Covid-19 Health Local News News Pandemic changes health focus Barbados Today24/03/20230584 views Dr Petra Crookendale One local consultant internist believes that the last three years of COVID-19 have turned the focus on the need to re-examine the current policies used to address mental health illnesses and the non-communicable diseases (NCDs) affecting citizens. Dr Petra Crookendale also believes it is time preventive medicine, and “generational health” are seen as practical policies going forward for the country, as a change in healthy lifestyles needed to start from the ground up. Speaking on the lessons learned by the medical fraternity after the prolonged battle with the pandemic, Dr. Crookendale, said the rise in anxiety and depression among locals seeking help, has been stark. “One of the things that I have noticed is that we do need to improve our mental health facilities, the ability for people to have counselling and so on. One of the glaring things that came out of COVID-19 was the mental health issues, especially things like anxiety and depression. “There are people who don’t want to acknowledge that they do have a mental health issue… which by the way, post COVID, I think all of us do, it’s just the degree to which we have it. I think a lot of it existed before COVID but people were coping. Now after COVID they are not coping as well and this is why these symptoms of anxiety are manifesting,” she explained. Her comments aligned with those of Minister of Health Dr the Most Honourable Jerome Walcott made in the Upper House as the Senate debated the Appropriation Bill 2023. The minister said that over the course of the last three years of the pandemic many patients have been reporting to several institutions with mental health concerns, with cases having increased by 200 per cent since 2019. Dr Crookendale said though Barbadians may have gotten numb to the NCD numbers affecting the country over the last several years, the cases of chronic illnesses being diagnosed remains uncomfortably high. (SB)