THE UNIVERSITY of the Free State (UFS) is the first university in South Africa and Africa to implement the MEGA mobile application in primary healthcare settings to improve access for children and adolescents to mental-health services and appropriate care in South Africa and Zambia.
The MEGA project is a three-year project that started in October 2017 and is
part of a larger European Union-funded project to build capacity by
implementing the World Health Organisation’s (WHO) Mental Health Gap Action
Programme (mhGAP) mobile intervention in SADC countries.
According to Ronelle Jansen, Manager of the UFS team, the Mega consortium
consists of an interprofessional team including registered professional nurses,
psychiatrists, psychologists, IT specialists, a sociologist, researchers, and
administrative specialists in project funding.
The project involves primary healthcare professionals installing the app either on their phone or on a device, and the app then automatically generates a patient ID when the healthcare professional starts the screening process.
Sections
Jansen says for screening, multiple-choice questions or closed questions are
used with a ‘yes’ or ‘no’ answer, but some sections allow the primary
healthcare professional to manually insert additional information if necessary.
The
mental-health screening modules assess the following conditions:
depression, anxiety, substance use, suicide and self-harm, trauma, and
PTSD.
The healthcare worker can ask for the screening results, and possible diagnoses will appear. The primary healthcare professional must save and export data to a secure server.
The UFS team in the School of Nursing formed part of each work package and the
deliverables set out in all nine work packages. They were the first university
team to implement deliverables and were used as an example during feedback
discussions.
Team
UFS hosted one face-to-face partner meeting in April 2018 and will also host
the last face-to-face partner meeting in 2020 before the final dissemination
conference.
Capacity
The aim of the project is to improve child and adolescent mental-health services through early diagnosis and treatment by improving the skills and competencies of primary healthcare professionals with capacity building in mental-health education, says Jansen.
“There is a high burden of mental-health disorders among adolescents, but
limited access to mental healthcare. There is also a lack of knowledge about
mental healthcare among workers in public healthcare settings.
“The Mega project hopes to improve the delivery of mental healthcare to adolescents by supporting and educating primary healthcare professionals through a mobile application. Also, by disseminating the results and outcomes to the National Departments of Health in both SA and Zambia,” says Jansen, who is currently working on her PhD.
The project is currently
busy with its sixth work package (WP), which involves the implementation and
evaluation of the app after the primary healthcare professionals have received
training on the content and use of the app. The UFS was the first to start
implementing the app in seven clinics and with eight nurses.
Jansen says it is a tremendous honour and privilege to be part of an
international mental-health project funded by the Erasmus + programme and the
EU.
Partner institutions include the Turku University of Applied Science in Finland; Hamburg University of Applied Sciences in Germany; Riga Technical University in Latvia; the University of the Free State; Stellenbosch University; the University of Cape Town; the University of Pretoria; the University of Zambia; and Lusaka Apex Medical University in Zambia.
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