Health care practitioners' perceptions of public mental health care in the Eastern Cape, South Africa

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Health care practitioners' perceptions of public mental health care in the Eastern Cape, South Africa

Published in: Journal of Psychology in Africa
Volume 24 , issue 4 , 2014 , pages: 370–374
DOI: 10.1080/14330237.2014.980625
Author(s): Dalena van Rooyen Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, , Kegan Topper Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, , David Morton Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, , Joanitha Strümpher Nelson Mandela Metropolitan University, , Isabell Schierenbeck University of Gothenburg, , Lena Andersson University of Gothenburg,

Abstract

This qualitative study explored the perceptions of health care practitioners (HCPs) concerning public mental health care in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. Data were collected from thirteen purposively selected HCPs using in-depth unstructured interviews (males = 6, females = 7). Data were transcribed verbatim and later thematically analysed. The findings suggest that mental health professionals perceive mental health services to be both inadequate and of suboptimal quality. Specifically, they perceived public mental health care to have lower priority, to be poorly resourced and lacking in patient-oriented care qualities.

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