World Mental Health Day Forum by the Global Mental Health Advocacy Working Group: A Review

photo (2)Guest blogger: Socorro Lopez

Mental illness has proven to be one of society’s greatest invisible burdens, accounting for 4 of the 10 leading causes of disability worldwide. The Global Mental Health Advocacy Working Group recently honored World Mental Health Day by hosting a forum to discuss mental health needs amongst people in humanitarian crises, an extremely vulnerable group in terms of developing and dealing with mental illness.

The event’s panelists included Kelly Clements, the U.S. Department of State’s Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration, Dr. Inka Weissbecker, the Global Mental Health Psychosocial Advisor for the International Medical Corp (IMC), and Dr. James Griffith, the Chairman in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences.

The discussion touched on three important themes in relation to mental health in emergency settings: the vulnerability of people suffering from mental illness, the critical gap in mental health services, and the detrimental social isolation that the mentally ill are frequently subjected to.

While approximately 10% of a population is traditionally at risk of developing a mental disorder under normal circumstances, this rate has the potential to double during a humanitarian crisis, meaning more people must deal with these disabilities in highly unstable environments. Furthermore, mentally ill individuals are more susceptible to stigma, discrimination, violence, abuse, and human rights violations in these circumstances.
Although there is a vast need for mental health services in emergency settings, there is a significant lack of access to quality care. The number of health professionals who can implement psychosocial interventions that effectively address mental illness is minimal during crises.

“There is a treatment gap between the people who need care and those who receive it,” said Dr. Weissbecker, who has monitored IMC’s mental health and psychosocial programs in countries such as South Sudan, Ethiopia, Sierra Leone, Syria, and Afghanistan.

A lack of healthcare professionals and mental health services often means that the burden of care for a mentally ill individual is placed on their families. Unfortunately, mental disorders are still fundamentally misunderstood around the world, causing many communities to be ill equipped to properly care for a portion of their citizens. In the absence of related health services, families resort to harmful traditional health practices that stem from local beliefs. These practices regularly call for extreme measures, such as chaining the mentally ill to trees or institutionalizing them in inept facilities, to isolate people dealing with mental disorders from the rest of the community.

By acting as natural buffers to instability and prejudice, Dr. James Griffith discussed the vital role that local caregivers, families and communities can play in treating mental illness. In accordance with this line of thought, IMC programs have integrated community involvement into their programs by hosting educational seminars that utilize local volunteers to raise awareness and social consideration for mental illness.

The panelists also addressed how this knowledge could be applied to two topics that have been making recent headlines: Ebola and the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). In terms of treating mental illness within extremist groups such as ISIS, the panelists were quick to correct the misconception that violence can commonly be associated with mental illness, a stereotype creating stigma and driving discrimination. According to the American Psychiatric Association, “the vast majority of people who are violent do not suffer from mental illness.”

In relation to Ebola, preventing and treating mental illness proved to be more applicable. In order to diminish emotional and psychological trauma, Weissbecker discussed the need to provide more education to people who contract the disease and their families, in order to decrease debilitating fear and prevent transmission. Reintegration services should also be offered to survivors who may be treated differently once they return to their communities. Finally, it is important to find ways to safely bury the dead, while ensuring that burials are still culturally significant.

Addressing mental health in emergencies is undoubtedly a multifaceted and complicated health challenge. Nevertheless, increased rates of mental disorders and the potential social ramifications of having such illnesses illustrate that mental illness in humanitarian crises is an urgent issue for global health. Reducing the current treatment gap and increasing communities’ understanding of mental disorders are two of the most promising tactics to improve the health status of the mentally ill in these situations. In doing so, devastating disability and demoralizing hardship can be prevented in populations that have already experienced immeasurable adversity in their lives.


Socorro Lopez is an undergraduate at the George Washington University, majoring in environmental studies and minoring in public health and geographic information systems. Her interests include environmental, reproductive, and global health. Prior to working at the American Public Health Association (APHA) as a Global Health Intern, she was part of the Collegiate Leaders in Environmental Health (CLEH) program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Socorro is originally from Roatan, Honduras and recently returned from Tanzania, where she was studying coastal ecology and doing research on water quality.

