The Phnom Penh Post

Invest in mental health support

-

PEditorial

ERHAPS the most grievous effect of Covid-19, especially on those dying of or receiving treatment for it, is the loneliness.

In their desire to limit the spread of infection and prevent possible outbreaks, health authoritie­s the world over have dictated a severe protocol for the care and handling of people battling the most serious impact of Covid19. The patient is bundled off into an isolation room, offlimits to everyone but the most essential health personnel who are themselves suited in intimidati­ng personal protective equipment.

Once confined, the Covid19 patient is left to his or her own devices, tethered to a bewilderin­g array of machines. The majority of those diagnosed positive survive the ordeal and the treatment, but only after several days of painful struggle and two additional weeks of quarantine even after being discharged.

For those succumbing to the virus, the last days are spent in silence and isolation, while loved ones can do nothing but peer through glass windows or communicat­e by mobile phones. Even in death, loneliness reigns. The bodies of the dead are taken away and immediatel­y cremated, urns bearing ashes the only concrete signs left that once a human being lived, loved, and walked the earth.

But the impact of Covid-19 reverberat­es far beyond the confines of ICUs, hospital rooms, or quarantine facilities. The emotional toll the disease takes on family members and friends is immeasurab­le. However, even those with no personal contact with Covid-19 but living in a world suddenly dominated by the virus can feel and imbibe the free-floating anxiety, as they manoeuvre and behold their surroundin­gs behind a face mask and face shield while keeping physically distant from other people, alert for anyone coughing, sneezing, wheezing, or otherwise unwell.

Such paranoia can only result in a spike in mental health problems, as the findings of a seven-country survey (including the Philippine­s) show. The report, titled The greatest need was to be listened to: The importance of mental health and psychosoci­al support during Covid19 and released by the Internatio­nal Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, “demonstrat­es how the pandemic is adding an extraordin­ary level of stress and suffering on communitie­s around the world”.

With countries seeking to balance the competing demands of keeping everyone safe indoors while encouragin­g the public to get out and stimulate the stalled economy, societies are grappling with both old and new mental health issues. According to Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross directorge­neral Robert Mardini, the “Covid-19 health crisis has exacerbate­d the psychologi­cal distress of millions of people already living through conflicts and disasters”. “Lockdown restrictio­ns, a loss of social interactio­n, and economic pressures are all impacting people’s mental health and access to care. Mental health is just as important as physical health, especially in crisis situations, when mental health needs are especially critical,” Mardini emphasised.

In the Philippine­s, the need to recognise and address mental health issues is made even more urgent by the lack of data. Estimates on the number of Filipinos suffering from depression, say researcher­s Lance Espejo and Yoo Jung Lee, are easily more than a decade old. But even old data produced alarming results. For instance, suicide rates increased from 19842005 among males, while 32 per cent of 327 respondent­s experience­d a “mental health problem”. Third, intentiona­l self-harm was the ninth leading cause of death for Filipinos in their 20s, per a 2003 study.

In time for the enactment of the mental health law in 2018, the Philippine Department of Health’s statistics on mental health were updated, but using data generated since over a decade before.

“Since 2018, therefore, we don’t know any official government data on the mental health situation,” said Espejo and Lee.

Given the events in the interim, especially the economic reversal resulting in millions out of work, the draconian measures applied to impose isolation, and the lack of contact among friends, classmates, and workmates, we can only expect the number of people falling prey to depression and mental stress to increase. But it is not too late to act. “Mental health programmes are some of the least expensive interventi­ons in humanitari­an response, but they have a lifesaving and priceless impact on the lives of people who need them,” says Jagan Chapagain, secretary-general of the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies.

“Now more than ever, we must invest in mental health and psychosoci­al support for everyone – communitie­s and carers alike – to help people cope, rebuild their lives, and thrive through this crisis.”

We must invest in mental health and psychosoci­al support for everyone to help people cope through this crisis

 ?? PIXABAY ?? In the Philippine­s, the need to recognise and address mental health issues is made even more urgent by the lack of data.
PIXABAY In the Philippine­s, the need to recognise and address mental health issues is made even more urgent by the lack of data.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia