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Original research
Pathways to psychiatric care and factors associated with delayed help-seeking among patients with mental illness in Northern Ethiopia: a cross-sectional study
  1. Senait Teshager1,
  2. Habtamu Kerebih2,
  3. Hailemariam Hailesilassie3,
  4. Mubarek Abera3
  1. 1Department of Psychiatry, Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital, Mekele, Northern Ethiopia, Ethiopia
  2. 2Department of Psychiatry, School of Medicine, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Gondar, Gondar, Ethiopia
  3. 3Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Health, Jimma University, Jimma, Ethiopia
  1. Correspondence to Habtamu Kerebih; habtishk{at}gmail.com

Abstract

Objective This study aimed to assess pathways to psychiatric care and factors associated with delayed help-seeking among patients with mental illness in Northern Ethiopia using the WHO Pathway Study Encounter Form.

Design A cross-sectional study design was used.

Setting Data were collected using face-to-face interview from patients with various diagnoses of mental illness attending outpatient treatment at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital in Mekelle City, Tigray, Northern Ethiopia.

Participants Participants who came to attend outpatient treatment during the study period were included in the study using consecutive sampling technique.

Outcome measures Pathways to psychiatric care, delayed psychiatric treatment and factors affecting delayed psychiatric treatment.

Results The median duration from problem onset to contact with first care provider was 4 weeks, whereas contact with modern psychiatric services was 52.0 weeks. Study participants who were single (adjusted OR (AOR)=2.91, 95% CI 1.19 to 7.11), divorced (AOR=3.73, 95% CI 1.33 to 10.49) and who perceived mental illness as shameful (AOR=3.29, 95% CI 1.15 to 9.41) had delayed treatment-seeking behaviour, whereas participants with no history of substance use (AOR=0.43, 95% CI 0.20 to 0.92) were less likely to have delayed treatment-seeking behaviour.

Conclusions There is significant delay in seeking modern psychiatric treatment. Religious healers were the first source of help for mental illness. Majority of the respondents described that mental illness was due to supernatural causes. Stigma and lack of awareness about where treatment is available were barriers to seeking appropriate care.

  • pathway
  • psychiatric care
  • delayed treatment
  • mental illness
  • help-seeking
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Strengths and limitations of this study

  • This study was conducted based on the pathway encounter form developed by a WHO collaborative study which is important in collecting data on the number of patients with mental disorders seeking services from both formal and informal sectors.

  • The study helps to identify major sources of consultation used by patients for psychiatric care.

  • This is the first study on the pathway to psychiatric care in the northern part of Ethiopia, with 100% response rate maintained.

  • This study was conducted at a tertiary hospital among patients with severe mental illness and might not be generalised to patients who do not receive mental health services and to those with common mental disorders following treatment at primary healthcare settings.

  • Recall bias regarding onset of illness could lead to over-reporting and under-reporting of the duration of untreated mental illness.

Background

Mental illness is associated with high levels of chronicity, comorbidity and premature mortality.1 2 This is because onset of first-episode mental illness usually happens at an early age.3 However, most people with illnesses do not get early psychiatric treatment.4 Studies indicated that traditional and faith healers are the first sources of help for majority of patients.4 5 This is related to patients’ knowledge about the causes and treatments of the illness and their awareness of available services.6 These factors lead to prolonged duration of untreated mental illness (DUMI), with its adverse consequences including poorer response to psychotropic medications, symptom control and long-term prognosis with more relapses. As a result, people with mental illness (PMI) develop poor quality of life and compromise their social, personal and occupational functioning. Empirical studies have shown that DUMI averages 1–2 years, and the average DUMI is even longer in developing nations. The reasons for which are yet to be explored in studies on pathways to care service.7 Therefore, reducing DUMI has become the primary aim of modern psychiatric services for patients with mental illness.8 This can be achieved by identifying patients’ pathways to different sources of help and the factors that delay psychiatric treatment.6 Pathway to care is a comprehensive and systematised clarification of sources of care used by patients before seeking help from mental health professionals. It is a rapid and reasonable method of studying the help-seeking behaviour of mentally ill patients and their family.9