WHO Videos: Depression and World Mental Health Day

This post was written by Sarah M. Simpson.

Do you or someone you know have a big black dog following them? The World Health Organization recently collaborated with illustrator Matthew Johnstone, author of “I Had a Black Dog”, to mark the 20th anniversary of World Mental Health Day as designated by the World Federation for Mental Health (WFMH). Initiated in 1992, World Mental Health Day signifies a day to encourage public discussion of mental disorders and to bring awareness to investments in mental disorder prevention, promotion and treatment services. This year’s theme is “Depression: A Global Health Crisis”. In the book “I Had a Black Dog”, Johnstone chronicles his struggle with depression through narrative and illustrations. Interestingly, the “black dog” reference was popularized by Winston Churchill, a long-time sufferer of depression and mental illness. Using Johnstone’s illustrations, WHO has come up with the series of videos, featured below that highlight symptoms of this illness along with ways to prevent and treat it.

Depression is one of the world’s most widespread illnesses, often co-existing with other serious illnesses. It also doesn’t discriminate and anyone from men to women, adults to children, the rich to the poor can be affected. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), depression is a common mental disorder with more than 350 million people suffering from this “hidden burden” world-wide.

As these videos show, depression is different from one’s usual mood fluctuations. Depression not only makes you feel sadness for long periods of time, but it also interferes with your ability to function and perform everyday activities at work, school or home. Effective treatments include psychosocial treatment and medication. The active involvement of depressed people and those who are close to them in addressing depression is key. The first step in treating this illness is to recognize the depression and seek support. The earlier the treatment begins, the more effective it is in treating this illness that affects so many people.

Global Health News Last Week

October 10 was World Mental Health Day.
October 15 was Global Handwashing Day.

POLITICS AND POLICY

  • The U.S. Army has proposed major cuts to its work on HIV, especially in the vaccine field. Leaders of the Infectious Diseases Society of America and other biomedical research organizations oppose the cuts.
  • The WHO plans to recommend tighter nutritional standards in food aid for young children, a move activists say is necessary to improve donations from countries such as the United States.
  • The US Department of Defense is funding platforms that will completely rethink how malaria drugs are developed.
  • Former Bush Administration official Andrew Natsios argues the case for foreign aid: “Singling out foreign aid for disproportionate cuts—which is exactly what has happened—is a serious mistake the United States as a world leader will pay for in the future.”
  • A survey of 507 Americans at the end of September sought to capture what, exactly, Americans know about the foreign aid budget. Particpiants were asked four questions about their impressions of foreign aid and opinions on why it is important to American interests.  Go here to read the full fact sheet that also includes more details about the study’s methods and see below to review the results in more detail.
  • The World Health Organization’s chief on Monday urged governments to unite against “big tobacco”, as she accused the industry of dirty tricks, bullying and immorality in its quest to keep people smoking.

PROGRAMS

  • Berk Ozler examines some recent reports about the challenges surrounding male circumcision. In the World Bank Development Impact blog, he offers two suggestions for how to improve the programs.
  • A partnership between Pampers and UNICEF to deliver neonatal tetanus vaccines is on track to eliminate the disease by 2015.
  • A $258 million initiative sponsored by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation aimed at preventing AIDS in India appears to have paid off overall, researchers say, resulting in more than 100,000 fewer new HIV infections over five years. Many aren’t quite ready to judge this project, Avahan, a success, however. The project failed in three of the six Indian states where it was tested.
  • Are the Millennium Villages an intervention that can reach scale? Supporters say yes and detractors are skeptical. Madeline Bunting covers the debate in the Guardian Development.
  • A report on the MGDS by United Nations Development Program, the UN Economic Commission for Africa, the African Development Bank and the African Union Commission says that social protection programs can have a wide positive impact.

RESEARCH

DISEASES AND DISASTERS