%0 Journal Article %T Lessons from case studies of integrating mental health into primary health care in South Africa and Uganda %A Inge Petersen %A Joshua Ssebunnya %A Arvin Bhana %A Kim Baillie %A MhaPP Research Programme Consortium %J International Journal of Mental Health Systems %D 2011 %I BioMed Central %R 10.1186/1752-4458-5-8 %X A qualitative post-intervention process evaluation using focus group and individual interviews with key stakeholders was undertaken in both sites. The emergent data was analyzed using framework analysis.Sensitization of district management authorities and the establishment of community collaborative multi-sectoral forums assisted in improving political will to strengthen mental health services in both countries. Task shifting using community health workers emerged as a promising strategy for improving access to services and help seeking behaviour in both countries. However, in Uganda, limited application of task shifting to identification and referral, as well as limited availability of psychotropic medication and specialist mental health personnel, resulted in a referral bottleneck. To varying degrees, community-based self-help groups showed potential for empowering service users and carers to become more self sufficient and less dependent on overstretched healthcare systems. They also showed potential for promoting social inclusion and addressing stigma, discrimination and human rights abuses of people with mental disorders in both country sites.A common implementation framework incorporating a community collaborative multi-sectoral, task shifting and self-help approach to integrating mental health into primary healthcare holds promise for closing the treatment gap for mental disorders in LMICs at district level. However, a minimum number of mental health specialists are still required to provide supervision of non-specialists as well as specialized referral treatment services.There is an increasing burden of mental disorders in low to middle income countries (LMICs), which are often co-morbid with physical diseases [1]. In the context of a scarcity of mental health specialists [2], decentralization and integrated primary mental healthcare, embracing a task shifting approach, has been mooted as a mechanism to address the treatment gap for mental disorders in these %U http://www.ijmhs.com/content/5/1/8