In
an interesting and educative piece, a consultant psychiatrist, Adeoye Oyewole,
has revealed the important early signs of mental illness to note before it gets
out of hand.
Mental
illness is one of the most stigmatised illnesses in the world, especially in
Africa. This attitude has serious social implications for affected persons.
Many have been denied marriage and other employment opportunities even when
they got better.
Educated
folks, who know that there is treatment for mental illness like any other
condition, often discriminate against such individuals. This belief has
encouraged alternative methods of managing mentally challenged patients.
Families would rather conceal information and sentence a relative with mental
illness to spiritual cleansing instead of seeking orthodox help.
The
mental health policy articulation and implementation suffer setbacks because we
prefer to live in the denial of the reality of the illness. Alternative
caregivers have flourished at the expense of the orthodox ones because they
explore our cultural models.
Supernatural
prescriptions of intervention such as exorcism, offering of sacrifices to the
gods, prescribed prayers and rituals are some the unconscious psychological
strategies we adopt to confront mental illness and its management on the
continent.
The
mandate for mental health practice in Africa and especially in Nigeria is to
interrogate these alternative models and interrupt their adverse influences
that have been reported to be responsible for increasing number of deaths among
the mentally ill.
Our
policy makers often bring what obtains in developed countries as framework
forgetting that there is a need to interrogate this policy to accommodate our
peculiarities. One aspect that is of importance is to get the public educated
on the early symptoms of mental illness because our religious and social
intuitions have masked its symptoms.
This
is very important because research has established that the earlier an
appropriate method of intervention is instituted, the better the outcome for
such patients. But when the illness is allowed to fester for too long without
intervention, the personality of the patient is gravely affected. The
individual may become a shadow of him/herself.
When
the illness is not identified early and appropriate orthodox treatment is not
instituted, the patient may wreck more havoc in the community. A good of number
of cases of murder, assault, suicide and other social crimes, such as substance
abuse may be traceable to mental illness.
Several
cases of marital instability and disrupted family life may be linked to mental
illness in one of the spouses. A good number of our road traffic accidents may
have been averted if the road safety officers were trained to identify drivers
who may be under the influence of drugs.
Our
schools cannot produce the best when mental health issues are not considered
and adapted into the running of the curriculum. Productivity and overall
performance of companies and organisations are hinged on the early
identification and treatment of mental ill health among their employees.
In
my opinion, mental well-being is the ultimate index of good governance. Even
for our religion institutions, the mental well-being of the followers and
believers is a verifiable gold standard of its effectiveness.
Mental
illness occurs when there is malfunctioning of the human mind such as emotion,
intellect, thought, cognition and mood. It could be due to predisposing
economic, social physical or political factors. This disruption manifests in
the mind in a way that ultimately causes distress to the individual without
him/her knowing it.
It
may disturb sleep; make the individual walk long distances aimlessly away from
the house or make the individual spend more than usual time in prayer without
sleeping.
Some
may fast to the point of damaging their physical health. Others can suspect
people without valid proofs. Some may show undue generosity, sadness, over
religiosity and excessive concern over security or hygiene.
The
guiding principle is that these manifestations cause distress to the individual
in a way that s/he is not aware of it. The second point is that this abnormal
functioning of the mind should be of concern to others like children, spouses,
friends, relatives and even co-workers.
My
article is for this group since the patients are not aware that their behaviour
is abnormal. It is the responsibility of the others to consider this
observation and explore appropriate intervention.
The
last point is that such behaviours should alert response from the people whom
the individual resides with irrespective of the intellectual, cultural or
religious rationalisations of the mentally-ill patient.
Adeoye
Oyewole is a Consultant Psychiatrist
Contact:
adeoyewole2000@yahoo.com
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