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Mental health clinics seeing 200 per cent more patients

by Barbados Today
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The Ministry of Health is committed to tackling the significant increase in people turning up in the island’s healthcare system with mental health illnesses.
Health Minister Dr the Most Honourable Jerome Walcott said over the course of the last three years of the COVID-19 pandemic many of these patients have reported at several institutions with general numbers shooting up by over 200 per cent since 2019.
As he made his contribution to the debate on the Appropriation Bill 2023 in the Senate on Wednesday Dr Walcott noted: “In the Ministry of Health, we recognise that post-COVID mental health illness and disease in Barbados is a real concern. We have been looking at the attendance at the various clinics, and the attendance to the ‘psychi’ clinics in the polyclinic system [since] 2019. We are now over 200 per cent above what it was then, which tells you that there are people seeking care [and] to be evaluated.
“The ministry this year is really going after mental health,” he insisted.
He further revealed that the previously operational Mental Health Commission had been re-established, along with a strategic plan which was first drafted using the 2005 Mental Health Reform Policy.
Dr Walcott stressed that the mental health of citizens and the policies governing this aspect of healthcare needed to be relooked.
“We need to look at the whole issue of governance of mental health illness in this country. We need to look at public education and the stigma associated with mental health illness, [and] we need to look at community mental health.
“We have started but we really need to push it. We need to integrate it totally into the polyclinic system. We are expanding the numbers of psychiatrists and counselling psychologists in the community because we need to move it into the community.”
He added: “There are a number of issues with teenagers in the schools, some of the violence we are hearing about is related to mental health issues.”
He explained that clinics have been introduced in the antenatal and postnatal at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, recognising that postpartum psychosis is a real factor, and that “people can become suicidal after delivery”.
(SB)

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