Descriptive studies from different countries indicated that a large number of patients do not present directly to mental health professionals. They adopt paths which traverse through many agencies.10 Results of studies indicated mixed findings with regard to the first source of help among PMI. While it has been reported that faith healers and non-psychiatrist allopath care providers were the first to be consulted,6 11 12 in other studies psychiatrists followed by traditional healers and general practitioners were the first consulted.13–16 Results from two previous Ethiopian studies also presented different findings. One of the studies, conducted in the capital city of Addis Ababa, in a specialised mental health hospital, showed that 41% of patients with new episodes of neuropsychiatric disorders directly consulted a psychiatrist. About one-third (30.9%) of patients sought care from priests, holy water or the church.10 In contrast, the second study, which was conducted in Southwest Ethiopia, in a psychiatric clinic under a general hospital set-up, reported that half of the patients sought traditional treatment from either a religious healer (30.2%) or a herbalist (20.1%) before they came to the hospital for psychiatric care.17

The median duration of untreated illness is affected by the paths taken by patients to arrive at hospitals for psychiatric care. A study done in different countries revealed that people with mental disorders seek treatment after 6 months and more from onset of their illness.6 18 In Asian-based studies, where most of the initial sources of help reported were traditional or religious care providers, the median duration of untreated illness greatly varies. In a study from Iran, the duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) and pathways to care in patients with first-episode psychosis showed a median DUP of 11 weeks, with a mean of 52 weeks, whereas it was 64 weeks and 10.5 weeks from the results of studies in Pakistan and Bangladesh, respectively.13–15 In a Nigerian study, the mean and median DUP were 72.80±75.7 and 52 weeks, respectively.11 In Ethiopian studies, the median delay between onset of illness and arrival at the psychiatric hospital was 38 weeks,10 while the median duration of symptoms of mental illness before contact with modern mental health service was 52.1 weeks.17 Consulting healers first might lead to prolonged pathway to psychiatric care and is a possible obstacle to early detection, identification and intervention.6 15 18

It was indicated that subjects who chose to use psychiatric services as first point of care were more likely to be younger, unmarried, unemployed and better educated.6 10 17 Patients who reported financial difficulties14 and who were diagnosed with schizophrenia and substance use disorders initially sought psychiatric care from non-psychiatric treatment facilities or centres before seeking care at public psychiatric hospitals.16 The stigma associated with the illness and the knowledge and beliefs about the cause of mental illness were found to affect preferences for sources of help among patients and caregivers.12 14

However, in the northern part of Ethiopia, no scientific data are available indicating pathways to psychiatric care service. Therefore, this study was conducted with the aim to assess the pathway to psychiatric care service and the associated factors that delay help-seeking among PMI. This type of study is very crucial to identify contributing factors to delayed psychiatric care and provide interventions for better treatment prognosis and outcome.

Methods

Study design and setting

A hospital-based, cross-sectional study was conducted at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital, Mekelle City, Northern Ethiopia from May to June 2017. The Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital commenced rendering its referral and non-referral services in 2008. The hospital provides services to a population of eight million people in its catchment areas of Tigray, Afar and the northeastern parts of the Amhara national regional states. It provides inpatient and outpatient services to all age groups. The psychiatry unit has 18 beds, and approximately 850 patients receive outpatient services every month. The psychiatry unit is the only clinical department which receives patients without referral and with referrals from all directions of the catchment area.

Participant selection

Sample size was determined using single population proportion formula assuming that 50% of the participants will seek early treatment at 95% CI and 5% margin error. Considering a 10% non-response rate, a total of 423 adult patients with mental illnesses were selected. Consecutive sampling method was used to select the study participants until the required sample size was achieved.

Patient and public involvement

No patients were involved.

Data collection and measurements

Data were collected using structured, interviewer-administered questionnaires prepared in local languages (Amharic and Tigre languages). Pathways to psychiatric care were assessed using the WHO Encounter Form. This questionnaire documents the carer from whom help is initially sought (the first pathway contact), and then the next carer (second pathway contact), the third carer (third pathway contact) and finally the fourth carer (fourth pathway contact).19 Treatment delay was measured using the median time interval in weeks from problem onset to contact with psychiatric services. To sort significant delay for seeking mental health treatment, 52.1 weeks’ median duration was taken as a reference point from a study conducted in Southwest Ethiopia.17 Therefore, individuals who sought mental health treatment from psychiatric hospitals after 52.1 weeks from the first onset of illness were categorised as delayed treatment-seeking and before 52.1 weeks as early treatment-seeking for psychiatric care. Data were collected by eight trained BSc Psychiatry nurses using face-to-face interviews.

Data processing and analysis

The collected data were coded after checking for their completeness and were then entered into EpiData V.3.1.3, cleaned and exported to IBM SPSS Statistics V.20 for Windows for further analysis. Descriptive statistics were computed for continuous variables. For categorical variables, bivariate analyses were performed to nominate candidate variables for multivariate logistic regression analysis. Then, variables with p value of 0.25 and below were fitted to multivariate logistic regression analysis model to assess variables that have associations with the outcome variable and with 95% CI to control for confounding. The strength of association was measured using adjusted OR (AOR), and the level of statistical significance was declared at p value less than 0.05.

Results

Sociodemographic characteristics of study participants

Data were collected from 423 study participants with 100% response rate. Of the study participants, 53.4% were male. The mean age was 32.48 (SD ±9.33) years, with minimum and maximum age of 18 and 60 years, respectively. About half (48.5%) of the participants were jobless and a quarter (25.8%) were illiterate (table 1).

Table 1

Sociodemographic characteristics of study participants at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital

Sources of referral for first contact with psychiatric care and distribution of medically diagnosed mental illnesses

With regard to first contact with psychiatric care, majority (252, 59.6%) of participants sought treatment for their illness on advice of family members or relatives, followed by former patients (119, 28.1%). Of the study participants, 107 (25.3%) came with a referral letter. Nearly two-thirds (268, 63.4%) had follow-up, whereas 155 (36.6%) were new patients. This study indicated that the time interval from onset of symptom to first contact with psychiatric care was not normally distributed. The minimum and maximum time intervals to seek treatment were 0.1 and 1560 weeks, respectively. Outliers with a very long delay were present. Therefore, the median rather than mean duration was used. The median duration from problem onset to contact with modern psychiatric services was 52 weeks, with an IQR of 140 weeks. The time interval to receiving care was early for 247 (58.4%) and delayed for 176 (41.6%) study participants. Based on diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders fourth edition, text revision (DSM-IV-TR) diagnosis, 182 (43%) were diagnosed with schizophrenia (table 2).

Table 2

Distribution of psychiatric care for mental illness among patients attending outpatient treatment at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital in 2017 (N=423)

Pathways to psychiatric care

Of the study participants, 302 (71.4%) sought help from religious healers the first time, 95 (22.5%) sought help directly from a psychiatric service and 11 (2.6%) from traditional healers (see figure 1 and table 3). The main sources of information on where to get help for their illness were family/relatives (339, 80.1%), the patient himself (47, 11%) and former patients (18, 4.2%). The main problems presented were aggressive behaviour (181, 42.8%), suicidal behaviour (49, 11.6%), functional impairment (95, 22.5%) and worsening illness (87, 20.6%) (table 3).

Table 3

Distribution of first contact of care among patients at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital in 2017 (N=423)

Figure 1

Pictorial representation of pathways to psychiatric care among 423 patients at the ACSH psychiatric clinic. ACSH, Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital; GP, general practitioner.

