Monday, November 5, 2018

Friends of Mental Health urges Parliament to urgently pass LI on Mental Health Act

The Communications and Research Lead of Friends of Mental Health, Madam Jennifer Akuamoah has said it is worrying that Parliament had not backed the Mental Health Act, in spite of the establishment of a Mental Health Authority. 
This, she asked  Parliament to as a matter of urgency, expedite action on the legislative instrument (LI) regarding the Mental Health Act (Act 846) that was passed in 2012 to ensure its effective implementation.
She was speaking at a ceremony dubbed: “Open Day” organised by the Accra Psychiatric Hospital, in collaboration with the Mental Health Authority, as part of a week-long celebration to mark World Mental Health Day on the theme: “Young People and Mental Health in a Changing World”.

 She explained that “medications for mental illness were expensive and so when passed and implemented, the Mental Health Act would, among other things, help subsidise the cost of drugs”.
“Currently, we are working with some NGOs in mental health and the Mental Health Authority to push for the passage of the LI, so that at least mental health drugs will be made less expensive or readily available in mental health facilities,” she said.
The Member of Parliament for Ledzokuku in the Greater Accra Region, Dr Benard Okoe Boye, who was present at the ceremony, said some steps had been taken by Parliament to pass the LI on mental health.
“We will pursue the passage of the LI to ensure that the act is implemented and I’m sure of a positive result next year,” he said.
The Member of Parliament for Klottey Korle, Dr Zanetor Agyeman-Rawlings, said called for more education to end the stigmatisation of people with mental health disorders.
The day was marked with several activities, including guided tours of the facility, poetry recital and the presentation of items by some NGOs and individuals.
 
Scores of students drawn from 18 institutions attended the event and were taken round the facility to enable them to familiarise themselves with conditions at the hospital.
Friends of Mental Health, with support from the Chinese Chamber of Commerce, donated items worth GH¢70,000 to the Mental Health Authority for distribution to the Accra, Pantang and Ankaful Psychiatric hospitals.
The items included toiletries, 90 mattresses, 300 gallons of detergents, GH¢5,000 worth of washing powder and bed sheets.

Tour
During a tour of the Female Ward, a Senior Nurse, Mrs Rejoice Mispa Anaman, said that relationships were a major cause of mental illness among female patients at the hospital.
Other causes, she said, were alcohol abuse and the intake of hard drugs.
An officer at the special open air ward said nurses at the ward were not covered by insurance, in spite of the harsh working conditions.
He appealed to the government and benevolent organisations to support the hospital to improve working conditions and infrastructure facilities.

World Mental Day
The World Mental Health Day is observed on October 10, every year, with the aim of creating awareness of mental health issues around the world and to intensify efforts at supporting mental health.
The day also presents an opportunity for stakeholders working in mental health institutions to talk about their work and to chart the way forward in making mental health care in Ghana less demanding.

Friends of Mental Health is a non-governmental organisation that advocates an end to stigmatisation of mental health patients and promotes quality mental health care across the country.

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