Understanding the community management of long-term physical and mental health conditions in Bolivia, Colombia and Guatemala: a situational analysis
Juan Camilo Marin-Urrego, Adriana Buitrago-Lopez, Carlos Gomez-Restrepo, Edgar Lopez Alvarez, Ronald Fernando Tapia Pijuan, Lucia Elena Alvarado-Arnez, Estela Tango-Camargo, Yazmin Cadena-Camargo, David Niño-Torres, Nelcy Rodriguez-Malagon, Isabela Osorio Jaramillo

TL;DR
This study explores community-based healthcare for long-term physical and mental health conditions in Bolivia, Colombia, and Guatemala.
Contribution
It provides a situational analysis of community-based care resources, barriers, and stakeholder perspectives in three Latin American countries.
Findings
Health centres often lack sufficient staff and resources for community-based care.
Mental health stigma and logistical challenges like travel distance hinder implementation.
Most centres have general practitioners but limited specialists in cardiovascular or mental health.
Abstract
Community-based healthcare approaches can improve outcomes and reduce costs for long-term physical and mental health conditions. To design, evaluate and implement such interventions, it is essential to explore the existing resources of community and healthcare institutions, understand stakeholder perspectives and identify potential barriers and facilitators to community-based care for non-communicable diseases. Our aim was to conduct a situation analysis to better understand and contextualise community-based care for long-term physical and mental health conditions in Bolivia, Colombia and Guatemala. A multimethod approach was used, incorporating three data sources: (1) sociodemographic and morbidity indicators from selected regions and healthcare centres; (1) quantitative surveys completed by health centre management staff and (2) semistructured interviews with healthcare workers,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMental Health Treatment and Access · Public Health and Social Inequalities · Healthcare Systems and Reforms
