Author:
Christopher Obuaku-Igwe Chinwe
Abstract
This study explored the effectiveness of a mental health first-aid program on improving young people’s attitudes, knowledge and mental health-related behavior, using qualitative methods. An assessment of the pilot project that was conducted among social science students between age 18 and 34 years revealed a reduction in stigma, increased openness about mental health challenges and increase in utilization of professional services among participants (n-548) of the MHFA program, following the 13-week program. The study found that MHFA intervention projects were considerably more effective in changing attitudes towards mental illness when blended with indigenous concepts, values, language, as well as priorities for various cultures and settings. Based on analysis of course content and focused group discussions, the study concludes that four factors contributed to the overwhelming satisfaction experienced by participants: (1) the utilization of peer tutors in administering the training, (2) the inclusion of mental models and centering participants’ agency in creating and administering training content, (3) the availability of peer mentors and a mobile application which makes referral (social prescribing) and access to professional intervention easy, and (4) the inclusion of friends and family as accountability partners.
Reference34 articles.
1. Girgis K. Teen mental health first aid in the United States: A pilot study. In: Society for Prevention Research 28th Annual Meeting. SPR. Available from: https://spr.confex.com/spr/spr2020/meetingapp.cgi/Paper/29378 [Accessed: 23 October 2022]
2. Davies EB, Beever E, Glazebrook C. A pilot randomized controlled study of the mental health first aid eLearning course with UK medical students. BMC Medical Education. 2018;18(1):1-2
3. Drinkwater C, Wildman J, Moffatt S. Social prescribing. BMJ. 2019;28:364
4. Sartore GM, Kelly B, Stain HJ, Fuller J, Fragar L, Tonna A. Improving mental health capacity in rural communities: Mental health first aid delivery in drought affected rural New South Wales. Australian Journal of Rural Health. 2008;16(5):313-318
5. Mantzios M, Cook A, Egan H. Mental health first aid embedment within undergraduate psychology curriculums: An opportunity of applied experience for psychology students and for enhancing mental health care in higher education institutions. Higher Education Pedagogies. 2019;4(1):307-310
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献