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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Monday, October 01, 2001 |
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Scarf of warmth
Chennai-based SCARF has drawn up a pragmatic programme to
identify the mentally ill quickly.
A report. Dr. Saraceno addressing the gathering at SCARF.The Anna
Nagar-based Schizophrenia Research Foundation (SCARF) has taken
an initiative to launch the Urban Mental Health programme on or
before October 10. SCARF is one of the four recognised by the
Geneva-based World Health Organisation (WHO) as collaborating
centres for mental health in India.
All the speakers at the inauguration of the SCARF's new
programmes recently highlighted how important it was to
decentralise the system so that the mentally ill could be
identified quickly.
Dr. B. Saraceno, Director, Department of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse, WHO, said that there were institutions which
excelled in research but not in the commitment to take the
results to the community, there were others, which reached out
efficiently to the mentally ill but lacked the rigorous
discipline to do research, and there were only a few centres,
which blended the best of both. SCARF, Dr. Saraceno said,
``continues its social commitment and maintains a high standard
of scientific exploration''. He said that even though a cost-
effective system of treatment existed, only 20 per cent of
schizophrenia patients in urban areas actually got treatment.
Dr. R. Thara, director, SCARF said that the need to reach out to
the mentally ill was important because in most cases the sick
remained unidentified. She also said that faith healing was not
restricted to villages. Nearly 20-30 per cent of mentally ill
people visiting religious centres for miracle cures were from the
educated, urban sections of society, she said.
Given the crippling shortage of psychiatrists, teaching
institutions as well as mental hospital beds, it was impossible
to hospitalise all the mentally ill. As some mental illnesses
crippled their victims progressively over time, it was important
to identify the incidence before the victims became difficult to
manage, if not unmanageable as in many instances of
schizophrenia.
One way would be to train public health centre (PHC)-level
general physicians to identify the mentally ill. The other -
adopted by SCARF - would be to reach out to the non-Government
organisations (NGOs), which provide basic health care. These NGOs
could offer basic health care services, identify and provide
medication to the mentally ill, and refer only the difficult
cases to the mental institutions in the State.
With some support from the pharmaceutical companies, the
programme could be sustained initially, Dr. Thara said, till the
system evolved to maintain the momentum.
One of the hurdles in sustaining mental health care is the cost
of drugs. A mentally ill person often requires a cocktail of
drugs costing at least Rs.500 a month - a sum not many families
can afford. So either the drugs should be available cheap or they
should be subsidised by the Government.
As pharmaceutical companies are run for profit and not charity,
the drugs are unlikely to be marketed at a low price. The only
feasible option therefore would be to subsidise the drugs. The
belief that for sustenance of an NGO, innovation was critical, as
Dr. Thara claimed, seemed to defy reason unless financial support
to an NGO was dependent on the novelty of projects. If so, it
would imply that philanthropists hated to support an NGO's on-
going meaningful programmes. Facts show otherwise.
A programme that identifies and takes care of the pitfalls during
its efficient run for years makes the best use of every rupee the
NGO gets. SO the need to devise novel schemes for survival hardly
seems convincing.
Dr. Bertolote, team coordinator, Department of Mental Health and
Substance Abuse, WHO, offered to be the godfather of the FACES
(Family Care Empowerment Support) programme.
He clarified later that being a godfather meant that the project
would get relevant information inputs from other parts of the
world. He would also help in networking people and agencies, and
provide technical support. What matters is the assurance that the
WHO would be there to help in case of need.
One of the aims of the FACES programme is to reach out to
families and communities with audiovisual inputs to sensitise
them about the plight and the needs of the mentally ill.
Given the track record of the SCARF for the last 17 years, one
feels almost certain that it would try its best to keep its
promise. So the mentally ill in urban areas are likely to be
identified sooner than they have been so far.
That's a reassurance many families will welcome after silently
bearing the brunt and the burden of living with the mentally ill,
whom they unwillingly hide from the community as long as
possible.
GOUTAM GHOSH
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