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Annals of General Psychiatry logoLink to Annals of General Psychiatry
. 2020 Feb 26;19:12. doi: 10.1186/s12991-020-00261-y

Help-seeking intention and associated factors towards mental illness among residents of Mertule Mariam town, East Gojam Zone, Amhara Region, Ethiopia: a mixed-method study

Berhanu Yeshanew 1, Asmare Belete 2,, Mogesie Necho 2
PMCID: PMC7045738  PMID: 32127907

Abstract

Background

About 76% and 85% of people in low and middle-income countries with severe mental illness did not get management because of fear of expected discrimination. Studying the intention to seek help for mental illness will, therefore, help to know their intended plan for help that would have a vital role to access patients with mental illness. Despite this, literature is limited in the area and community-based studies are scarce in Africa in general and Ethiopia in particular concerning help-seeking intention towards mental illness and its associated factors. Therefore, we assessed the pattern of intention to seek help and associated factors for mental illness among residents of Mertule Mariam town that would fill the gap in evidence and serve as baseline information for public health intervention.

Methods

A community-based cross-sectional study design was conducted from May to June 2017 at Mertule Mariam town. General Help-Seeking Questionnaire (GHQ) was used to assess the intention of help sought. Focus group discussion had also been employed to obtain qualitative data. A multi-stage sampling technique was used to obtain a total sample of 964 participants. Data were fed into Epi Info 7 and analyzed using SPSS version 21. The binary logistic regression method was used and an odds ratio with its 95% confidence interval was computed. Variables in multi-variable logistic regression were considered as an independent predictor of help-seeking intention to mental illness if their P value was less than 0.05.

Result

About 81.5% of respondents had the intent to seek help from healthcare workers. But 44.6% of participants had the intention to seek from traditional healers. Variables that had an association with help-seeking intention were having an idea that mental illness needs treatment (AOR = 3.42, 95% CI 1.1–10.55), age group of 25–34 years (AOR = 1.46, 95% CI 1.02–2.09), mild social support (AOR = 1.85, 95% CI 1.25–2.72), and perceived severity of mental illness.

Conclusion

Community help-seeking intent for mental health problems was still inadequate. So strengthening to deliver information about mental illness through media like radio and television to advance help-seeking intention of the community was mandatory.

Keywords: Help-seeking intention, Mental illness, Ethiopia

Background

Mental illness impinges on the individual’s ability to realize the capacity, handle normal life stressors, perform profitably and contribute to the society that he was living [1]. It is a great deal cause of disability-adjusted life years (DALY) [2]. Worldwide, mental and related diseases accounted for 13% of diseases’ load and expected to be 15% by 2020. And also in low and middle-income countries (LMIC), behavioral disorders attribute huge figures of disability. It contributes 25.3% and 33.5% among all the years lived with disability in LMIC, respectively [3].

In Ethiopia, mental illness is the foremost burden of illness among non-infectious disease including the rural parts of the country that accounts for up to 11% of illness burden exceeding the burden due to HIV/AID [4]. WHO reports showed that out of the clients who visited the psychiatric hospital at the outpatient department, 41% had a diagnosis of schizophrenia, 13% had a mood disorder and 11% were diagnosed with other disorders. Among patients who had got inpatient service, 85% have schizophrenia and mood disorder diagnosis [5].

Globally, the mental health treatment gap is huge. Up to 85% and 35–50% of clients in LMICs and high-income countries with severe mental health problems never receive treatment, respectively [6]. Henderson also supports that about 70% of the world clients with mental illness never receive treatment from mental health care staff [7].

Even though mental illnesses are highly prevalent and incapacitating to the society of this world [8], still no more help was demanded from the modern facility by society. Only 72.7% responded to seek help from healthcare workers as conditional with specification by ‘if necessary’. Among the reasons attributed by those who did not respond seeking help, 20.1% do not desire others to know their problem while 19.4% of them claim as they did not know where to seek help [9].

The society prefers habitual healers, as well as herbal treatments including holy water and community, took the patients with a mental health problem to modern medical centers when they lost hope and progress after trying exhaustively from informal traditional methods [8, 10].

Also, in some areas, people left clients who have mental illness alone if he/she did not respond to informal help source and modern treatments. Based on the patient’s condition, he/she chose to live with the family getting his/her basic needs or wander around the street naked [11].

