Tag: Mental health

  • ‘Declare emergency on mental health’

    Founder of Mental Health Foundation, Mr Emmanuel Owoyemi has urged the Presidency to declare a state of emergency on Mental health  to reduce the disorder’s burden.

    Owoyemi said the  insurgency in the Northeast has increased the burden of mental disorders.

    He said  the  rate of mental illnesses was on the rise and so called for concern.

    “I think the way forward starts from us; we might not be able to rely on government that they would do the right thing.

    “We need to make them do the right thing, so, it starts from us putting pressure on government asking for what we want and also pleading with our policy makers to do what is right concerning the mental health of Nigerians.

    “I said recently that the same way we have state of emergency right now in some parts of Nigeria, the government of Nigeria, the Presidency need to call for a State of Emergency in the mental health of Nigerians.

    “At that point it would have very strong attention because, it’s really serious. In different parts of the North people do not sleep again, everybody is afraid; so, there is serious trauma all over the country.

    “So, putting enough political will into it and releasing quick intervention fund to take care of people who are already going through traumatic experiences of the after effect of this insurgency”.

  • Mental health crisis

    Mental health crisis

    • Rising cases are symptomatic of the many challenges that Nigerians are grappling with 

    The revelation that over 5,000 cases of mental health disorders were recorded in Plateau State in the last one year is certainly indicative of an even more alarming manifestation of the problem nationwide. Delivering a paper at an event in commemoration of the Y2014 World Mental Health Day, Dr Taiwo Obindu, Head of the Psychiatric Department, Jos University Teaching Hospital (JUTH), Jos, disclosed the magnitude of the mental health crisis in the state while lamenting the dearth of personnel and facilities to effectively meet the challenge.

    This sensitisation of Nigerians to the scale of mental health cases in the country is a positive function of the setting aside of October 10 every year to commemorate the World Mental Health Day, which offers an opportunity for stakeholders across the globe, particularly mental health professionals, to advocate for better mental health and address the stigma associated with the illness due to limited public awareness.

    One of the most prevalent mental health conditions, schizophrenia, was the focus of this year’s commemoration of the day. Noting that schizophrenia is a common occurrence among mental health patients in Plateau State, Dr Obindo described the disease as “a condition in psychiatry where the individual has problems with his thinking the way he interacts with people and …the way the person thinks and the beliefs he has is awkward”. Schizophrenics tend to hear imaginary voices and see images that are non-existent to others. The widespread occurrence of such behavioural disorders in Plateau State can be understood within the context of the pervasive and persistent violence that has  plagued the state since 2001, resulting in the loss of thousands of lives and large-scale dislocation of whole communities.

    Incessant destructive clashes between settlers and indigenes in the state are further compounded by ethnic, religious and politically motivated violence. A situation of psychological siege is, therefore created in which destabilised individuals and groups are vulnerable to mental disturbance. But then this scenario is not limited to Plateau State as every part of the country is confronted with one spectre of violence or the other. Apart from the Boko Haram terrorism that has turned the North-East into a war zone, armed robberies, kidnappings, assassinations, ritual killings, rape, thuggery and bloody communal conflicts are taking a heavy toll on lives, property and the psychological wellbeing of millions of Nigerians across the country.

    It is thus not surprising that during the commemoration of last year’s World Mental Health Day, the founder of the Mental Health Foundation, Emmanuel Owoyemi, disclosed that about 64 million Nigerians suffer from mental illness. This is understandable since experts confirm that it is possible for schizophrenics, for instance, to function well and appear normal despite the debility. This high incidence of mental ill health has been attributed to increased poverty, insecurity and hopelessness leading to greater frequency of anxiety, depression and despair among the populace. This situation is aggravated by the persistent economic crisis characterised, among others, by astronomical unemployment and frustrating underemployment.

    Against this background, it is unfortunate that the country does not have a Mental Health Policy to provide a comprehensive and coherent policy framework for tackling her daunting challenges of mental healthcare. For inexplicable reasons, the National Assembly continues to delay in passing the Mental Health Bill, which makes provision, among others, for access to mental healthcare and services, voluntary and involuntary treatment, accreditation of professionals and facilities, enforcement and other judicial issues affecting people with mental health issues as well as implementing the provision of mental health legislations.

