University of Cape Town
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Qualitative Dataset for Brain Intervention

dataset
posted on 2025-09-29, 08:57 authored by Nawal MohamadNawal Mohamad, Kevin G. F. Thomas, Rhiannon ChanguionRhiannon Changuion, Reuben N Robbins, Elizabeth W. Twamley, David E Vance, Ntombizamantungwa Nyembezi, Zanele Nhlabatsi-Khumalo, Hetta GouseHetta Gouse
<p dir="ltr">In this qualitative study, we aimed to describe how South African PLWH perceived and experienced the local adaptations of two US-designed CRT programs. We recruited 34 PLWH (27 women; age 30–50 years) from community healthcare clinics and a non-governmental organization. All had Xhosa as their home language, resided in low-income communities, and experienced at least mild NCI. Over a 5-week intervention period, participants completed ten 2-hour Cognitive Symptom Management and Rehabilitation Therapy (CogSMART-SA) group sessions and 20 self-guided 30-min BrainHQ<sup>©</sup> sessions. Post-intervention, we hosted nine focus group discussions (3–5 participants each). We applied thematic analyses to the textual contents of those discussions, using decolonial community psychology frameworks (i.e., focusing on community needs and alternative approaches to researching historically marginalized groups, as well as on collaboration and community engagement through exchanges of culturally and socially relevant ideas).</p>

Funding

NIH Mental Health grant number 1R34MH126702-01A1

History

Department/Unit

Department of Psychology; Department of Psychiatry

United Nations Sustainable Development Goals

  • SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being
  • SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities