisol and setting the response system in a ‘high alert’ mode. Sustained high levels of cortisol can damage hippocampal functioning, the brain region important for learning and memory. Conversely, children experiencing secure relationships have more controlled stress hormone responses (National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, 2005).

Given that a key objective of global health is to target health inequities within and between populations (Koplan et al. Reference Koplan, Bond, Merson, Reddy, Rodriguez, Sewankambo and Wasserheit2009), it is not surprising that the early childhood period is viewed as an essential window of opportunity (UNICEF, 2006). The early childhood period provides a chance to ameliorate, for example the pressures of poverty and violence in the home, before they become embedded in children's wellbeing and social functioning. In 2007, an estimated 200 million children in LMICs were not reaching their developmental potential (Walker et al. Reference Walker, Wachs, Meeks Gardner, Lozoff, Wasserman, Pollitt and Group2007). The identified key risks for suboptimal health and development indicate the value of interdisciplinary and multi-sectoral approaches, in that they reach across several domains: (1) malnutrition and growth (stunting, iodine deficiency, iron-deficiency anemia, intrauterine growth restriction, and prenatal maternal nutrition); (2) maternal mental health (maternal depression and stress); (3) social interaction (inadequate cognitive stimulation, institutionalization, and exposure to violence); and (4) infectious disease and environmental health (malaria, HIV infection, and lead exposure). Breastfeeding and maternal education are protective factors (Walker et al. Reference Walker, Wachs, Grantham-McGregor, Black, Nelson, Huffman and Richter2011).

The identified importance of inadequate cognitive stimulation and early caregiver relations has spurred interest in parenting interventions in the early years. Such interventions are often implemented by locally trained para-professionals, and have consisted of home visits by community workers or primary health care (PHC) workers, as well as combined nutrition and early stimulation activities through home visits by PHC workers, with most interventions addressing mother–child interaction (for example play, responsive feeding, and communication) (Barry et al. Reference Barry, Clarke, Jenkins and Patel2011).

A systematic review of early childhood development interventions in LMICs identified 11 controlled studies and four assessments of scaled-up programs focused on parenting specifically (Engle et al. Reference Engle, Fernald, Alderman, Behrman, O'Gara, Yousafzai and Iltus2011). In the 11 controlled studies, substantial positive effects were found for child development, including on cognitive or social-emotional development (nine studies), and parent knowledge, home stimulation, and learning activities with children (two studies). Larger effects have been found for interventions focused on both parents and children and for programs with younger and poorer children, Effects for purely information-based and parent-only interventions have been smaller. According to this review, the most effective programs are those that have systematic training methods, a structured and evidence-based curriculum, and opportunities for parental practice while feedback is provided (Engle et al. Reference Engle, Fernald, Alderman, Behrman, O'Gara, Yousafzai and Iltus2011).

Universal prevention: addressing intimate partner violence

Intimate partner violence is a worldwide highly pervasive phenomenon with well-documented negative consequences for mental health and thereby forms a critical social determinant for mental health. A recent meta-regression of multiple international studies, involving data from 141 studies in 81 countries, found that 30% of women 15 years and older experienced physical, sexual violence, or a combination in their lifetimes. There is considerable regional variation in rates, from 16% in East Asia to 66% in central Sub-Saharan Africa (Devries et al. Reference Devries, Mak, Garcia-Moreno, Petzold, Child, Falder and Watts2013b ). Among other health consequences, the link with adverse mental health outcomes is well substantiated (Trevillion et al. Reference Trevillion, Oram, Feder and Howard2012). For example, a systematic review of intimate partner violence and depression found that 9–28% of depressive symptoms can be attributed to intimate partner violence (Beydoun et al. Reference Beydoun, Beydoun, Kaufman, Lo and Zonderman2012). Longitudinal studies have revealed statistically significant relations between intimate partner violence depression and suicide, with an odds ratio of 1.97 for depression across six studies (Devries et al. Reference Devries, Mak, Bacchus, Child, Falder, Petzold and Watts2013a ). In the perinatal period specifically there are also consistent relations between intimate partner violence and a range of worse mental health outcomes, including depression, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and anxiety (Howard et al. Reference Howard, Oram, Galley, Trevillion and Feder2013).

