Opportunities for Digital Health to Support Early Psychosis Care in Ghana: Qualitative Study Among Patients, Caregivers, and Clinicians.

Youth experiencing early psychosis in West Africa often face delays in accessing evidence-based treatment. Digital mental health interventions may offer an acceptable and scalable approach to improve access to early psychosis care in West Africa; however, few data exist on the experiences and perspectives of patients with early psychosis and their caregivers to inform digital intervention development.

This study aims to explore current experiences of early psychosis care, identify barriers and facilitators to in-person early psychosis care within health facilities, and identify opportunities for digital interventions to support patients with early psychosis and caregivers in Ghana.

We conducted qualitative focus group discussions among patients with early psychosis, their caregivers, and their mental health care providers recruited at Accra Psychiatric Hospital in Accra, Ghana. Trained qualitative researchers facilitated discussions using a structured qualitative interview guide, exploring current care practices for early psychosis in Ghana, barriers and facilitators to facility-based care, and perceptions of digital mental health interventions. Transcripts were translated, transcribed, and analyzed thematically using a hybrid inductive and deductive approach grounded in the theoretical framework of acceptability.

Overall, we conducted 4 focus group discussions (N=31) among 7 patients with early psychosis (median age 28, IQR 21-41 years), 6 caregivers (median age 58, IQR 29-34 years), and 18 clinicians (median age 30, IQR 29-34 years). Participants described current early psychosis care practices in Ghana, including seeking spiritual and traditional healing, the dearth of information and resources about psychosis, and the integral role of caregivers in facilitating treatment engagement and continuation (often at the cost of caregiver mental distress and burnout). Common barriers to facility-based mental health care included stigma associated with mental illness, lack of prior knowledge about early psychosis and treatment options, and practical constraints (eg, financial, logistical, and health care system limitations). Motivating factors for facility-based care included success stories from community members and strong rapport and trust in mental health clinicians. Technology (eg, mobile phones, laptops, radio, and television) was commonly used among participants in typical daily tasks, health information seeking, and stress reduction. Participants expressed support for digital tools that could deliver psychoeducation about early psychosis, support treatment adherence, and extend patient-provider communication between clinic visits.

Digital mental health interventions have the potential to complement facility-based early psychosis services in Ghana by addressing misinformation, reducing access barriers, and supporting caregiver roles. These qualitative findings inform potential integration points, content, attributes, and strengths of digital modalities that could be leveraged to support patients with early psychosis and their caregivers in Ghana.
Mental Health
Access
Care/Management
Advocacy
Education

Authors

Larsen Larsen, Agorinya Agorinya, Beaulieu Beaulieu, Attah Attah, Tauscher Tauscher, Asafo Asafo, Buck Buck, Sottie Sottie, DeVries DeVries, Okyere Okyere, Ampaw Ampaw, Duah Duah, Ofori-Atta Ofori-Atta, Obeng Obeng, Ben-Zeev Ben-Zeev
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