Title: HUMAN RIGHTS AND MENTAL HEALTH
1HUMAN RIGHTS AND MENTAL HEALTH
- Dan J. Stein, MB ChB, FRCPC, PhD
- Prof and Head, Dept of Psychiatry / MH, UCT
- Chief Psychiatrist, PGWC
- Director, MRC Unit on Anxiety Disorders, US
2OVERVIEW
- International mental health context
- Data on mental health in South Africa
- Explore reasons for stigmatization
- Attempts to combat stigmatization
- A call for parity for mental health
3International Context
- What are psychiatric disorders?
4(No Transcript)
5International Context
- Psychiatric disorders are medical disorders!
-
- - they can be diagnosed reliably
- - they have an underlying brain basis
- - they respond well to effective treatment
- - deserve dignity / care not blame / shame
-
6Advances in Imaging / Genetics
7Advances in Imaging / Genetics
8Modern Treatment
Baseline
After SSRI
9International Context
- Psychiatric disorders are crucially important!
-
- - associated burden of illness v. large (gt20)
- - associated burden of illness will grow in SA
- - but treatments are cost-effective / saving
- - treatment pathways from primary to tertiary
10WHO Most disabling conditions
- Unipolar major depression
- Iron deficiency
- Falls
- Alcohol abuse
- Chronic obstructive airways disease
- Bipolar disorder
- Congenital abnormalities
- Osteo-arthritis
- Schizophrenia
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder
Murray, C. J. L. Lopez , A. D. (1996). Global
Burden of Disease. Harvard, WHO.
11RSA Most disabling conditions
- 1. HIV/AIDS
- 2. Neuropsychiatric disorders
Bradshaw, D. (2003). Initial Burden of Disease.
Estimates for South Africa. Cape Town, MRC.
12WC Most deathly conditions
- 1. HIV/AIDS
- 2. Suicide / homicide
- During adolescence - suicide!
Bradshaw D, et al (2005). Provincial mortality in
South Africa, 2000--priority-setting for now and
a benchmark for the future. S Afr Med J 95,
496-503.
13Cost-Effectiveness of Treatment
- It saves the Government money to spend on
appropriate mental health care services
Wang PS, Simon G, Kessler RC. Int J Methods
Psychiatr Res. 200312(1)22-33. The economic
burden of depression and the cost-effectiveness
of treatment.
14Cost-Effectiveness of Treatment
- Even in a developing world setting, it is cheaper
to treat than not to treat!
15Advances in Psychiatry
- Development of Psychiatric Subspecialities
- Neuropsychiatry (eg neuroHIV)
- Liaison Psychiatry (eg womens MH)
- Intellectual Disability
- Addiction Psychiatry
- Geriatric Psychiatry
- Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
- Forensic Psychiatry
16Advances in PsychiatryNeuropsychiatry / HIV
- An 18 year old man presented with sudden onset of
emotional lability, repeated hand-washing, and
choreoform movements - Special Investigation - Streptococcal infection
- Diagnosis PANDAS
- Treatment Antibiotics, SSRI, Cognitive-Behaviour
al Rx -
17Advances in PsychiatryLiaison Psychiatry /
Womens MH
- 34 year old woman presents with hallucinations
shortly after giving birth by Caesarian section - Special Investigation - MRI with focal areas of
atrophy - Diagnosis Post-partum psychosis
- Treatment SSRI, Cognitive-Behavioural Rx, Help
with infant care -
18What about South Africa?
- SA Stress and Health Survey (SASH)
- 4351 adult South Africans sampled
- Rigorous probability sample design
- Representing all races and groups
- Comprehensive diagnostic interview
1912-Month Prevalence of Psychiatric Disorders in SA
20Lifetime Prevalence of Psychiatric Disorders in
SA
21Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders in SA
22Under-Resourcing of Mental Health
23Under-Resourcing of Mental Health
- Very few mental health professionals (eg rural
areas with only a handful of psychiatrists / MH
nurses) - Very few beds for psychiatric patients in general
hospitals (eg in
the Western Province there are 12 such beds)
24Under-Resourcing of Mental Health
- Hospital deinstitutionalization without building
of community treatment services (eg intellectual
disability services, addiction services) - Vast systems with little attention to MH (eg
military, EPAs, correctional services,
emergency/trauma services)
25Under-Resourcing of Mental Health
- Almost no expertise in sub-specialties (eg no
intellectual disability psychiatrists, very few C
A or addiction psychiatrists) - Addiction psychiatry is a particular problem, as
DoH is not the primary driver (eg despite WC
epidemics, hospital closure)
26Under-Resourcing of Mental Health
- Very little prevention at the primary level
(eg lack of school mental
health nurses) - Underfunding of MH by DST / MRC / NRF and
unacceptable delays in approving MH research by
the MCC
27Under-Resourcing of Mental HealthMRC Funding in
R millions
28Under-Resourcing of Mental Health
- No parity in budgets / posts for MH (both in
public and in private sectors eg discrimination
by medical aids)
29Yes, but
- Policy-making is resource constrained
- - This ignores the data on cost-efficacy of
treatment for psychiatric disorder (precedent
from nevirapine) - Other medical areas also need more
- - This ignores the data on lack of parity for
those who suffer from mental illness (any
precedent?)
30Why The Lack of Parity?
- Poor mental health literacy amongst the public -
Most South Africans would rather die than admit
to suffering from a mental illness, few know
about things like an addiction psychiatrist
31Why The Lack of Parity?
- Poor mental health literacy amongst clinicians -
Few doctors, nurses, and other health care givers
with capacity to provide current treatments of
psychiatric disorders
32Why The Lack of Parity?
- Poor mental health literacy amongst policy-makers
- Past discrimination against mentally ill during
apartheid, continued neglect of facts on
cost-effectiveness of MH treatments
33Why The Lack of Parity?
- Physical disorders always seem so much more
important eg HIV/AIDS - - but behavioural factors contribute to the
epidemic - - the majority of HIV/AIDS patients will develop
a neuropsychiatric disorder
34Why The Lack of Parity?
- Culturally, it is hard to accept the view that
mental illness is a medical disorder - - this is particularly the case with alcoholism
and drug dependence - - where few policy-makers would easily agree
that this is a medical disorder
35National Health Policy
- 1997 Dept of Health, White Paper
- Emphasised lack of parity for mental health
services - 2004 Mental Health Care Act
- Emphasized human rights of those using mental
health services
36National Health Policy
- We do have many reasonable facilities and highly
dedicated staff - With some progress eg new hospitals, mental
health review boards, etc - And with growing advocacy from mental health
consumer groups
37National Health Policy
- National DoH has a very small Mental Health
Directorate (eg guidelines?) - Each of the Provinces have different posts and
policies - Within provinces, significant splits between
hospital and community care
38National Health PolicyHalf-full vs half-empty?
39National Health PolicyParity as an Objective
Measure
- No evidence that policy emphasizing parity has
been implemented in provinces - this seems
medicolegally indefensible - Mental Health Care Act review boards have focused
on gross abuses, rather than service access and
parity
40Conclusion Parity for MH Remains the Goal
- Parity for mental health services would be
effective and cost-effective - Parity for mental health services would help
reverse stigma and is a human rights issue
41ConclusionParity for MH Remains the Goal
- SAHRC In view of clear and ongoing
discrimination against mental health users in
South Africa, with less of a voice and relatively
lower access to mental health services, parity
(including budgetary parity) and leadership
(including parity of posts) for such services
needs to be formally legislated and urgently
implemented