Evidence for the effectiveness of interventions aimed at preventing or reducing intimate partner violence in LMICs has been growing rapidly in the last years – with more recent research focusing on prevention rather than response (Ellsberg et al. Reference Ellsberg, Arango, Morton, Gennari, Kiplesund, Contreras and Watts2015). From a mental health perspective, the different approaches to prevent or reduce violence can be categorized as universal prevention or selective prevention. For example, a community-based intervention aimed at preventing or reducing intimate partner violence with people regardless of current violence exposure, addresses an important risk factor for mental health at the population level (universal prevention). Interventions in the health care sector with women who have experienced (or who are experiencing) intimate partner violence can be viewed as selective prevention, given that they work with a group at particular risk for the development of mental health problems.

The evidence for prevention of intimate partner violence was summarized – together with evidence on interventions for violence against women more broadly – in a recent special issue in the Lancet. In LMICs, several types of interventions have shown to effectively reduce levels of intimate partner violence, including community mobilization; empowerment training for women and girls; group-based training for women and men; as well as economic empowerment interventions combined with gender equality training (Ellsberg et al. Reference Ellsberg, Arango, Morton, Gennari, Kiplesund, Contreras and Watts2015).

Of the nine studies included in this review, only one directly examined mental health outcomes. This randomized controlled trial in western Kenya found that unconditional cash transfers were associated both with improvements in female empowerment as well as improvements in several wellbeing indicators (happiness and life satisfaction) and a reduction in perceived stress, depressive symptoms, and in levels of the stress hormone cortisol (Haushofer & Shapiro, Reference Haushofer and Shapiro2013). There remains a need for further studies that directly examine how addressing intimate partner violence translates to prevention of mental disorders. Three strands of knowledge support this as a viable research strategy, including (a) aforementioned epidemiological research that shows strong links between intimate partner violence and negative mental health outcomes; (b) evaluations of intimate partner violence response interventions that show simultaneous reductions in intimate partner violence and mental health symptoms (Hegarty et al. Reference Hegarty, O'Doherty, Taft, Chondros, Brown, Valpied and Gunn2013; Saftlas et al. Reference Saftlas, Harland, Wallis, Cavanaugh, Dickey and Peek-Asa2014); and (c) rigorous evaluations of intimate partner violence prevention interventions showing concomitant results on reduced intimate partner violence and other health outcomes (e.g. HIV incidence) (Jewkes et al. Reference Jewkes, Nduna, Levin, Jama, Dunkle, Puren and Duvvury2008; Wagman et al. Reference Wagman, Namatovu, Nalugoda, Kiwanuka, Nakigozi, Gray, Wawer and Serwadda2012).

Selective prevention: school-based interventions for conflict-affected children

Just over one billion children globally live in countries and territories affected by armed conflicts and wars (Machel, Reference Machel2009). As noted above, exposure to violence constitutes a well-documented risk factor for child development and mental health in LMICs (Walker et al. Reference Walker, Wachs, Grantham-McGregor, Black, Nelson, Huffman and Richter2011). Exposure to violence has been linked to a range of mental health consequences; the best studied constituting symptoms of PTSD, major depressive disorder, and anxiety disorders (Attanayake et al. Reference Attanayake, McKay, Joffres, Singh, Burkle and Mills2009). However, it is recognized that many children do not show long-term negative mental health impacts of armed conflict, a phenomenon studied under the term resilience. Research on mental health and resilience in children growing up in conflict zones can be particularly informative for the development of selective preventive interventions.

A systematic review of the resilience literature has shown that resilience should not be equated to a simple balance of risk and protective factors with universal relevance. Rather, resilience appears to be determined in complex time- and context-dependent processes. For example, longitudinal studies have shown that the same coping methods had different benefits for mental health depending on whether they were applied in an active phase of conflict or in the post-conflict phase. Similarly, political affiliation appeared protective among conflict-affected youth in Nepal, but the reverse was observed in Bosnian adolescents. Different impacts of protective factors have also been observed depending on gender and developmental stage. Such findings underscore the importance of context-sensitive preventive interventions, rather than the application of similar prevention interventions across diverse socio-cultural contexts (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Song and Jordans2013b ). This can be further illustrated by the findings of evaluations of a school-based intervention for conflict-affected children in Burundi, Indonesia, Nepal, and Sri Lanka.

Several randomized controlled trials evaluated the classroom-based intervention (CBI), a manualized group intervention with children aged 8–12 years in 15 sessions over 5 weeks. The CBI combines elements of trauma-focused cognitive behavioral techniques (such as drawings related to adverse events, psychoeducation, and discussion of coping) and creative-expressive activities components (drama exercises, movement, and use of music), aimed at reducing distress and strengthening coping and social support (Macy et al. Reference Macy, Johnson Macy, Gross and Brighton2003). The CBI was implemented as part of a multi-tiered package of services in several conflict-affected settings. Besides the CBI, this package also included school-based mental health promotion, universal preventive intervention, and treatment interventions (Jordans et al. Reference Jordans, Tol, Komproe, Susanty, Vallipuram, Ntamutumba and de Jong2010b , Reference Jordans, Tol, Susanty, Ntamatumba, Luitel, Komproe and de Jong2013). A brief screening tool was developed to assess eligibility, including exposure to violence and a perceived lack of coping and social support (Jordans et al. Reference Jordans, Komproe, Ventevogel, Tol and de Jong2008, Reference Jordans, Komproe, Tol and De Jong2009).

