Abstract

Background: South African Mental Health Care (MHC) legislation advocates for supportive rehabilitative services in Primary Health Care (PHC) settings. PHC settings are often understaffed and MHC nurses in these settings overburdened with high patient loads. Alternative cost-effective psycho-social intervention strategies must be explored to supplement the overstrained MHC sector to meet the rehabilitative and supportive needs of service users in community settings. Using a social constructionist epistemology, this study aimed to highlight the value of a community-based support group for MHC users at a Tshwane District Community Health Centre. This was done by exploring the meaning group members attached to the group. The intervention was a collaborative partnership between a local University Psychology Department and the Department of Health, Tshwane District, utilising post-graduate psychology students as group facilitators.Methods: Qualitative research methods were applied. Data were collected using semistructured interviews and a collage-making and storytelling method. Thematic analysis highlighted the main themes representing the meaning the five participants ascribed to the group.Results: The findings suggest that the group offered the participants a sense of belonging and a means of social and emotional support. The group also created opportunity for learning, encouraged mental and physical mobilisation and stimulation, and served as an additional link to professional services. Conclusion: The findings suggest that student-facilitated support groups could offer a viable supplement for offering support to service users in PHC settings. The group assisted MHC users to cope with symptoms, social integration, and participating in meaningful activities as part of rehabilitation services.

Highlights

  • A central tenet of the Mental Health Care (MHC) Act No 17 of 2002 and the National Mental Health Policy Framework and Strategic Plan 2013e2020 is psychosocial rehabilitation, services focussed on improving the lives and functional capacities of individuals with mental illness

  • This concept refers to an approach that combines pharmacological treatment, skills training, as well as psychological and social support focussed on improving the social functioning of service users (KramersOlen, 2014; South African Department of Health, 2012)

  • As part of the psychosocial rehabilitation plan, MHC legislation promotes the provision of support groups for MHC users in Primary Health Care (PHC) settings (South African Department of Health, 2002)

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Summary

Introduction

A central tenet of the Mental Health Care (MHC) Act No 17 of 2002 and the National Mental Health Policy Framework and Strategic Plan 2013e2020 is psychosocial rehabilitation, services focussed on improving the lives and functional capacities of individuals with mental illness. Community-based social support encompasses services offered within community settings aimed at helping service users cope with their mental illness and improve their quality of life. Such services are supportive, educative, and empowering in nature and could be offered in the form of psychoeducation or group initiatives (Becker, 2010; Sturgeon & Keet, 2010). Using a social constructionist epistemology, this study aimed to highlight the value of a community-based support group for MHC users at a Tshwane District Community Health Centre. This was done by exploring the meaning group members attached to the group. The group assisted MHC users to cope with symptoms, social integration, and participating in meaningful activities as part of rehabilitation services

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