    We call on the National Assembly to appreciate the danger that mental ill- health poses for national security and productivity and urgently pass the Mental Health Bill into law.

  • Obasanjo to Fed Govt: take care of youths to avert danger

    Former President Olusegun Obasanjo yesterday pushed for the immediate training, empowerment and positive engagement of the youths to avert future danger.

    He warned over a year ago that the army of the unemployed youths was a time bomb and something that could make the country vulnerable to a situation similar to the “Arab Spring”.

    The former President said a nation that neglects its youths “is playing with a dangerous game with its future”.

    Obasanjo spoke in Abeokuta, the Ogun State capital, at an event marking this year’s edition of the United Nations (UN) International Youth Day.

    The former President, who led over 200 youths from the Youth Centre arm of the Olusegun Obasanjo Presidential Library Youths Centre (OOPL) on a charity walk, urged government at all levels to make youth empowerment and development their priority to ensure a secured future for Nigeria.

    He noted that it was because of the importance of the youths to the nation, the community and the society that the UN dedicated August 12 each year to celebrate youths across the world.

    The former President admonished the youth to be of good behaviour.

    Obasanjo said: “When the United Nations decided that youths all over the world will be celebrated in one day of the year, it knew what it was doing.

    “This is because people will say youths are the hope of the future. But you are more than the hope of the future; youths are the hold on the future, the stability of the future and, in fact, youths are the future.

    “So, when we talk about the youths, we are talking about the future. Any country or community that does not take the training, the skill acquisition, the empowerment and employment of its youths seriously, that community or nation is playing a dangerous game with its future.”

    According to the former President, the theme for this year’s celebration is: Youth And Mental Health.

    Obasanjo noted that the theme was appropriate because it highlighted a long neglected issue of mental health.

    He participated in the two-kilometre road walk, which took  off at the popular Kuto Roundabout, where youth groups converged, and terminated at the OOPL.

  • She says she’s a graduate, speaks good English, but is mad

    She says she’s a graduate, speaks good English, but is mad

    Mental health problems remain a huge stigma in the country, with most people, even families of victims, choosing to ignore them, in the hope that the problems will simply go away.

    The problems, however, rarely vanish, and whether an individual’s problem is severe or mild, if not treated, can result in exclusion from society, loss of work, and breakdown in relationship.

    The Nation came across a middle-aged woman, who is a university graduate, but has gone mad in the ancient town of Oyo, in Oyo State.

    She was said to have been in that state of mental disorder for the past seven years unattended to.

    Popularly referred to as Mary, her real name is Bose Oyeleru. She hails from Fiditi in the Afijio Local Government Area of the state.

    Slim and dark complexioned, Bose is said to have attended Fiditi Grammar School, after which she proceeded to the university.After her higher education, she had the mandatory National Youths Service Corps (NYSC).

    She joined the Oyo State Police Command after her service year and she was transferred to Atiba Divisional Command, Akesan and later Akunlemu, all within the ancient town.

    Bose, according to source, was redeployed in the Signal section near the divisional command, before she contracted the mental illness.

    She is said to be happily married with children.

    It was learnt that the lunatic graduate was sleeping within the vicinity of the Signal office before she was chased away.

    She later moved to the Government Reservation Area (GRA), at Apitipiti.

    A mechanic at Boode-Ogbomoso, Mr. Michael Agboola, also confirmed that there is no day Bose would not get as far as the vicinity of the Signal section, after which she would come to the workshop.

    “Before coming to our workshop, she would first get to the Signal section and later come to meet us here.  She is not violent but used to play and stay with us.  Sometimes, when she is okay, she opens up when we asked questions, and that was how we know that she is a university graduate.

    What is however amazing about Bose is that besides the fact that she speaks good English and responds intelligently to questions put before her, she also appears neat all the time, as she goes to beauty saloon to make up her hair.