Evaluations through cluster randomized trials have shown diverse mental health benefits of the CBI across settings, and identified a complex set of mediators and moderators of intervention benefits. Intervention benefits were found in Burundi (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Komproe, Jordans, Ndayisaba, Ntamutumba, Sipsma and de Jong2014), Indonesia (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Komproe, Susanty, Jordans, Macy and De Jong2008), Nepal (Jordans et al. Reference Jordans, Komproe, Tol, Kohrt, Luitel, Macy and de Jong2010a ), and Sri Lanka (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Komproe, Jordans, Vallipuram, Sipsma, Sivayokan and de Jong2012). However, intervention benefits were differentiated by both gender and age (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Komproe, Jordans, Gross, Susanty, Macy and de Jong2010). Other important moderators of intervention included pre-intervention levels of exposure to conflict-related events (Burundi and Sri Lanka), family-level variables such as household size and family composition (Burundi), and displacement status (Burundi). Moreover, in ongoing sites of conflict (Burundi and Sri Lanka) better outcomes in the control group were identified for some symptom outcomes. Based on these findings, it is clear that context plays a critical role in determining the outcome of preventive interventions.

Although more research is necessary to disentangle the specific mechanisms responsible for these diverse findings, they are consistent with the above-described findings in the epidemiological literature on resilience and mental health. Similar to this epidemiological literature, these intervention studies highlight the critical importance of careful tailoring of interventions to target population and contexts. Further work, for example, is required to study how gender-sensitive interventions may result in more consistent outcomes, and how targeting narrower age groups may change outcomes. However, such changes in narrower targeting need to be weighed against the cost-benefit of reaching a smaller population. Critically, the inclusion of trauma-focused elements in prevention programs may need to be reconsidered in areas of ongoing instability (i.e. the trials in Burundi and Sri Lanka). Removing the trauma-focused element in preventive efforts and providing separate evidence-based treatments for children with more severe psychological difficulties may be indicated here. This direction is supported by a randomized controlled trial by Ager et al. (Reference Ager, Akesson, Stark, Flouri, Okot, McCollister and Boothby2011) which evaluated an adapted version of CBI with displaced children in northern Uganda without specific trauma-focused elements and found positive impacts on child wellbeing.

Indicated prevention: preventing postnatal depressive disorder in pregnant women with heightened levels of depressive symptoms

Depression forms a critical global health priority. It is characterized by lowered mood, reduced energy, and decreased activity. Typical symptoms include reduced capacity to enjoy and be interested in activities, severe tiredness after minimum effort, disturbed sleep and appetite, diminished self-esteem, and feelings of worthlessness (World Health Organization, 1990). Of the 7.4% of disease burden caused by mental and substance use disorders globally, depression is responsible for 40.5% – constituting the largest mental health contribution to the global burden of disease (Whiteford et al. Reference Whiteford, Degenhardt, Rehm, Baxter, Ferrari, Erskine and Vos2013). Epidemiological research has shown significant variation in prevalence of depression across countries, commonly with an age of onset in young adulthood and an often chronic or relapsing course. Socio-economic disadvantage and exposure to violence are key determinants of depression, and depression itself is associated with increased mortality (e.g. through suicide) (Patel et al. Reference Patel, Simon, Chowdhary, Kaaya and Araya2009). Maternal mental disorders are also associated with worse child health outcomes. A substantial global literature has documented perinatal mental disorders as risks for a broad range of negative child outcomes (including increased risk for premature delivery, lower birth weight, and intrauterine growth restriction; attachment difficulties; impaired physical growth and cognitive development; and child emotional difficulties), some of which can persist into late adolescence (Stein et al. Reference Stein, Pearson, Goodman, Rapa, Rahman, McCallum and Pariante2014).

