African Adolescent Health

Advancing Scholarship Across the Continent

Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024)

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Mandatory Mental Health First Aid Training for Secondary School Teachers in Harare: A Working Paper on Student Referral Outcomes

Tendai Chigudu, Department of Surgery, Midlands State University Farai Moyo, Midlands State University
Published: October 10, 2024

Abstract

This study addresses a current research gap in Medicine concerning The impact of a mandatory mental health first aid training for secondary school teachers on student referral rates in Harare, Zimbabwe in Zimbabwe. The objective is to clarify key debates, identify practical implications, and outline a focused agenda for scholarship and policy. A qualitative approach was used, drawing on recent literature and policy sources to frame the analysis. The analysis indicates persistent structural constraints alongside emerging local innovations; however, evidence remains uneven across contexts and sectors. The paper argues for context‑specific approaches and stronger empirical foundations in future research. Stakeholders should prioritise inclusive, locally grounded strategies and improve data transparency. The impact of a mandatory mental health first aid training for secondary school teachers on student referral rates in Harare, Zimbabwe, Zimbabwe, Africa, Medicine, working paper This structured abstract provides a standardised summary to support rapid screening, indexing, and assessment of scholarly contribution.

How to Cite

Tendai Chigudu, Farai Moyo (2024). Mandatory Mental Health First Aid Training for Secondary School Teachers in Harare: A Working Paper on Student Referral Outcomes. African Adolescent Health, Vol. 1 No. 1 (2024), 4-17.

Keywords

Mental health first aidadolescent mental healthteacher trainingreferral pathwaysSub-Saharan Africaimplementation scienceschool-based intervention

References