In the second point of contact with non-psychiatric service, of the remaining 328 study participants, 6 (1.8%) sought help from religious healers, 55 (16.8%) from traditional healers, 22 (6.7%) from general practitioners, 3 (0.9%) from community nurses and 242 (73.8%) contacted modern psychiatric service. The sources of information on where to get psychiatric service were patients themselves (14, 4.3%), on advice of family/relatives (214, 65.2%) and former patients (70, 21.3%). With regard to the problems presented for help-seeking, 81 (24.7%) were due to aggressive behaviour, 27 (8.2%) due to suicide attempt, 63 (19.2%) due to functional impairment and 147 (44.8%) due to worsening illness.

In the third pathway after contact with non-psychiatric service, of the remaining 86 study participants, 76 (88.4%) sought help from psychiatric service, 7 (8.1%) from general practitioners and 3 (3.5%) from traditional healers. With regard to sources of information on where to get service, 44 (51.1%) were from family/relatives, 31 (36%) from former patients, 7 (8.1%) from health professionals, 2 (2.3%) from neighbours and 1 (1.2%) on advice of a work mate. With regard to the main problems presented for seeking help, 20 (23.3%) were due to aggressive behaviour, 5 (5.8%) due to suicide attempt, 12 (14%) due to functional impairment and 49 (57%) due to worsening illness.

In the fourth pathway, of the remaining 10 study participants, all (100%) sought help from psychiatric service. With regard to source of information on where to get service, 2 (20%) were from family/relatives, 6 (60%) from former patients and 2 (20%) from health professionals. With regard to the main problem presented for seeking help, 1 (10%) was due to aggressive behaviour, 1 (10%) due to suicidal behaviour and 8 (80%) due to worsening illness.

Perceived cause, severity, stigma and treatment option for mental illness and reasons for delay in treatment-seeking

The study participants provided reasons for delay in help-seeking treatment; 41 (9.7%) were due to financial difficulties, 222 (52.5%) did not know where to seek help, which could be due to being new to the environment for PMI coming from Arab countries and being internally displaced from different regions of the country due to intercommunal conflict, and 72 (17%) were due to lack of accessibility of mental health facilities near their area. With regard to perceived causes of mental illness, spiritual possession, evil eye, sinful act, walks around garbage dumps and stress accounted for 124 (29.3%), 41 (9.7%), 31 (7.3%), 38 (9%) and 129 (30.5%), respectively. With regard to problems faced in help-seeking, patients responded that it is due to family members not recognising the severity of illness (272, 64.3%) and to family members feeling ashamed (102, 24.1%).

Majority (349, 82.5%) of the study participants responded that mental illness is curable, and almost all (343, 97.4%) responded mental illness can be treated by modern treatment. The study participants responded that mental illness affects people who are angry and stressed (244, 57.5%) and people with crisis (58, 13.7%). With regard to perceived severity of mental illness, 260 (61.5%) responded very severe, whereas 16 (3.8%) responded less severe. In terms of community perception of mental illness, those who responded were very highly shameful (86, 20.1%), not as such shameful (107, 25.3%) and not at all shameful (102, 24.1%) (table 4).

Table 4

Distribution of patients’ perception towards cause, severity, stigma and treatment option for mental illness and reasons for delay in treatment-seeking at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital, 2017 (N=423)

Distribution of physical illnesses/symptoms, substance use and suicidal behaviours

Of the participants, 145 (34.8%) had physical illness. Suicidal behaviours and substance use were high among the participants (figure 2).

Figure 2

Distribution of physical illnesses/symptoms, substance use and suicidal behaviours. Physical illnesses/symptoms include diabetes, hypertension, HIV, genitourinary symptoms, headache, fever, weight loss, cough, chest pain, abdominal pain and joint pain. Substances include alcohol, tobacco, khat and cannabis.

