Abstract

Collaborative research partnerships are necessary to answer key questions in global mental health, to share expertise, access funding and influence policy. However, partnerships between low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) and high-income countries have often been inequitable with the provision of technical knowledge flowing unilaterally from high to lower income countries. We present the experience of the Programme for Improving Mental Health Care (PRIME), a LMIC-led partnership which provides research evidence for the development, implementation and scaling up of integrated district mental healthcare plans in Ethiopia, India, Nepal, South Africa and Uganda. We use Tuckman’s first four stages of forming, storming, norming and performing to reflect on the history, formation and challenges of the PRIME Consortium. We show how this resulted in successful partnerships in relation to management, research, research uptake and capacity building and reflect on the key lessons for future partnerships.

Highlights

  • Global mental health encompasses the study, research and practice of equitably improving mental health for all people (Patel and Prince 2010)

  • We argue that mutually beneficial global health partnerships can and should be based on a synergistic flow of complementary skills and experience

  • Programme for Improving Mental Health Care (PRIME) has highlighted some of the potential benefits and challenges related to the formation of multi-country collaborative research partnerships in global mental health

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Summary

Background

Global mental health encompasses the study, research and practice of equitably improving mental health for all people (Patel and Prince 2010). During the six years of PRIME, we aimed to produce a body of policy relevant research which could help understand the implementation and scaling up of packages of care for mental disorders in low resource settings We did this by developing and implementing district-specific mental healthcare plans in all five countries (Fekadu et al 2016; Jordans et al 2016; Petersen et al 2016; Shidhaye et al 2016) (Hanlon et al 2016; Kigozi et al 2016) and scaling them up in Ethiopia, India, Nepal and South Africa. The revision of the Ethiopian National Mental Health Strategy (Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia 2012), New Pathways, Percentage of LMIC and HIC authors per PRIME paper

Year 4
Findings
Discussion
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