    Investigation further revealed that Bose would leave her “GRA residence” everyday around five in the evening for a stream where she would bathe.

    After having her bath, Bose would put on new clothes, often times jeans with T-shirt and some make–up to match, before leaving for Owode, the Central Business District of the ancient town. She returns to her abode late in the night.

    Bose was cornered by our correspondent near the Tennis Club, along the GRA residence, where she washes her dirty clothes.

    Below is the interview with the lunatic graduate:

    Good day, Madam.  How are you?

    Good day gentleman, what can I do for you because I am on duty here?  Please talk.

    What are you doing here and where are you from?

    I told you I am a guard here and a native of this area, I mean Oyo metropolis.  It’s a long story my brother, don’t disturb me, I am very much on duty.

    How do you mean?

    I am well-read, but don’t know how I find myself in this circumstance.  But thank God, am working here.

    You mean … (Cuts in)

    Sorry, do I not smell because I have not taken my bath.

    Do you love my environment? I know it is dirty and bushy, but I am at work, you may not like it, leave me with my plight, I don’t want to be disturbed here.

    Are you married?

    Of course, but cannot locate either the children or their father now. I am fine. Any problem and why are you bothered? After all, they are my children. What again?

    Where do you stay?

    I am sleeping at a building (GRA) over there. But wait and listen, these people do not allow me to sleep. They come late at night to trouble me and force me into doing it. They come with cars.

    Force you to do what?

    Don’t you know what a man and a woman do together when they meet? It is not their fault because they treat me because of my condition. Hmmmmn. Me, a whole graduate of university.

    Which university did you attend?

    Wetin again. Please leave me alone. You are disturbing me on duty here.

    Several efforts by our correspondent to locate her family at Fiditi, a distance of about thirty minutes from Oyo town were to no avail.

    However, residents have expressed concern over increasing large number of young people with mental disorders in the ancient town.

    About 300 lunatics were said to be residing in the ancient town alone.

    Investigation showed that most of these mentally deranged people, who were non-indigenes, were brought and dumped from outside the ancient town, by some individuals after allegedly using them for money rituals.

    Some residents were said to be exploiting the situation by having sexual intercourse at night with the female ones among the lunatics.

    Consequently, these female lunatics were abandoned without any care whatsoever after being impregnated.

    Few good-spirited individuals usually come to the assistance of the pregnant lunatics, by taking them to the health centres, in some cases, as well as provide for their needs to ensure safe delivery.

    Meanwhile, statistics from the Department of Community Medicine, University College Hospital (UCH), Ibadan, the state capital indicated that approximately, one in five of the world’s youth, 15 years and younger suffer from mild to severe mental disorders.

    A large number of these children remain undetected and untreated.  It noted that mental health is one of the more recently added components of Primary Health Care (PHC), and means more than merely the presence or absence of obvious mental illness.

    “In Nigeria, 28.5 per cent of those attending primary healthcare setting in an urban area were found to have psychiatric morbidity. The disintegration of the traditional, extended family due to factors such as economic migration, inevitably creates mental health of the individuals in the society.  Concerns for job security and the economic survival of the household can also create enormous pressure on individuals, which may in turn affect their mental health.”

    The study also revealed that the adolescent age group was found to have higher psychiatric morbidity when compared to the adults in Oyo State.

    It underlines the effect of family structure on the mental health of the population, adding that marriage was found to be associated with mental stability in the state.

    Those separated from their spouses, divorcees and widows, the study indicated had a higher mental morbidity.

    “Sticking to acceptable family structures may create mental tension in the communities.  Aspiration to meet up to the community standards is usually a common source of mental illness, large family size and unemployment was also found to be associated with increase in psychiatric morbidity,” it said.

    The adolescent period is a turbulent period in life when there is a transition into adulthood and self autonomy.

    While stating that the prevalence of psychiatric morbidity is high in the state, the study stressed the need for mental health promotional services for the rural population.

    It further said, “Basic needs provided by the government in both rural and urban areas, especially made available to the younger generation and promotion of family planning to reduce family size, would help to reduce psychiatric morbidity, and improve quality of life in the Africa population.