van Zoonen et al. (Reference van Zoonen, Buntrock, Ebert, Smit, Reynolds, Beekman and Cuijpers2014) conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of interventions to prevent depression globally. Their systematic review focused on randomized controlled trials of prevention interventions (universal, selective, and indicated), with study participants not meeting criteria for major depressive disorder at baseline. Thirty-two studies were identified with a total of 6214 participants, most (30 out of 32) focused on indicated and selective prevention, and 25 of the 32 studies were conducted in the USA and Europe. Fifteen of the studied prevention interventions were based on cognitive behavioral approaches, and five were based on interpersonal group therapy. The quality of the studies was evaluated as relatively high. Overall, the combined interventions reduced the incidence of new cases of depression with 21%. There was low statistical heterogeneity of the effectiveness of prevention interventions between studies. Prevention effectiveness did not differ by prevention type, type of intervention, age group, number of sessions, study country, or target group. Interpersonal group therapy-based interventions showed a lower number needed to treat than cognitive behavioral prevention interventions(7 v. 71, respectively) (van Zoonen et al. Reference van Zoonen, Buntrock, Ebert, Smit, Reynolds, Beekman and Cuijpers2014).

One of the studies included in the review concerns a randomized controlled trial of an antenatal psycho-educational intervention to prevent postnatal depression in women in Mexico (Lara et al. Reference Lara, Navarro and Navarrete2010). Women were recruited at three different types of clinics in Mexico City, and were eligible if they had higher scores on a depression symptom checklist and were over 26 weeks pregnant. The intervention (Salud Mental de Mamás y Bebés) consisted of eight weekly 2-h group sessions, covering: (a) education on the perinatal period and risk factors for postnatal depression; (b) reduction of depressive symptoms through increasing positive thinking and pleasant activities, improving self-esteem and self-care; and (c) the provision of a supportive group environment. In addition, both the intervention and control condition, both n = 68 at last follow-up, received a self-help book on depression designed for women with limited reading abilities. The study found six new cases of depression in the prevention condition compared to 15 new cases in the control condition. The positive prevention benefits were more pronounced for women with higher depression risks at baseline. Although the study suffered from high attrition rates, it is a promising indication of how depression incidence can be lowered in populations with sub-disordered levels of depression in an urban population in an upper middle-income country.

Conclusion

This paper aimed to provide a brief overview of the possibilities for effective mental health promotion and prevention of mental disorders in LMICs. It is argued that such efforts should take a central position in the field of global mental health, given limitations to what treatment alone can do to lower the burden of ill mental health. In addition, prevention and promotion efforts can contribute to ensure a more inclusive global mental health field that addresses health inequities through targeting the social determinants of mental health such as poverty, social marginalization, and (gender-based) violence. General principles for promotion and prevention in mental health may be summarized as PaCTS, indicating the importance of a socio-ecological perspective (place); an inter-sectoral and interdisciplinary approach (collaboration), a life span developmental perspective (timing), and a participatory and empowerment approach (strengths).

Mental health promotion and prevention of mental disorders encompass a wide-ranging field. The paper aimed to provide examples to illustrate this breadth by providing examples of promotion and different types of prevention in different life phases: supporting positive parenting in the early childhood period (mental health promotion); community-wide prevention and reduction of intimate partner violence as a critical determinant of ill mental health (universal prevention); school-based preventive interventions for children exposed to conflict-related violence (selective prevention); and preventing the onset of full-scale postnatal depressive disorder in pregnant women with higher levels of depressive symptoms (indicated prevention).

A detailed summary of the evidence supporting all promotion and prevention interventions in mental health in LMICs is beyond the scope of this paper, but interested readers may consult a recent report by Barry et al. (Reference Barry, Clarke and Petersen2014). Their summary of evidence for prevention and promotion interventions is briefly summarized in Box 2.

Box 2. See Barry et al. (Reference Barry, Clarke and Petersen2014)

Sufficient evidence in LMICs:

  • - Home visiting programs for new mothers and their babies integrating mental health promotion within routine pre- and postnatal-care services.

  • - Screening and prevention for women at risk of postnatal depression.

  • - Universal social and emotional learning delivered through school-based life-skills programs in primary- and post-primary schools.

  • - Targeted interventions which enhance resilience, cognitive, and coping skills for children at increased risk of depression and anxiety

  • - CBIs for vulnerable children (orphaned by HIV/living in areas of conflict/war) improve psychological and social functioning and coping.

  • - Out-of-school empowerment programs for adolescents/young adults designed to promote youth health through the use of multi-component interventions.

  • - Screening and brief interventions for problem drinkers by PHC workers.

  • - Raised tax/price on alcohol; restricted access to alcohol; and bans on alcohol advertising.

  • - Restricting access to potential lethal means of suicide.