A community-based study done in India showed that fewer respondents (18%) claim as they might visit a psychiatrist if they have an emotional problem while a relatively higher number (35%) prefers habitual healer as a means of treatment for their mental health problem [12]. Another study conducted in Nigeria showed that patterns of help-seeking revealed that 46% of respondents prefer orthodox medical care as a primary source of help and 34% of respondents prefer spiritual healing and also 18% prefer informal help as the first-line source of help than modern medicine [13].

In our country Ethiopia too, there is a huge treatment gap for the treatment of the mental health problem. A study has been done in Butajira and showed that only 41% of society prefers seeking help from health institutions [14]. According to the study conducted at holy water site of Gebremenfes Kidus [10], out of 25 patients who participated in the study 21 patients, which accounts for 84%, had help-seeking behavior from traditional form of help like religious leaders, holy water, and from individuals who believed to have special power of knowing mental illness and prescribing traditional treatment for mental illness. Those individuals were known by the community to have ability to treat mental illness. A qualitative study done in Borana also supports the finding of the Axum study. The Borena societies have intentions seeking help according to the following. They may seek help initially from Borana wise men consultation followed by indigenous healers, then modern health facility which is the last option [11].

Contributing factors for the help-seeking intention of the mental health problem were attributed to being female, good perceived social health, higher mental health awareness, higher educational level [15], ethnicity, younger age and good attitude towards mental illness [10].

These mental illnesses affect the social, academic, occupational and recreational parts of functionalities victims, family members, and a whole community. Perceived causes, perceived help sought and the prognosis is crucial in implementing integrative health care to mental illness. So this study has a vital role in assessing help-seeking intention and associated factors of the community towards mental illness in Mertule Mariam town.

Methods

Study design and setting

This study assessed the magnitude of help-seeking intention and its associated factor for mental illness among residents of Mertule Mariam town. The study utilized both quantitative and qualitative methods and was conducted in Mertule Mariam town from May to June 2017. Mertule Mariam town is located 364 km far from Addis Ababa, the capital city of Ethiopia. The town has a total population of 12,082(30), 6028 males and 6054 females. Regarding health facilities the town, has one hospital, one health center, and four private clinics. Moreover, the town has been geographically demarcated into two administrative kebele with 2848 households in kebele one and 2833 households in kebele two. The Mertule Mariam primary hospital provides multiple services like chronic care service, inpatient and outpatient services, ophthalmic services, maternal and child health series, Human Immune Deficiency Virus treatment, and prevention service. Mental health service is also one of the services delivered in this hospital. The psychiatric unit of the hospital has both outpatient service and inpatient service which are staffed by four BSc psychiatric professionals. According to the staff report, the traditional healers link the psychiatric patients to a psychiatric unit of Mertule Mariam Primary hospital.

Study participants

The sample size had been estimated with a single population proportion formula. The assumptions taken into consideration during the estimation of the sample size include the magnitude of help-seeking intention 59% [14] from a previous Ethiopian study and z-value of 1.96, margin of the error to be tolerated to be 0.05, design effect of 2 and non-response rate of 10%. So the total estimated sample size was 794. However, we also considered sample size calculation for the associated factors of help-seeking intention towards mental illness. So in this case, we calculated sample size using stat calc of Epi Info version 7 by taking confidence interval = 95%, power = 80%, design effect = 2 and an odds ratio of 0.55 for family history of mental illness which yielded the highest sample, 964 which was the final sample size for this study. A total of 964 adult people in the town aged 18 years and above who were available at home during the data collection period were joined in this study.

A multi-stage sampling technique was employed. A systematic sampling method was also used to select households. If two or more adults were living in the households, to select the adult who participates in data collection, the lottery method was employed. The study excludes those who were severely ill due to any form of medical illness that prevents them from giving an interview.