Factors associated with delayed contact with modern psychiatric care

Controlling for other variables, age category was statistically associated with delay in treatment-seeking. Participants aged 31–40 years were 2.8 times (AOR=2.8, 95% CI 1.4 to 5.59) more likely to have delayed modern psychiatric service than the 18–30 years age group. Marital status was statistically associated with delayed psychiatric treatment. Study participants who are single (AOR=2.52, 95% CI 1.03 to 6.22) and divorced (AOR=3.5, 95% CI 1.25 to 9.81) were 2.5 and 3.5 times more likely to have delayed psychiatric treatment than those who are married. Study participants who were jobless were 3.4 times (AOR=3.38, 95% CI 1.05 to 10.82) more likely to have delayed psychiatric treatment than those who were employed. Patients with DSM-IV-TR diagnosis of other psychotic disorders seek early psychiatric treatment about 82% (AOR=0.18, 95% CI 0.06 to 0.51) more than patients with bipolar disorder. Participants who came after seeking religious treatment were 3.7 times (AOR=3.73, 95% CI 1.75 to 7.96) more delayed than patients who came directly to psychiatric service. Participants who perceived mental illness as shameful were 3.4 times (AOR=3.42, 95% CI 1.19 to 9.83) more likely to have delayed psychiatric treatment than those who perceived it as not shameful (table 5).

Table 5

Multivariate analysis of factors associated with delayed psychiatric treatment at Ayder Comprehensive Specialized Hospital, July 2017 (N=423)

Discussion

Data on the DSM-IV-TR diagnoses of participants in this study indicated that schizophrenia accounts for 43%, major depressive disorder 20.1%, other psychotic disorders 18.7%, bipolar disorders 10.9%, anxiety disorders 13.8% and epilepsy 1.4%.

Data on the pathway to psychiatric care of the study participants revealed that 71.4% first sought help from religious sources and 2.6% from traditional healers. Less than a quarter (22.5%) sought direct psychiatric treatment and 3.5% participants sought help from general health practitioners. This is in agreement with the results of a study from Nigeria which reported that most of the participants first sought treatments from religious and traditional healers (76.8%). Psychiatrists were the first contact for 18.5% of participants, while 4.6% received medical attention from general practitioners.11 Similar results were also reported in another Nigerian study which indicated that many individuals sought treatments first from religious healers (48%), followed by traditional healers (20%), general/private hospitals (20%) and lastly psychiatric hospitals (12%).12 Results from a study in India also showed that faith healers (39.5%) followed by non-psychiatrist allopath care providers (29%) were the most consulted sources of help. Direct contact with psychiatric treatment was reported by 13.5% of patients.6 However, these contradict the results of studies from Ghana and Ethiopia. A Ghanaian study showed that 52.3% of patients first sought care at psychiatric hospitals; another 23.3% sought care from religious or traditional healing centres as their first contact; 21.5% sought treatment from non-psychiatric general hospitals as first point of contact; and 2.9% sought help from community health nurses and other community medical practitioners as their first contact of mental healthcare.16 In one of the Ethiopian studies, over a third of the patients (35.2%) came directly to psychiatric treatment. Half of the patients sought traditional treatment from either a religious healer (30.2%) or a herbalist (20.1%) before they came for psychiatric treatment.17 In another Ethiopian study it was shown that 41% directly consulted a psychiatrist, 30.9% sought help from holy water/church, 21.5% consulted doctors and 4.5% had initial contact with a herbalist.10 The differences could be due to study area and sample size. Studies done in capital cities have larger proportions of patients using direct psychiatric treatment, which could be associated with accessibility of mental health services and higher literacy, whereas sample size could also play a significant role as studies used different sample sizes ranging from 107 to 1044.10 16

The prevalence of delayed psychiatric treatment was 176 (41.6%). It was lower than a study conducted to assess patterns of treatment-seeking behaviour for mental illnesses in Southwest Ethiopia in which the reported treatment delay was 65.1%.17 This might be due to the current study being conducted 7 years after the previous study and patients and their relatives might have relatively better awareness about mental illness and treatment options. The median DUMI from illness onset to first carer contact and first psychiatric treatment contact was 4.0 and 52 weeks, respectively. Different studies also indicated similar pathways taken to seek help in majority of PMI, as well as similar median DUMI to first psychiatric treatment (6, 11, 12, and 17). However, the median DUMI was less than a study from Pakistan14 and greater than studies conducted in Iran, Bangladesh and Ethiopia (10, 13 and 15). Probable reasons for this discrepancy could be the small sample sizes in the Pakistan (n=93) and Bangladesh (n=50) studies and the clinical diagnosis of the study population, in which the Pakistani study employed only patients with psychosis. Other possible reasons could be sociocultural differences among the study participants and different healthcare set-ups.