Limited evidence in LMICs:

  • - Access to pre-schools offering day center and home based educational interventions for children living in poverty – high quality education and parent support focusing on children's emotional, behavioral and social development and parents’ parenting skills and mental wellbeing

  • - Universal and targeted parenting/family strengthening programs which enhance parenting and family communication skills for promoting children's development

  • - Community microcredit schemes which incorporate health and education training alongside the provision of credit for income generation

Clearly, there is a need for further strengthening of evidence of preventive interventions, as there is for treatment of a variety of mental disorders in LMICs (Tol et al. Reference Tol, Barbui and van Ommeren2013a ). It is critical that research capacity and funding in LMICs is strengthened to ensure rigorous prevention research efforts to further this agenda. Nevertheless, the current evidence for promotion and prevention efforts in LMICs supports proactive efforts to enhance wellbeing and prevent suffering before disorder sets in as a critical element of the field of global mental health.

Footnotes

For: Special Issue of Global Mental Health on the WHO Mental Health Action Plan 2013–2020

References

Ager, A, Akesson, B, Stark, L, Flouri, E, Okot, B, McCollister, F, Boothby, N (2011). The impact of the school-based psychosocial structured activities (PSSA) program on conflict-affected children in Northern Uganda. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 52, 11241133.Google Scholar
Allen, J, Balfour, R, Bell, R, Marmot, M (2014). Social determinants of mental health. International Review of Psychiatry 26, 392407. doi:10.3109/09540261.2014.928270.Google Scholar
Andrews, A, Sanderson, K, Corry, J, Lapsley, HM (2000). Using epidemiological data to model efficiency in reducing the burden of depression. Journal of Mental Health Policy and Economics 3, 175186.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Attanayake, V, McKay, R, Joffres, M, Singh, S, Burkle, FM Jr., Mills, E (2009). Prevalence of mental disorders among children exposed to war: a systematic review of 7,920 children. Medicine, Conflict and Survival 25, 419.Google Scholar
Barry, MM, Clarke, AM, Jenkins, R, Patel, V (2011). Rapid Review of the Evidence on the Effectiveness of Mental Health Promotion Interventions in Low and Middle Income Countries. World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
Barry, MM, Clarke, AM, Jenkins, R, Patel, V (2013). A systematic review of the effectiveness of mental health promotion interventions for young people in low and middle income countries. BMC Public Health 13, 835. doi:10.1186/1471-2458-13-835.Google Scholar
Barry, MM, Clarke, AM, Petersen, I (2014). Priorities for Implementing the Promotion of Mental Health and Primary Prevention of Mental Disorders: Technical Evidence Paper Prepared for the WHO Inter-Country Meeting on Implementation of Global Mental Health Action Plan in the Eastern Mediterranean Region. WHO EMRO.Google Scholar
Beardslee, WR, Chien, PL, Bell, CC (2011). Prevention of mental disorders, substance abuse, and problem behaviors: a developmental perspective. Psychiatric Services 62, 247254.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beydoun, HA, Beydoun, MA, Kaufman, JS, Lo, B, Zonderman, AB (2012). Intimate partner violence against adult women and its association with major depressive disorder, depressive symptoms and postpartum depression: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Social Science and Medicine 75, 959975. doi:10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.04.025.Google Scholar
Bronfenbrenner, U (1994). Ecological Models of Human Development International Encyclopedia of Education, 2nd edn, vol. 3, pp. 3743. Elsevier: Oxford.Google Scholar
Collins, PY, Patel, V, Joestl, SS, March, D, Insel, TR, Daar, AS, Stein, DJ (2011). Grand challenges in global mental health. Nature 475, 2730. doi:10.1038/475027a.Google Scholar
Devries, KM, Mak, JY, Bacchus, LJ, Child, JC, Falder, G, Petzold, M, Watts, CH (2013 a). Intimate partner violence and incident depressive symptoms and suicide attempts: a systematic review of longitudinal studies. PLoS Medicine 10, e1001439. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001439.Google Scholar
Devries, KM, Mak, JY, Garcia-Moreno, C, Petzold, M, Child, JC, Falder, G, Watts, CH (2013 b). Global health. The global prevalence of intimate partner violence against women. Science 340, 15271528. doi:10.1126/science.1240937.Google Scholar
Ellsberg, M, Arango, DJ, Morton, M, Gennari, F, Kiplesund, S, Contreras, M, Watts, C (2015). Prevention of violence against women and girls: what does the evidence say? Lancet 385, 15551566. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(14)61703-7.Google Scholar