Measurements and data collection instruments

The dependent variable was help-seeking intention, whereas the independent variables include socio-demographic factors (age, sex, ethnicity, religion, marital status, educational status, occupational status, and family income), and illness perception factors. Data were collected by interviews using a semi-structured questionnaire by using the translated Amharic version of the questionnaire. General Help-Seeking Questionnaire (GHSQ) had been implemented for the assessment of help-seeking intention for their perceived mental illness [16]. In addition to this, Community Attitude Towards Mental Illness Inventory (CAMI) was utilized to assess community attitude towards mental illness [17]. The overall reliability of CAMI was a = 0.84. Moreover, the Mental Health Knowledge Schedule (MAKS), Oslo 3-item social support scale and illness perception questionnaire were employed to assess knowledge about mental illness, social support level of participants and illness perception about mental illness, respectively. The questionnaire was pre-tested on 5% (49) of the total sample size participants and we did not include the results of the pretest in the final analysis. Focus group discussion which had a member of religious leaders, health workers and community participants who were selected purposely was also conducted to obtain the qualitative part of the data. The principal investigator moderated the discussion of focus group discussion. Audio records and hand notes were used during the discussion. Data collectors and supervisors were trained for 2 days. The collected data were reviewed and checked for completeness daily.

Data processing and analysis

The quantitative data were entered using Epi info 7th version and exported to SPSS version 21 for analysis. Data were explored using descriptive statistical measures. Bivariate and multi-variable binary logistic regression analyses were used. A P-value of less than 0.2 on bivariate logistic regression was used to screen variables to be entered into multi-variate logistic regressions.

Then independent variables with a p-value less than 0.05 on the final model were considered as determinants of help-seeking intention. The strength of the association has been illustrated by the odds ratio (OR) with its 95% confidence interval. Thematic analysis was also enrolled in the analysis of the qualitative part.

Operational definition

Attitude: measured based on four subscales of CAMI; authoritarianism, benevolence, social restrictiveness, and community mental health ideology. Attitude scores are dichotomized by their mean score [17].

Good knowledge: was defined if the participants answer the knowledge questions greater than the mean score [18].

Good help-seeking intention: was defined if the participants intend to seek help from health workers for personal or family mental illness when they thought they have a problem.

Social support: was categorized as poor if the score is 3–8, moderate if between 9 and 11 and strong if an overall score was between 12 and 14 [19].

Ethical consideration

Ethical clearance was obtained from the institutional review board of the University of Gondar College of medicine and health science and review committee of Amanuel Mental Specialized Hospital. Permission letter from the Mertule Mariam town administration was also requested and obtained so that distributed to the two kebele administrations before the starting of the study. Written consent was obtained from each participant after full information regarding the study was supplied. The name of the participants was not included in the questionnaire and therefore the information gathered from the participants was kept confidential.

Result

Socio-demographic characteristics of participants

Out of 964 study participants invited, 947 were interviewed and gave complete responses which give 98.23% response rate. Among these participants, 554 (58.5%) were males while 393 (41.5%) were females. The mean age ± SD of the respondents was 30 ± 8.29 years and ranges from 18 to 80 years. Regarding the marital status of the participants, 426 (45%) were single followed by married, 417 (44%). Most of the participants were Amhara by ethnicity, 944 (99.7%) and orthodox by religion, 935 (98.7%). Concerning the educational level of participants, 267 (28.2%) had a college diploma and above followed by 260 (27.5%) who attended secondary school education. Concerning social support of the participants, moderate, poor and strong social support accounted for 409 (43.2%), 375 (39.6%) and 163 (17.2%), respectively (Table 1).

Table 1.

Socio-demographic distributions of participants among residents of Mertule Mariam town East Gojam Zone, Amhara Region, Ethiopia, 2017

Independent variable Categories Frequency Percent
Age 18–24 241 25.4
25–34 463 48.9
35–44 193 20.4
> 44 50 5.3
Sex Male 554 58.5
Female 393 41.5
Marital status Single 426 45.0
Married 417 44.0
Divorced 85 9.0
Widowed 19 2.0
Ethnicity Amhara 944 99.7
Other 3 0.3
Religion Orthodox 935 98.7
Other 12 1.3
Educational status Unable to read and write 116 12.2
Educational level Elementary school 126 13.3
Secondary school 260 27.5
College diploma 267 28.2
Degree and above 178 18.8
Occupational status Government employee 387 40.9
Housewife 70 7.4
Farmer 59 6.2
NGO employee 45 4.8
Merchant 168 17.7
Student 152 16.1
Other 66 7.0
Income < 750 290 30.6
751–1200 113 11.9
> 1201 544 57.4

Information and previous experience about mental illness

About 575 (60.6%) of respondents have got information about mental illness during the last 1 year. Three hundred seventy-six (39.7%) of respondents got the information from other people while 110 (11.6%) got the mental health information from health care institutions. Moreover, about 62 (6.5%) of participants obtained information regarding mental illness from mass media, while 41 (4.4%) of participants got the information from magazines (Fig. 1). Regarding the previous experience of participants about mental illness, about 658 (69.5%) of them knew someone who had a mental illness. Six hundred sixty-three (70%) of respondents had never been involved in caring for someone who had a mental illness (Table 2).

