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Mapping mental health care services for children and youth population in Colombia’s Pacific: potential for boundary spanning between community and formal services

  • Open Access
  • 01-12-2024
  • Research
Published in:

Abstract

Background

Conflict and violence can impact on the mental health of children and young people, who are in a crucial stage of their personal growth. Not much is known about the provision of mental health care to young people in conflict-affected areas. Community-based care can be essential, as state-led services are often scarce in conflict contexts, like Colombia’s Pacific region where this research was conducted. According to the WHO, such care is ideally provided in the form of a network of interconnected services, offered by different actors beyond the formal health sector. This article describes the relationship between the formal and community mental health systems in Colombia’s Pacific region, and identifies ways of improving their interaction.

Methods

Qualitative data were collected through 98 semi-structured interviews with community organisations, schools, international organisations and state institutions. These interviews aimed to identify the strategies used to promote young people’s mental health and the interactions between the different providers. Boundary spanning theory was used to analyse how different actors and forms of mental health care provision could coordinate better.

Results

Community organisations and schools use a wide array of strategies to attend to the mental health of children and young people, often of a collective and psychosocial nature. State institutions offer more clinically focused strategies, which are however limited in terms of accessibility and continuity. International organisations aim to strengthen state capacity, but often struggle due to high staff turnover. Although mental health care pathways exist, their effectiveness is limited due to ineffective coordination between actors.

Conclusions

To make sure that the variety of strategies to improve young people’s mental health effectively reach their beneficiaries, better coordination is needed between the different actors. Mental health care pathways should therefore integrate community organisations, while community connectors can help to manage the coordination between different actors and forms of clinical and psychosocial support.
Title
Mapping mental health care services for children and youth population in Colombia’s Pacific: potential for boundary spanning between community and formal services
Authors
Sanne Weber
Francy Carranza
Juan Roberto Rengifo
Camilo Romero
Sergio Arrieta
Karina Martínez
Mónica Pinilla-Roncancio
Sarah-Jane Fenton
Germán Casas
Paul Jackson
Juan Pablo Aranguren
Publication date
01-12-2024
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
International Journal of Mental Health Systems / Issue 1/2024
Electronic ISSN: 1752-4458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13033-024-00626-w
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