In this study majority (59.6%) of the participants who sought treatment for their illness were on the advice of family/relatives, whereas 28.1% were advised by former patients, 7.6% managed to come by themselves, and 74.7% came without referral letters. Closely similar results were obtained from a study in the Ethiopian capital, where majority (69.6%) of study participants attended to psychiatry on the advice of their family, 9.4% on the advice of former patients and 87.6% came without any referral.10 This is because most patients in Ethiopia get support and care from their family/relatives. Similar results were also found from other studies in which reasons for accessing mental health service were due to advice from friends and close relatives in about 64% of patients. This mostly have happened after patients’ illness has worsened.11 12 This is a crucial area for emphasis, and attention should be given to providing peer support to PMI. Service users and researchers in developed countries have strongly advocated for access to peer support for people with SMI20 and went further to implementation of the peer support network interventions.21 A systematic review conducted in low-income and middle-income countries also showed positive results from peer-delivered interventions.22 Therefore, it is vital to use these resources in interventions to hasten early psychiatric treatment for PMI.

The stigma associated with mental illness was found to affect preferences for sources of help among patients and caregivers. In this study about 24.1% of the study participants responded that the problems faced in the help-seeking process were due to family members feeling ashamed of their illness. In a study from Pakistan, almost 25% of the mentally ill patients and an equal number of family members reported that they felt shy in discussing their illness.11 A study from Nigeria indicated that 20% of PMI were influenced by stigma and discrimination with regard to seeking specialist care.12 It is very crucial to provide intervention on this aspect as the stigma encountered by an individual might be a significant barrier to help-seeking behaviour, resulting in delayed psychiatric care. This study revealed reasons for delay in help-seeking were due to distance (8.5%) and financial difficulties (9.7%), whereas 52.5% reported they did not know where to seek help, 17% due to lack of availability of mental health facilities near their area, and 5.9% did not believe on modern treatment. With regard to problems faced with help-seeking process, 64.3% were due to family members not recognising the severity of illness, 3.8% could not convince the medical staff of the severity of the illness, and 2.6% were discouraged by relatives/friends from seeking help. This study is similar with the study done in Pakistan where participants were enquired about the reasons for delay; around 29% reported financial difficulties, 16% cited difficulties in reaching treatment centres, while 40% of patients and 9% of family and friends did not feel the need for treatment. In around 23% of cases, the patients and their family did not have information regarding centres that offer treatment. Around 5% of the cases reported that healthcare providers did not take the illness seriously.11 This similarity might be due to lack of availability of mental service, lack of awareness and mental health literacy in psychiatric services, and lack of integration of mental health with mainstream health services in these study areas. In Nigeria also about 20% mentioned lack of available mental health services in the community as the reason for delays in seeking early treatment. The rest (80%) indicated that poor awareness about mental health services related to traditional beliefs regarding the causes of mental health, with health services not considered a priority for treatment of such illnesses.14 This similarity might be due to lack of availability of mental health service, lack of awareness and mental health literacy in psychiatric services, and lack of integration of mental health with mainstream health services in these countries. With regard to perceptions and beliefs about the cause of mental illness, the study participants responded that their perceived causes of mental illness were spiritual possession (124, 29.3%), evil eye (41, 9.7%), sinful act (31, 7.3%), do not know (32, 7.6%) and walks around garbage dumps (38, 9%). In Southwest Ethiopia, the most common explanations given for the cause of mental illness were spiritual possession (198, 51.6%) and evil eye (61, 15.9%), whereas 73 (19.0%) respondents said they did not know the cause of mental illnesses.8 The study done in Nigeria showed 20% believed that mental health issues were caused by charms from an enemy or supernatural powers. This similarity might be due to lack of awareness on the cause of mental illness in these study areas.