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Sources of information about mental illness for residents of Mertule Mariam town, East Gojam Zone, Amhara Region, Ethiopia, 2017

Table 2.

Previous experience about mental illness of participants of residents of Mertule Mariam town, East Gojam Zone, Amhara Region, Ethiopia, 2017

Independent variables Categories Frequency Percentage
Have you ever suffered from mental illness? Yes 91 9.6
No 856 90.4
Do you know someone who has mental illness? Yes 657 69.4
No 290 30.6
If yes for the above question what is your relation? Relative 65 6.9
Neighbor 133 14.0
Friend 144 15.2
Other 605 63.9
Have you been involved in caring people who have mental illness? Yes 284 30.0
No 663 70.0
Have you ever been hurt by people who have mental illness? Yes 315 33.3
No 632 66.7
Did you witness someone hurt by people who have mental illness? Yes 687 72.5
No 260 27.5

Other: includes on street, other people’s home

Knowledge, attitude and illness perception to mental illness

Despite the fact that 445 (47%) of participants had poor knowledge regarding mental illness, a significant portion of 307 (32.4%) and 550 (58.1%) of them level mental illness as severe and very severe, respectively. Majority 677 (71.5%) of clients believe different psychosocial factors as major causes of mental illness. Concerning the attitude of the respondents, 561 (59.2%) of them had community mental health ideology (Table 3).

Table 3.

Attitude, knowledge and perception to mental illness among residents of Mertule Mariam town, East Gojam Zone, Amhara Region, Ethiopia, 2017

Variable Categories Frequency Percent
Knowledge of mental illness Good 502 53.0
Poor 445 47.0
Perceived severity of MI Mild 24 2.5
Moderate 66 7.0
Severe 307 32.4
Very severe 550 58.1
Cause of MI Psychosocial factor 677 71.5
Nerve damage 13 1.4
Poverty 22 2.3
Substance use 102 10.8
Evil spirit possession 59 6.2
God’s punishment 71 7.5
MI needs treatment Yes 773 81.6
No 174 18.4
Place of treatment Hospital 614 64.7
Holy water 207 21.9
Holy water and hospital 101 10.7
Sorcerer 24 2.5
Attitude towards MI Authoritarianism Less 447 47.2
More 500 52.8
Benevolence Less 495 52.3
More 452 47.7
Social restrictiveness Less 580 61.2
More 367 38.8
Community MI Ideology Less 386 40.8
More 561 59.2

MI mental illness

Help-seeking intention to mental illness

Among the total respondents, 772 (81.5%) were likely to seek help from healthcare workers while 423 (44.6%) of participated subjects were likely to seek help from traditional methods of treatment. Four hundred ninety (85%) respondents whoever got information about mental illness had the intention of seeking help from health workers. Regarding social support and the intent to seek help, 349 (85.3%) of those who had mild social support had the intention to seek help from health care workers. Fifty-six (90%) of those who got information from mass media and 98(89%) of those who got information from health workers had the intention to seek help (Table 4). Participants who perceived the severity of mental illness as mild 45 (68.2%) were less likely to have the intention of seeking help from a traditional source of help. Respondents who agreed that mental illness needs treatment; 341 (44.1%) had the intent to seek help from traditional medical practice (Table 5).

Table 4.