Engle, PL, Fernald, LC, Alderman, H, Behrman, J, O'Gara, C, Yousafzai, A, Iltus, S (2011). Strategies for reducing inequalities and improving developmental outcomes for young children in low-income and middle-income countries. Lancet 378, 13391353. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60889-1.Google Scholar
Fazel, M, Patel, V, Thomas, S, Tol, WA (2014). Mental health interventions in schools in low-income and middle-income countries. Lancet Psychiatry 1, 388398.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gordon, R (1983). An operational classification of disease prevention. Public Health Reports 98, 107109.Google Scholar
Haushofer, J, Shapiro, J (2013). Household Response to Income Changes: Evidence from an Unconditional Cash Transfer Program in Kenya, 2014. Available: http://www.iies.su.se/polopoly_fs/1.162160.1389355591!/menu/standard/file/HaushoferJob%20Market%20Paper.pdf (Accessed 18 December 2014)Google Scholar
Heckman, JJ (2006). Skill formation and the economics of investing in disadvantaged children. Science 312, 19001902.Google Scholar
Hegarty, K, O'Doherty, L, Taft, A, Chondros, P, Brown, S, Valpied, J, Gunn, J (2013). Screening and counselling in the primary care setting for women who have experienced intimate partner violence (WEAVE): a cluster randomised controlled trial. Lancet 382, 249258.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Herrman, H, Saxena, S, Moodie, R (ed.) (2005). Promoting Mental Health: Concepts, Emerging Evidence, Practice. World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
Howard, LM, Oram, S, Galley, H, Trevillion, K, Feder, G (2013). Domestic violence and perinatal mental disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis [Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't]. PLoS Medicine 10, e1001452. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001452.Google Scholar
Jewkes, R, Nduna, M, Levin, J, Jama, N, Dunkle, K, Puren, A, Duvvury, N (2008). Impact of stepping stones on incidence of HIV and HSV-2 and sexual behaviour in rural South Africa: cluster randomised controlled trial. BMJ 337, a506. doi:10.1136/bmj.a506.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jordans, MJD, Komproe, IH, Tol, WA, De Jong, JTVM (2009). Screening for psychosocial distress amongst war-affected children: cross-cultural construct validity of the CPDS. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines 50, 514523.Google Scholar
Jordans, MJD, Komproe, IH, Tol, WA, Kohrt, BA, Luitel, N, Macy, RD, de Jong, JTVM (2010a). Evaluation of a classroom-based psychosocial intervention in conflict-affected Nepal: a cluster randomized controlled trial. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 51, 818826.Google Scholar
Jordans, MJD, Komproe, IH, Ventevogel, P, Tol, WA, de Jong, JTVM (2008). Development and validation of the child psychosocial distress screener in Burundi. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 78, 290299. doi:10.1037/a0014216.Google Scholar
Jordans, MJD, Tol, WA, Komproe, IH, Susanty, D, Vallipuram, A, Ntamutumba, P, de Jong, JTVM (2010b). Development of a multi-layered psychosocial care system for children in areas of political violence. International Journal of Mental Health Systems 16, 415.Google Scholar
Jordans, MJD, Tol, WA, Susanty, D, Ntamatumba, P, Luitel, NP, Komproe, IH, de Jong, JTVM (2013). Implementation of a mental health care package for children in areas of armed conflict: a case study from Burundi, Indonesia, Nepal, Sri Lanka, and Sudan. PLoS Medicine 10, e1001371. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1001371.Google Scholar
Kirmayer, LJ, Pedersen, D (2014). Toward a new architecture for global mental health [Editorial]. Transcultural Psychiatry 51, 759776. doi:10.1177/1363461514557202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knapp, M, McDaid, D, Parsonage, M (2011). Mental Health Promotion and Prevention: The Economic Case. Department of Health: London.Google Scholar
Koplan, JP, Bond, TC, Merson, MH, Reddy, KS, Rodriguez, MH, Sewankambo, NK, Wasserheit, JN (2009). Towards a common definition of global health. Lancet 373, 19931995. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(09)60332-9.Google Scholar
Lancet Mental Health Group (2007). Scale up services for mental disorders: a call for action. Lancet 370, 12411252.Google Scholar
Lara, MA, Navarro, C, Navarrete, L (2010). Outcome results of a psycho-educational intervention in pregnancy to prevent PPD: a randomized control trial. Journal of Affective Disorders 122, 109117. doi:10.1016/j.jad.2009.06.024.Google Scholar
