Addressing the Syndemic Relationship between Lymphatic Filariasis and Mental Distress in Malawi: The Potential of Enhanced Self-Care
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. What Are Syndemics?
1.2. Lymphatic Filariasis, Acute Attacks, Disability, and Mental Distress
1.3. WHO 2030 Targets and Disease Management, Disability, and Inclusion (DMDI) Approaches
1.4. The Context of Malawi and the National LF Programme
1.5. Enhanced Self-Care Study
1.6. Study Contribution and Rationale
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Setting and Design
2.2. Participants, Sampling Procedure, and Data Collection
2.2.1. Life Histories
2.2.2. Key Informant Interviews
2.3. Data Analysis
2.4. Ethical Statement
3. Results
3.1. (A) How Do Co-Occurring Conditions Interact?
3.1.1. How Do LF and Mental Distress Interact?
3.1.2. Discovering Lymphoedema and Healthcare Availability
“When I discovered that I have got this problem, my heart sometimes stresses out … I could think of just dying because I was feeling like I am a failure”.(Female, 49, Participant 5)
3.1.3. Coping, Social Systems, and Religious Support
“When my husband left me … I just told God, [and] everything came back to normal. And some people also helped me praying over it, so yes, I am okay”.(Female, 40, Participant 20)
“… I thought of killing myself. Then I had to comfort myself that I should [not] do that because the bible tells us that committing suicide is a sin and I just accepted to live and struggle like that”.(Male, 43, Participant 12)
3.2. (B) How Are Conditions Experienced?
3.2.1. Somatic Experience and Acute Attacks
“I usually think about … [suicide] because of the pain … I feel it is better to die than just to suffer”.(Female, 36, Participant 9)
3.2.2. Daily Lives and the Impact of Acute Attacks on Household
“The depression is there since I have mentioned that I need to search for food so if I do not work, I do not have food. So, food can be unavailable for me to eat and sometimes I am depressed since I do not have any other ways for me to find food”.(Male, 53, Participant 21)
“After being diagnosed … I am not able to do most of the chores that I used to do in the past … I am a failure because for … [someone] who does not have this condition … is able to work properly … while for me I have a limitation”.(Male, 51, Participant 2)
“…when I got better [following acute attack], my friends were already at another level with the farming and that meant that I will not have enough food that year. So, because of that, I could think of just dying because I was feeling like I am a failure”.(Female, 49, Participant 5)
3.2.3. Social Roles
“If I am to find a partner, she will mock me saying you have a disability … Women stigmatise us because of this and they say the way you are looking with your legs; can we be married and move together? So, it is difficult for me to ask a woman out”.(Male, 53, Participant 21)
“Even when my husband was marrying me, people were telling my husband that if you are getting that girl with big legs, you will have troubles with her but he was telling them that only God knows everything. He was interested in me and not in my legs. He wanted marriage and not the legs”.(Female, 65, Participant 14)
“Ah … [the condition did not affect my marriage] with the current wife but the first wife whom we separated, we were having quarrels … she would tell me … do you think that after leaving me you will get another wife with your condition? … I decide to just leave her”.(Male, 39, Participant 19)
3.2.4. Meaning of Disease
External (Enacted) Stigma
“friends that I used to chat with … had … thoughts that I should not … [go] near them … they could chase me away [and] say get out, you have got lymphoedema. [That] caused me stress … people … [would] say, hey you! Do not chat with this person, he is supposed to be left alone”.(Male, 39, Participant 19)
“[People] were pointing fingers at me to say[ing] … she has lymphoedema. So, as a woman, I started feeling shy … of course, there are some people who are just new in the community and they wonder why I have these big legs”.(Female, 39, Participant 8)
“No, I was living with them freely [following LF diagnosis] and there was no problem. I was able to chat with them as well. I had my peace of mind even up to now”.(Female, 60, Participant 14)
“They were laughing at me … They were telling me that it was the beginning of elephantiasis, and I will not get better, that was the beginning of a disability … [and] the leg will become bigger”.(Male, 47, Participant 4)
“When I was okay, when I was strong enough, [I] was selling cattle and after I was diagnosed with this condition, people started stigmatising me”.(Male, 43, Participant 12)
“Some use the supernatural powers when they want to farm … people advised me to stop farming on that field … my penis [started] to swell such that I was struggling with life… [I was advised] to stop using the fields or … [it] might kill me … Later on … my legs started swelling … it started as if I was bewitched only that the legs were not shrinking even if I went to the hospital”.(Male, 47, Participant 4)
Internalised Stigma and Participation
“… my marriage ended because I am sick…to say the way this person is sick, how useful can he be?”(Male, 53, Participant 21)
“I feel shy sometimes … I am a chief in this village and I have a name but they nicknamed me chief with a big foot, such that when you are to move around you will hear that name amongst people from this area”.(Male, 51, Participant 2)
3.3. Displacement, Poverty, Disease, and Health Inequities
“that missing person is my brother … he was the one who was taking care of me. … we found him … [dead] … so, from that day, I failed to sleep because … now, I am the only … [family member] remaining”.(Female, 38, Participant 1)
“I do [think about dying] because living with this condition, even … [my] guardian gets tired of taking care of me and sometimes if she gets tired, she forgets to provide some other things”.(Female, 62, Participant 16)
3.4. (C) How Do Health and Social Systems Contribute to Responses in LF and Mental Health Services?