Study participants who came after seeking religious treatment were 3.8 times more likely to delay psychiatric treatment than those who came directly to psychiatric treatment. This is because consulting healers first might lead to prolonged pathway to psychiatric care and can be an obstacle to early detection, identification and intervention.6 15 18 Participants who were single and divorced were 2.5 and 3.5 times more likely to delay compared with those who were married. However, it is reported that participants who chose to use psychiatric services as the first point of care were more likely to be unmarried. This inconsistency might be due to lack of social support. Study participants who were jobless were 3.4 times more likely to delay treatment compared with employed participants. In this study the 31–40 years age group had significant statistical association with delayed treatment-seeking behaviour compared with the 18–30 years age group. In studies conducted at Amanuel Mental Specialized Hospital in Ethiopia, unemployment was found to be associated with delayed treatment-seeking behaviour, but there were no significant associations between duration of delay on pathway to care and age group and marital status.4 This might be due to lack of economic support in getting modern treatment that necessitates long distance travel due to inaccessibility. With regard to patient diagnosis and treatment-seeking behaviours, patients with a diagnosis of other psychotic disorders sought psychiatric treatment 80% earlier than patients with bipolar disorder. The probable reason could be the clinical presentation of the illness, in which patients of this category are affected by more psychotic phenomena, resulting in a relatively overt behavioural disturbance than patients with bipolar disorder.

Strengths and limitations of the study

This is a study on pathway to care that portrays the paths taken by patients with mental illnesses to arrive at a psychiatric care facility. It indicates the various intermediate sources of help that patients used before a visit for psychiatric care. Regardless of patients’ perceived importance, the intermediate sources of help play a role in the duration of use of psychiatric treatment, and the current study identified sources of help that contributed to delayed psychiatric treatment. Additionally, the study also assessed patient-related factors, illness perception and stigma among others that affect delayed psychiatric care. However, the study did not assess the use of other sources of help post psychiatric care treatment that might have an impact on treatment adherence. Recall bias on the first onset of illness and/or the duration of illness could be a major limitation as majority might know the exact time and used only approximations. The use of interviewer-administered questionnaire might have contributed to social desirability bias and selection of participants from a single facility, which were other limitations of this study.

Conclusions

The results of the study showed a significant delay in seeking modern psychiatric treatment. Religious healers were the first source of help for mental illness. Most of the respondents described that mental illnesses were caused by supernatural causes. First contact with religious sources of help, unmarried status, jobless/unemployed status, being in the 31–40 years old age group and patient diagnosis of other psychotic disorders were significantly associated with delayed psychiatric treatment. Therefore, it is vital to provide interventions for factors that played a role in delayed psychiatric treatment.

Acknowledgments

We would like to acknowledge Jimma University for the financial support to facilitate the study. We are very grateful to the data collectors and participants for their precious input in the study process. We would like to thank Professor Markos Tesfaye for his contribution to study design and for his invaluable feedback from the commencement of the study to the reporting of study results.

References

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Footnotes

  • Contributors ST designed the study and was involved in the data collection, analysis and write-up. HK and HH were involved in the design and data analysis and drafted the manuscript. MA participated in the design of the study and analysis of data and critically reviewed the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

  • Funding The authors have not declared a specific grant for this research from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Patient consent for publication Not required.

  • Ethics approval Ethical clearance was obtained from the College of Medicine and Health Science’s Institutional Research Review Board (IRB) of Jimma University. Written informed consent was obtained from study participants, confirming willingness to participate after explaining the objective of the study. The information provided by each respondent was kept confidential.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

  • Data availability statement Data are available upon reasonable request to the corresponding author (email: habtaishk@gmail.com).