Abstract

BackgroundMental illnesses and disabilities as well as epileptic diseases remain an important public health issue. In Côte d’Ivoire, the provision of psychiatric care and specialised psychosocial facilities is almost non-existent. This study is based on the hypothesis that the care of people suffering from mental illness and epilepsy in Côte d’Ivoire is mainly in the hands of non-conventional mental health care facilities, including so-called ‘Prayer Camps’. These work according to traditional and spiritual principles and are mostly not registered or controlled by the Ivorian authorities.MethodsThis study is the first stage of a multi-stage study. For the first stage, a quantitative method with an exploratory and descriptive aim was chosen. 541 non-conventional mental health care facilities in Côte d’Ivoire were mapped, typologised according to their spiritual orientation and treatment methods, and examined according to some charactersitics. Semi-structured interviews with 435 facility leaders were conducted.ResultsThe article provides a typology of four types of non-conventional mental health care facilities in Côte d’Ivoire including Christian Prayer Camps, Traditional Healing Centres, Phytotherapy Centres, and Roqya Centres. It explores their administrative embedding, the qualification of the facility leaders as well as their willingness, in principle, to cooperate with conventional mental health care centres. A considerable number of non-conventional expressed a desire or acceptance of cooperation with psychiatric organisations.ConclusionsThe next stage of this multi-stage study will be to assess the clinical and legal situation of the patients in these centres. The aim is to interview the patients in order to analyse their perceptions and to capture the concerns of relatives and staff in the centres as well as the human rights situation in a mixed-method study. The long-term objective is to establish future cooperation between conventional psychiatric care providers and suitable non-conventional mental health care facilities and to implement a community mental health care policy in Côte d’Ivoire.

Highlights

  • Mental illnesses and disabilities as well as epileptic diseases remain an important public health issue

  • In Côte d’Ivoire, the health authority does not maintain a database on non-conventional mental health care facilities

  • Non-conventional mental health care facilities refer to any private mental health care facility not organised by the state and not oriented towards science based medical psychiatry and neurology

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Summary

Introduction

Mental illnesses and disabilities as well as epileptic diseases remain an important public health issue. This study is based on the hypothesis that the care of people suffering from mental illness and epilepsy in Côte d’Ivoire is mainly in the hands of non-conventional mental health care facilities, including so-called ‘Prayer Camps’. Koua et al International Journal of Mental Health Systems (2021) 15:83 in many countries, documented mainly by investigative journalists and human rights organisations, and in academic publications [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. The situation of the mentally ill is alarming in non-conventional mental health care facilities. In these facilities, patients are sometimes shackled and deprived of food and decent shelter. Health responses and legal provisions to protect the rights of these highly vulnerable populations are essential

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