3.4.1. Health Stress, Social, and Structural Barriers
“I have been coming [to the hospital] … several times and the doctor said I can read it from your form”.(Female, 65, Participant 14)
“After I came back from the hospital and when I noticed that I was not feeling better, I started visiting the traditional healers”.(Female, 40, Participant 20)
“I just accepted that my leg was swollen because all of my parents also died with this same condition … they were not seeking medical care from the hospital as we are doing it right now”.(Female, 65, Participant 14)
“I still visit the hospital [as well as traditional healers] and at times I buy medicine from private clinics … I have tried going to pastors for prayers and for blessed water … When I have money, I go and buy the medication and [my leg] … usually shrinks”.(Female, 40, Participant 20)
3.4.2. Financial Burden of Healthcare-Seeking, Lymphoedema Management, and Misdiagnosis
“When I went to the district hospital … I told my brother that I was supposed to be given 36 injections of which he accepted, and he was giving me transport money to and from the hospital”.(Male, 43, Participant 12)
“As a young man … I noticed that my leg has started swelling … I went to the district hospital, … [and] I was prescribed 18 injections …. [I was] failing to withstand the budget of staying at the hospital, it was difficult. I needed food and other things … I continued getting the injection[s] but because I did not have money, I failed to finish all the prescribed injections”.(Male, 39, Participant 19)
3.4.3. Resource and Capacity Limitations
“I was feeling tingling, and pain and I went to the hospital because I was failing to sit on the bicycle since my private part was also swollen … when I went [to the hospital] I was told that I need to be operated. So, they gave me a date and when I went back on that particular date, they told me to go there on another date. I went again, and when I arrived there, after they examined me, they told me that I need to try taking some medication before the operation [and could not have surgery that day]”.(Male, 70, Participant 6)
3.5. Mental Health Service Provision in Malawi
“There’s no … training for mental health for community health workers and even for the patients I think we overlook this this side of mental health in Malawi … so for the patients with elephantiasis I think we have been neglected in terms of psychosocial support or mental health because we don’t train them or we don’t even help them in any way mentally … … but most of the time when they come with lymphoedema we only look at the clinical part and clinical management”.(Programme Staff Member)
3.6. ESC Addressing Gaps in LF Service Provision
“I started practising [the self-care] … things have improved. Right now, I am able to run which was difficult for me in the past, the skin peeling stopped … when I started massaging it … and the exercises … the pain is gone … I was unable even to ride a bicycle … so when [my family] saw me moving about, they were happy”.(Male 47, Participant 4)
3.7. The Potential for ESC to Disrupt the Syndemic Relationship between Mental Health and LF
3.7.1. Somatic Experience and Acute Attacks
“since from that time, that you taught us the home-based care, I have not been sick [acute attacks] … I am able to work as you can see”.(Male, 51, Participant 2)
3.7.2. Daily Activities
“Sometimes because of being so overwhelmed with work, I miss out some days without cleaning it”.(Male, 51, Participant 2)
“For me to be able to support my children in terms of education … pay[ing] school fees … buying them school uniforms and other necessities … when I fall sick, I am not able to provide all those things to my children … [due to my condition] my life is not the same again”.(Female, 53, Participant 3)
3.7.3. Meaning of Disease-Stigma
“I was thinking that maybe I inherited [lymphoedema] from my parents …. it has been a while since I developed this condition even though I am on treatment but things are not going on okay … you might be thinking that you are bewitched and that might just cause enmity between you while the cause is not that”.(Male, 70, Participant 6)
3.8. Sustainability of the ESC
“You have found me walking around, and then you have received a report that someone with lymphoedema is sick, how would you help him or her after hearing that she or he is sick? Would you send medicine to his or her house or you say she or he will get the drugs when she gets better and return to the hospital?”(Female, 62, Participant 16)
“I was thinking that maybe they will no longer supply us again since we were told that they were leaving and maybe they have stopped supplying us with the supplies. So, if they have stopped supplying us, how would they know if our conditions are improving or not?”(Female, 49, Participant 5)
4. Discussion
Recommendations | |
---|---|
Early Case Detection |
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Hydrocoele Surgeries |
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Lymphoedema Management (Self-care) |
|
Psychosocial Support |
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Social Support |
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Caregiver Support |
|
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mental Distress | Mental Wellbeing Improvement | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Female | Male | Female | Male | |
Same or higher acute attacks | 2 | 1 | 2 | 2 |
Reduced acute attacks | 3 | 4 | 4 | 2 |
+1 Male Guardian, trained in the enhanced self-care but was not enrolled onto previous enhanced self-care study. |
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Barrett, C.; Chiphwanya, J.; Matipula, D.E.; Douglass, J.; Kelly-Hope, L.A.; Dean, L. Addressing the Syndemic Relationship between Lymphatic Filariasis and Mental Distress in Malawi: The Potential of Enhanced Self-Care. Trop. Med. Infect. Dis. 2024, 9, 172. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9080172
Barrett C, Chiphwanya J, Matipula DE, Douglass J, Kelly-Hope LA, Dean L. Addressing the Syndemic Relationship between Lymphatic Filariasis and Mental Distress in Malawi: The Potential of Enhanced Self-Care. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease. 2024; 9(8):172. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9080172
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarrett, Carrie, John Chiphwanya, Dorothy E. Matipula, Janet Douglass, Louise A. Kelly-Hope, and Laura Dean. 2024. "Addressing the Syndemic Relationship between Lymphatic Filariasis and Mental Distress in Malawi: The Potential of Enhanced Self-Care" Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease 9, no. 8: 172. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9080172
APA StyleBarrett, C., Chiphwanya, J., Matipula, D. E., Douglass, J., Kelly-Hope, L. A., & Dean, L. (2024). Addressing the Syndemic Relationship between Lymphatic Filariasis and Mental Distress in Malawi: The Potential of Enhanced Self-Care. Tropical Medicine and Infectious Disease, 9(8), 172. https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed9080172