Distribution of help-seeking intention for mental illness from health workers among residents of Mertule Mariam town East Gojam Zone, Amhara Region, Ethiopia, 2017

Variables Category Help-seeking intention from HW
Likely Unlikely COR AOR
Age 18–24 194 (80.5%) 47 (19.5%)  Reference  Reference
25–34 379 (81.9%) 84 (18.1%) 1.09 (0.73– 1.62) 1.31 (0.8–2.06)
35–44 158 (81.9%) 35 (18.1%) 1.09 (0.67–1.77) 1.67 (0.9–3.0)
> 44 41 (82%) 9 (18%) 1.10 (0.50–2.43) 2.27 (0.88–5.85)
Marital status Single 360 (84.5%) 66 (15.5%) Reference Reference
Married 325 (77.9%) 92 (22.1%) 0.64 (0.45–0.92) 0.48 (0.32–0.74)**
Divorced 73 (85.9%) 12 (14.1%) 1.11 (0.57–2.16) 0.87 (0.41–1.82)
Widowed 14 (73.7%) 5 (26.3%) 0.51 (0.18–1.47) 0.37 (0.11–1.28)
Social support Poor 290 (77.3%) 85 (22.7%) Reference  Reference
Moderate 349 (85.3%) 60 (14.7%) 1.70 (1.18–2.45) 1.85 (1.25–2.72)**
Strong 133 (81.6%) 30 (18.4%) 1.29 (0.81–2.37) 1.45 (0.88–2.37)
Source of information about mental illness Mass media 56 (90.3%) 6 (9.7%) Reference  Reference
Magazine 34 (81.0%) 8 (19.0%) 0.45 (0.14–1.42) 0.41 (0.12–1.38)
Health institution 98 (89.1%) 12 (10.9%) 0.87 (0.31–2.46) 0.79 (0.27–2.33)
Other people 313 (83.2%) 63 (16.8%) 0.53 (0.22–1.28) 0.48 (0.19–1.22)
Religious and school 271 (75.9%) 86 (24.1%) 0.33 (0.14–0.81) 1.02 (0.24–4.23)
Perceived severity of mental illness Mild 15 (62.5%) 9 (37.5%) Reference Reference
Moderate 56 (84.8%) 10 (15.2%) 3.36 (1.15–9.75) 0.35 (0.13–1.09)
Severe 251 (81.8%) 56 (18.2%) 2.68 (1.12–6.45) 1.09 (0.51–2.30)
Very severe 450 (81.8%) 100 (18.2%) 2.7 (1.15–6.34) 0.97 (0.66–1.42)
Do you think mental illness requires treatment? Yes 629 (81.4%) 144 (18.6%) 1.88 (1.35–2.62) 3.42 (1.11–10.55)*
No 143 (82.2%) 31 (17.8%) Reference Reference

HW health worker

*p-value < 0.05, **p-value < 0.01 *other people = informed by someone somewhere else

Table 5.

Distribution of help-seeking intention towards mental illness from traditional help source among resident of Mertule Mariam town East Gojam Zone, Amhara Region, Ethiopia, 2017

Variable Category Help-seeking intention from TFOH
Likely Unlikely COR AOR
Age 18–24 93 (38.6%) 148 (61.4%) Reference Reference
25–34 226 (48.8%) 237 (51.2%) 1.51 (1.10–2.08) 1.46 (1.02–2.09)*
35–44 81 (42%) 112 (58%) 1.15 (0.78–1.69) 1.03 (0.64–1.64)
> 44 22 (44%) 28 (46%) 1.25 (0.67–2.31) 1.28 (0.61–2.71)
Marital status Single 185 (43.4%) 241 (56.6%) Reference Reference
Married 185 (44.4%) 232 (55.6%) 1.04 (0.79–1.36) 1.06 (0.76–1.48)
Divorced 44 (51.8%) 41 (48.2%) 1.39 (0.87–2.23) 1.53 (0.89–2.62)
Widowed 8 (42.1%) 11 (57.9%) 0.94 (0.37–2.40) 1.21 (0.41–3.54)
Social support Poor 147 (39.2%) 228 (60.8%) Reference Reference
Moderate 192 (46.9%) 217 (53.1%) 1.37 (1.03–1.82) 1.41 (1.04–1.91)*
Strong 83 (50.9%) 80 (49.1%) 1.60 (1.11–2.33) 1.85 (1.24–2.75)**
From where you got the information? Mass media 42 (67.7%) 20 (32.3%) Reference Reference
Magazine 21 (50.0%) 21 (50.0%) 0.47 (0.21–1.06) 0.54 (0.23–1.26)
Health institution 70 (63.6%) 40 (36.4%) 0.83 (0.43–1.61) 0.91 (0.45–1.83)
Other people 169 (44.9%) 207 (55.1%) 0.38 (0.22–0.68) 0.37 (0.20–0.67)**
Religious and school 120 (33.6%) 237 (66.4%) 0.24 (0.13–0.43) 0.44 (0.12–1.53)
How severe do you think mental illness is? Mild 9 (37.5%) 15 (62.5%) Reference Reference
Moderate 21 (31.8%) 45 (68.2%) 0.77 (0.29–2.06) 0.65 (0.26–1.61)
Severe 130 (42.3%) 177 (57.7%) 1.22 (0.52–2.88) 0.43 (0.24–0.77)**
Very severe 262 (47.6%) 288 (52.4%) 1.51 (0.65–3.52) 0.73 (0.54–1.00)
Do you think mental illness require treatment? Yes 341 (44.1%) 432 (55.9%) 2.12 (1.62–2.78) 2.21 (0.73–6.66)
No 81 (46.6%) 93 (53.4%) Reference Reference

