World Mental Health Day: Awareness vs Medical facilities

World Mental Health Day marked on the 10th of October, 2022 in Nigeria following poor attention and awareness by leaders in the public and private sectors. By the popular adage that a good and sound health leads to wealth creation. All tiers of government in Nigeria are still treating mental health as cases deserving no special priority. Hence, in Nigeria, psychiatrists are few and medical facilities across the country scarce, underfunded and poorly maintained. Hence, few psychiatrists available are poorly remunerated, which in turn leads to mass Exodus for greener pastures outside the country. The consequence has resulted in mental health patients in large numbers on the streets nationwide and creation of opportunity for extortion by fake doctors and herbalists.

The poor attention and awareness has also worsened enlightenment needed for a parent and guardian of a patient with poor mental health that there is hope for cure if treated adequately by a qualified mental health specialist.

As things stand, there are fewer than two mental health workers for every 100,000 people, the majority of whom are psychiatric nurses and mental health nursing aids.

World Mental Health Day is supposed to serve the purpose of providing an opportunity to draw attention to Nigeria and Africa’s large and growing burden of mental health conditions, with children and adolescents worst impacted.

Hence, this year’s theme, “Make Mental Health and Wellbeing for All a Global Priority,” serves as a reminder that, after nearly three years, the social isolation, fear of disease and death, and strained socio-economic circumstances associated with the COVID-19 pandemic have contributed to an estimated 25% global rise in depression and anxiety.

Across the African Region, more than 116 million  people are estimated to be living with mental health conditions pre-pandemic. Suicide rates remain particularly concerning, as are the exponential rates of alcohol use and abuse among adolescents as young as 13 years of age.

We need to urgently strengthen regulatory systems to close the gaps that allow such young people to easily access alcohol, contributing to heavy episodic drinking rates as high as 80% among teens from 15 to 19. The situation poses a serious threat to their education, while setting the stage for a lifetime of alcohol abuse, and the associated risks of noncommunicable and other related diseases.

Inadequate financing for mental health continues to be the biggest limitation, negatively impacting efforts to expand Africa’s mental health workforce.

With these scarce resources concentrated at large psychiatric institutions in urban areas, people at community and primary care levels are left critically underserved. For example, while two-thirds of Member States report having guidelines to integrate mental health into primary health care, fewer than 11% are providing pharmacological and/or psychological interventions at this level.

It is however heartening that up to 82% of our Member States are receiving training on how to manage mental health conditions at primary care level, with up to 74% reporting that specialists involved in providing appropriate training and supervision to primary health care professionals.

African governments have also made some progress on mental health spending, which has risen to 46 US cents per person. But that is still well below the recommended US$2 per person, with mental health not featuring in national health insurance schemes.

To address the challenge, it is crucial that Member States follow through on the implementation of commitments they made at the Regional Committee in August 2022, when they endorsed the Framework to Implement the Comprehensive Global Action Plan 2013 to 2023 in the WHO African Region. This key document highlights the severe shortage of mental health services on the continent, and makes recommendations for key actions by Member States.

Among the developments of which Member States can be proud is the launch of Special Initiative for Mental Health frameworks by Ghana and Zimbabwe. Supported by WHO training, the aim is to strengthen relevant services at lower levels of care.

WHO in the African Region is also supporting task-sharing and integration of mental health into multisectoral programmes in Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Ghana, Niger, Nigeria and Mali. Examples include joint tuberculosis and mental health programming in Ghana and Kenya, and joint Neglected Tropical Diseases and mental health efforts in Nigeria.

Additionally, Kenya, Uganda and Zimbabwe have been supported to complete mental health investment cases. These provide a valuable base from which to make the case for increased investment in this neglected aspect of our health systems.

To advance continental efforts towards equitable access to mental, neurological and substance abuse care, Member States are to prioritise the implementation of the Framework to Implement the Comprehensive Mental Health Action Plan in the WHO African Region. This requires, among other things, increasing government expenditure on relevant services, and mobilising resources from partners.

Nigeria and other countries especially need to strengthen the mental health and psychosocial response in humanitarian emergencies, including COVID-19 and Ebola, which have a significant negative impact on school-age children and our health care workers. Mental health and psychosocial support are integral to any successful response.

On World Mental Health Day which has come and gone, let us all commit to work together to deepen the value we afford to mental health, to reshape the environments that negatively impact mental health, and to strengthen the care systems to make mental health care accessible to all  Nigerians for other countries in Africa to emulate.

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