Lund, C, De Silva, M, Plagerson, S, Cooper, S, Chisholm, D, Das, J, Patel, V (2011). Poverty and mental disorders: breaking the cycle in low-income and middle-income countries. Lancet 378, 15021514. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60754-X.Google Scholar
Lynch, M, Cicchetti, D (1998). An ecological-transactional analysis of children and contexts: the longitudinal interplay among child maltreatment, community violence, and children's symptomatology. Development and Psychopathology 10, 235257.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Machel, G (2009). Children and Conflict in a Changing World: Machel Study 10-Year Review. UNICEF: New York.Google Scholar
Macy, RD, Johnson Macy, D, Gross, SI, Brighton, P (2003). Healing in familiar settings: support for children and youth in the classroom and community. New Directions in Youth Development 98, 5179.Google Scholar
National Research Council & Institute of Medicine (2009). Preventing Mental, Emotional, and Behavioral Disorders Among Young People: Progress and Possibilities. The National Academies Press: Washington, DC.Google Scholar
National Scientific Council on the Developing Child (2005). Excessive Stress Disrupts the Architecture of the Developing Brain: Working Paper #3. http://www.developingchild.net.Google Scholar
Patel, V (2014). Why mental health matters to global health. Transcultural Psychiatry 51, 777789. doi:10.1177/1363461514524473.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Patel, V, Araya, R, Chatterjee, S, Chisholm, D, Cohen, A, De Silva, M, van Ommeren, M (2007). Treatment and prevention of mental disorders in low-income and middle-income countries. Lancet 370, 9911005.Google Scholar
Patel, V, Kleinman, A (2003). Poverty and common mental disorders in developing countries. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 81, 609615.Google Scholar
Patel, V, Simon, G, Chowdhary, N, Kaaya, S, Araya, R (2009). Packages of care for depression in low- and middle-income countries. PLoS Medicine 6, e1000159. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1000159.Google Scholar
Petersen, I, Barry, M, Lund, C, Bhana, A (2014). Mental health promotion and the prevention of mental disorders. In Global Mental Health: Principles and Practice (ed. Patel, V., Minas, H., Cohen, A. and Prince, M. J.). Oxford University Press: New York.Google Scholar
Petersen, I, Bhana, A, Flisher, A, Swartz, L, Richter, L (2010). Promoting Mental Health in Scarce-Resource Contexts: Emerging Evidence and Practice. Human Sciences Research Council: Cape Town.Google Scholar
Petersen, I, Flisher, A, Bhana, A (2011). Afterword: cross-cutting issues central to mental health promotion in scarce-resource contexts. In Promoting Mental Health in Scare-Resource Contexts: Emerging Evidence and Practice (ed. Petersen, I. Bhana, A. Flisher, A., Swartz, L. and Richter, L.). Human Sciences Research Council: Cape Town.Google Scholar
Roberts, G, Grimes, K (2011). Return on Investment: Mental Health Promotion and Mental Illness Prevention. Canadian Policy Network & Canadian Institute for Health Information. http://www.cpa.ca/docs/File/Practice/roi_mental_health_report_en.pdf.Google Scholar
Saftlas, AF, Harland, KK, Wallis, AB, Cavanaugh, J, Dickey, P, Peek-Asa, C (2014). Motivational interviewing and intimate partner violence: a randomized trial. Annals of Epidemiology 24, 144150. doi:10.1016/j.annepidem.2013.10.006.Google Scholar
Shonkoff, JP, Phillips, DA (ed.) (2000). From Neurons to Neighborhoods: The Science of Early Childhood Development. National Academy of Sciences: Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Southwick, SM, Charney, DS (2012). The science of resilience: implications for the prevention and treatment of depression. Science 338, 7982. doi:10.1126/science.1222942.Google Scholar
Stafford, MR, Jackson, H, Mayo-Wilson, E, Morrison, AP, Kendall, T (2013). Early interventions to prevent psychosis: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ 346, f185. doi:10.1136/bmj.f185.Google Scholar
Stein, A, Pearson, RM, Goodman, SH, Rapa, E, Rahman, A, McCallum, M, Pariante, CM (2014). Effects of perinatal mental disorders on the fetus and child. Lancet 384, 18001819. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(14)61277-0.Google Scholar
Tirado-Munoz, J, Gilchrist, G, Farre, M, Hegarty, K, Torrens, M (2014). The efficacy of cognitive behavioural therapy and advocacy interventions for women who have experienced intimate partner violence: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Annals of Medicine 46, 567586. doi:10.3109/07853890.2014.941918.Google Scholar
Tol, WA, Barbui, C, van Ommeren, M (2013a). Management of acute stress, PTSD, and bereavement: WHO recommendations. Journal of the American Medical Association 310, 477478. doi:10.1001/jama.2013.166723.Google Scholar
Tol, WA, Komproe, IH, Jordans, MJ, Gross, AL, Susanty, D, Macy, RD, de Jong, JTVM (2010). Mediators and moderators of a psychosocial intervention for children affected by political violence. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 78, 818828.Google Scholar
Tol, WA, Komproe, IH, Jordans, MJD, Ndayisaba, A, Ntamutumba, P, Sipsma, H, de Jong, JTVM (2014). School-based mental health intervention for children in war-affected Burundi: a cluster randomized trial. BMC Medicine 12, 56. doi:10.1186/1741-7015-12-56.Google Scholar
Tol, WA, Komproe, IH, Jordans, MJD, Vallipuram, A, Sipsma, H, Sivayokan, S, de Jong, JTVM (2012). Outcomes and moderators of a preventive school-based mental health intervention for children affected by war in Sri Lanka: a cluster randomized trial. World Psychiatry 11, 114122.Google Scholar
Tol, WA, Komproe, IH, Susanty, D, Jordans, MJD, Macy, RD, De Jong, JTVM (2008). School-based mental health intervention for children affected by political violence in Indonesia: a cluster randomized trial. Journal of the American Medical Association 300, 655662.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tol, WA, Song, S, Jordans, MJD (2013b). Annual research review: resilience in children and adolescents living in areas of armed conflict: a systematic review of findings in low- and middle-income countries. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry 54, 445460. doi:10.1111/jcpp.12053.Google Scholar
Tomlinson, M, Rudan, I, Saxena, S, Swartz, L, Tsai, AC, Patel, V (2009). Setting investment priorities for research in global mental health. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 87, 438446.Google Scholar
Trevillion, K, Oram, S, Feder, G, Howard, LM (2012). Experiences of domestic violence and mental disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PLoS ONE 7, e51740. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0051740.Google Scholar
UNICEF (2006). Programming Experiences in Early Child Development. UNICEF: New York.Google Scholar
van der Feltz-Cornelis, CM, Sarchiapone, M, Postuvan, V, Volker, D, Roskar, S, Grum, AT, Hegerl, U (2011). Best practice elements of multilevel suicide prevention strategies: a review of systematic reviews. Crisis 32, 319333.Google Scholar
van Zoonen, K, Buntrock, C, Ebert, DD, Smit, F, Reynolds, CF 3rd, Beekman, AT, Cuijpers, P (2014). Preventing the onset of major depressive disorder: a meta-analytic review of psychological interventions. International Journal of Epidemiology 43, 318329. doi:10.1093/ije/dyt175.Google Scholar
Wagman, JA, Namatovu, F, Nalugoda, F, Kiwanuka, D, Nakigozi, G, Gray, R, Wawer, MJ, Serwadda, D (2012). A public health approach to intimate partner violence prevention in Uganda: the SHARE Project. Violence Against Women 18, 13901412. doi:10.1177/1077801212474874.Google Scholar
Walker, SP, Wachs, TD, Grantham-McGregor, S, Black, MM, Nelson, CA, Huffman, SL, Richter, L (2011). Inequality in early childhood: risk and protective factors for early child development. Lancet 378, 13251338. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60555-2.Google Scholar
Walker, SP, Wachs, TD, Meeks Gardner, J, Lozoff, B, Wasserman, GA, Pollitt, E, Group, ICDS (2007). Child development: risk factors for adverse outcomes in developing countries. Lancet 369, 13251338.Google Scholar
Whiteford, HA, Degenhardt, L, Rehm, J, Baxter, AJ, Ferrari, AJ, Erskine, HE, Vos, T (2013). Global burden of disease attributable to mental and substance use disorders: findings from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2010. Lancet 382, 15751586. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(13)61611-6.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (1990). International Classification of Diseases – 10th Revision. World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2001). The World Health Report 2001: Mental Health: New Understanding, New Hope. World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2004). Prevention of Mental Disorders: Effective Interventions and Policy Options. World Health Organization: Geneva.Google Scholar
World Health Organization. (2012). Risks to Mental Health: An Overview of Vulnerabilities and Risk Factors. WHO: Geneva.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2013). Mental Health Action Plan 2013–2020. WHO: Geneva, Switzerland.Google Scholar
World Health Organization & Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (2014). Social Determinants of Mental Health. WHO: Geneva.Google Scholar
Zechmeister, I, Kilian, R, McDaid, D (2008). Is it worth investing in mental health promotion and prevention of mental illness? A systematic review of the evidence from economic evaluations. BMC Public Health 8, 20. doi:10.1186/1471-2458-8-20.Google Scholar