TFOH traditional form of help

*p-value < 0.05, **p-value < 0.01 *other people = informed by someone somewhere else

Factors associated with help-seeking intention to mental illness

On multivariable logistic regression age, marital status, social support, source of information, perceived severity of mental illness and perception about the need for treatment for mental illness were the associated factors for help-seeking intention. The odds of help-seeking intention among the respondents of Mertule Mariam town residents whose age was 25–34 years was 1.46 times higher for seeking help from traditional methods of treatment as compared to those participants whose age was 18–24 years (AOR = 1.46, 95% CI 1.02–2.09). Besides, participants who have moderate social support were 1.85 at higher odds of intention to seek help from health care workers than those participants who had poor social support (AOR = 1.85, 95% CI 1.25–2.72). But as the level of social support become strong, the increase in the chance of the individuals’ to have the intention to seek help from the traditional form of help; moderate social support (AOR = 1.41, 95% CI 1.04–1.91) and strong social support (AOR = 1.85, 95% CI 1.24–2.75). Moreover, participants who get information about mental illness from other people were 63% less likely to seek help from a traditional form of treatment (AOR = 0.37, 95% CI 0.20–0.67). Besides, respondents who thought that mental illness as severe were also 57% times less likely to seek help from traditional methods of treatment (AOR = 0.43, 95% CI 0.24–0.77) as compared to those participants who considered mental illness as mild. The odds of intention to seek help from health workers among participants who believed that mental illness needs treatment was 3.42 times higher than those participants who believed that mental illness does not need treatment (AOR = 3.42, 95% CI 1.11–10.55) (Tables 4 and 5).

Qualitative descriptions

Four focus group discussions were held with a minimum group size of five and a maximum group size of six participants and were limited when the idea saturates starting from the third session (group). Most of the participants explain their idea as people who have mental illness are unable to do anything good for their lives and no more worthy they are for their family unless they bring insult to them.

Stigma indicators

Most participants in the discussion agreed that mentally ill patients are aggressive and violent physically; they go naked and collect garbage. The fear of danger imposed by the mentally ill patient is cause of the stigma.

One group discussants raised their idea as follows:

‘…..they lose their control, they go naked, and mostly they use substances like ‘tela’, ‘araki’ and bite people they got without any reason. They do not know anything because they are mad… they are mad (ebid)’.

Another 32-year-old female discussant suggested that mentally ill people are dangerous physically if they are allowed to live in the same home.

‘….mentally ill peoples are difficult to know their behavior and should be left outside unless they may kill their family members. If possible it may be helpful to take them to holy water and if they don’t have any improvement better to leave on the street…’.

Their attitude is more of an avoidant and authoritarian type judging that they are substance users, prolonged sitters, and fighters for no reason. This idea may push family members of the mentally ill to either restraining patients in the home or leaving outside of the home on the street. On the treatment choice, they give the probability of helping only religious aspects and behavioral parts. These people may not take their family member who has a mental illness to the hospital for help.

Perceived causes of mental illness

Most discussants present their perceived cause of mental illness as social and evil spirit possession related. Among the listed causes; possessed by evil spirit due to violation of God’s doctrines and testaments, attack by devil spirit, loss of loved one, poverty, too much thinking, and substance use are the commonest.

Discussants of different group discuss their idea regarding the cause of mental illness as follows:

‘…mostly mental illness comes when the mother soon after she gave birth to a baby is left alone, substances are taken in large amounts, peoples could not get what they love. Peoples also get mentally ill when they try to steal ‘tabot’ and other materials of the church as punishment by God’s hand. Poverty exposes people to too much work time and too much thinking which is the main cause of mental illnesses’.

Possible treatment options

Almost all discussants prefer traditional methods of treatment as the first-line source of help like holy water, praying and herbal treatments including wise men.

One 38-year-old woman who has two children with a mental illness described her preference for help exclusively holy water and praying.

…I have two male children who have mental illness and the elder have been treated in Amanuel Mental Specialized Hospital. He had had some improvement while he takes the medication but worsened when he stopped taking medication. I took him to holy water last year and he is now fine but his younger brother recently become mentally ill. I will take him to holy water soon. The hospital medication never helps anything for mental illness…’.

Another member hesitates about the effectiveness of the treatment by modern medicine.

‘… hospitals may help to calm patients just to relief from the destructive behavior of the patient but for permanent it seems good to take him to holy water …’.

Another 29-year-old receptionist (hotel) supported the traditional treatment preference raising the issue of her elder brother who has been mentally ill 5 years ago.

‘… I think the best and ultimate treatment of mental illness is taking to sorcerer unless the rest of the treatment methods are nothing. We took my brother to the hospital, holy water but nothing we get….’

One male participant whose father had had mental illness but now healthy strongly argued that ‘holy water and praying is the only treatment for mental illness…’.

Another 25-year-old female radiographer argued the traditional methods of treatment as follows:

…taking mentally ill people to magicians and sorcerers is duplicating the devil and it is good only to take them to the hospital…’.

Discussion

As per the knowledge of researchers of the current study, there is a limitation of evidence regarding the help-seeking intention of the community towards mental illness in developed countries in general and developing countries like Ethiopia in particular. This shortage of evidence makes the treatment of mental illness difficult and creates a huge gap for the unmet needs of the treatment for mental illness. Therefore, this study assessed help-seeking intention for mental illness and its associated factors that would be an important milestone in narrowing the gap for treatment of mental illness since it would serve as an evidence mental health intervention activities.

In this study, the pattern of good help-seeking intention for mental illness was obtained to be high (81.5%). A study done in Malaysia obtained that 72.7% of participants had intended to seek help from health care workers [9] which is relatively lower than the present study. Another study in India assessed help-seeking intention of community and found that 18% of the participants had an intention to seek from a psychiatrist [12] which was also lower than the current study. Moreover, the help-seeking intention from health care workers was 46% in Nigeria [20], 41% in Ethiopia [14], 67.7% in Japan [21] all of which are lower as compared to the present study. The justification for this might be because of the variations in socio-demographic factors as well as cultural and economic variations between countries where the current and previous studies were conducted. Moreover, methodological variations like the use of different assessment methods for help-seeking in current and previous studies could contribute to the discrepancy. This study has also evaluated the traditional help-seeking intention of the community. Around 44.6% of the participants had the intention to seek help from a traditional form of help for perceived mental illness. This finding had been less than a result reported by the study done in Japan; 75.6% and also the qualitative result of this study also favor help-seeking intention more from informal treatments.

Among the variables which have a significant association with intention to seek help from health workers for perceived mental illness in Mertule Mariam community were being married, having moderate social support, and having an idea that mental illness requires treatment. In this study, participants who were married were 52% less likely to seek help from health workers than participants who were single in marital status. Up to the knowledge of the investigators, this finding might be considered as new finding. The probable reason that hinders the married individual from seeking help from health workers might be the lack of knowledge about mental illness, and the single participants might be prone to information about mental illness.

Besides, having a moderate level of social support was 1.85 times at an increased level to have the intention to seek help for perceived mental illness from health care workers than participants who have poor social support. This finding was in line with another study done in Ethiopia, in which the presence of strong social support increases the intention to seek help from health professionals [22]. This means that the participants who have good social support had an increased chance of seeking help for their mental health problems from health workers. The other variable that had a significant association with help-seeking intention from health workers in this study was having the idea that mental illness requires treatment. This means that participants who have an idea that mental illness requires treatment were 3.42 times more likely to have the intention to seek help from health workers than those participants who have no idea that mental illness requires treatment. The reason might be that participants’ who think of treatment are required for mental illness had good knowledge that biological treatment is needed for the treatment of mental illness and therefore might have high intention for seeking help from health care professionals.

Moreover, in this study, age group of 25–34 years, strong and moderate social support, getting information about mental illness from other people within the community, and severe perceived severity of mental illness were the variables that have a significant association with the intention to seek help from the traditional source of help.

Participants who believed mental illness was severe were 57% less likely to seek help from a traditional form of help. This justification for this might be that participants who think of mental illness as a severe form might take seek help from modern treatment than the traditional one. Besides, in our community, people think that the modern form of treatment for mental illness is the last preserved option for severe mental illness [11]. Besides, participants whose age group was from 25–34 years were 1.46 times at higher odds of having an intention to seek help from traditional forms of help than participants whose ages ranged from 18–24 years. This finding is in contradiction with the reported result of a study done in Malaysia that the younger age group is more likely to seek help than older aged individuals [9]. This might be due to those participants in Malaysia at their younger age were exposed to mass media and accesses information about mental illness easily at a younger age so that increased help-seeking in this age group.

Moreover, participants who had strong and moderate social support were more likely to seek help from a traditional form of help than respondents who had poor social support. This might be because in people with social support, different opinions might be given to bring people with mental illness to a traditional form of help. Finally, respondents’ who get information about mental illness from other people within the community were 63% less likely to seek help from the traditional form of help. This might be due to the community sharing the experience of their family members that mental illness might not improve if they took the patient to the traditional form of treatment. Another possible reason might be that they continue to hide their problems due to the fear of stigma and discrimination. For example, South African studies argued that the advocated treatment modality is talking about the problem of seeking professional help [14, 23]. One 29-year-old female focus group discussion participant supported this as ‘it is a good solution if someone who has mental illness talks with his close friend and shares what is a disturbing issue’. She considers social support as a solitary source of help for mental illness. This ideology might be the cause for those who have social support are less likely to seek help from health professionals in this study. The current finding contradicts the finding of a China study [15] which illustrated that people who have more information about mental illness are more likely to seek any type of help. Moreover, this study assesses help-seeking intention towards mental illness, so it is not assessing the specific disorders.

Conclusion

The results of this study showed that more than three-fourths (80%) of the participants had the intention to seek help from health workers for their perceived mental illness. The factors significant associations with help-seeking intention were social support, age, source of information, perceived severity of mental illness and marital status. This result shows that intervention needs to enhance help-seeking intention like giving education about mental illness for the community using a media of high geographical coverage.

Acknowledgements

First of all, we want to thank the University of Gondar College of medicine and health science and Amanuel Mental Specialized Hospital for their valuable contribution during this research process. Besides, we would like to acknowledge other colleagues, data collectors, and supervisors for their great effort.

Abbreviations

CAMI

Community Attitude to Mental Illness Inventory

Epi-info

Epidemiological information

GHSQ

General Help-Seeking Questionnaire

MAKS

Mental Health Knowledge Schedule

MI

Mental illness

MOH

Ministry of Health

SPSS

Statistical Package for Social Science

UOG

University of Gondar

WHO

World Health Organization

Authors’ contributions

BY and AB contributed to the design, conduct, and analysis of the research and in manuscript preparation. MN involved in the manuscript preparation. All authors contributed to the reading of the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by Amanuel mental health specialized hospital. The hospital has no role in the design, collection, and analysis of data and writing of the manuscript.

Availability of data and materials

All datasets used throughout this research process are available from the corresponding author on a reasonable request.

Ethics approval and consent to participate

Ethical clearance was obtained from the institutional review board of the University of Gondar College of medicine and health science and review committee of Amanuel Mental Specialized Hospital. Permission paper from the town administration of Mertule Mariam was requested and distributed to the two kebele administrations before the starting of the study. Written consent was obtained from each participant. The information gathered from the participants was kept confidential. The name of the participant was not included in the questionnaire.

Consent for publication

We all authors approved that our consent for publication in Annals of General Psychiatry the title of the manuscript: Help-seeking intention and associated factors toward mental illness among residents of Mertule Mariam town, East Gojam Zone, Amhara Region, Ethiopia: mixed method.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Footnotes

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Data Availability Statement

All datasets used throughout this research process are available from the corresponding author on a reasonable request.


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