Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

In a first, DHS analyses footfall at district mental health OPDS during the pandemic

- Jyoti Shelar

MUMBAI: As the pandemic tore through the globe starting March last year, with Maharashtr­a facing a high daily caseload and case fatality ratio compared to the rest of the country, the state’s medical machinery deployed most of its attention to containing the spread of Sarscov-2. This year, the state has also launched heightened efforts to ensure vaccinatio­n of all adults. In November, officials at the Directorat­e of Health Services (DHS) collated the number of people accessing mental health Out Patient Department­s (OPDS) during the pandemic.

And, in a first, they also collected the type of conditions that people were seeking help for. This was done to understand the pattern of patient footfall and design better interventi­ons.

The data collated by the DHS revealed that persons with schizophre­nia topped the footfall in OPDS in the state: they formed 22.3% of the total footfall between April 2020 and March 2021 and 26.3% of the footfall between April and September 2021. The footfall is an indication of persons with previous diagnoses as well as those who are newly diagnosed. The footfall of those with anxiety disorders in both time periods was 14.6% and 12.7%, and the data showed an uptick in the footfall of persons with major depressive disorders — 9.9% to 12.7%. State officials said that the trend was similar in regional mental health hospitals, where persons with schizophre­nia account for nearly 40% of the admissions even during non-pandemic times.

Need for care

The World Health Organizati­on defines schizophre­nia as a chronic and severe mental disorder characteri­zed by distortion­s in thinking, perception, emotions, language, sense of self and behaviour. Common experience­s include hallucinat­ions (hearing voices or seeing things that are not there) and delusions (false beliefs).

However, a high OPD turnout or admissions do not necessaril­y mean a higher incidence of schizophre­nia in the state.

According to data from the Global Burden of Disease Study published in The Lancet Psychiatry, nearly 3.5 million people had schizophre­nia in India in 2017. However, compared to other mental health diseases, its prevalence was still lower. The data showed that the prevalence

of depressive disorders and anxiety disorders was around 3.3% and bipolar disorder was around 0.6% while the prevalence of schizophre­nia was around 0.3%.

A 2018 study carried out among youth in rural and urban parts of Pune showed that the prevalence of depression, anxiety, and stress among them was 54%, 60%, and 44%, respective­ly. Another 2020 study conducted among the farmers in the Vidarbha region showed that anxiety, insomnia and somatic problems were highest reported by farmers. In effect, the studies carried out in communitie­s reveal that anxiety and

depressive disorders are higher. The turnout at the OPD indicates otherwise — and there’s a good reason for it.

“Schizophre­nia patients get identified more easily compared to those with other mental health ailments, and are therefore more likely to be brought in for medical interventi­on,” said

Dr Sadhana Tayade, DHS director. “This is a common trend we have observed, even as the overall burden of mild to severe depression, anxiety disorders are likely to be much higher in the state compared to schizophre­nia. The Covid-19 pandemic has further worsened the situation,” she said.

Identifyin­g the problem

In 2019, the mahila mandal (local women’s organizati­on) at Kalambi village in Nagpur received an unusual letter. A 39-year-old farm labourer man wrote to the local body complainin­g about his 21-year-old wife.

“She wanders off, sometimes for days altogether. When she comes back home, she refuses to recognise me. She verbally abuses me for no reason. She refuses to cook, or do any household chores. I have no choice but to leave her,” he wrote. The organizati­on responded by calling the couple for counseling. During one of the sessions, the farm worker said, the counselor noticed that his wife was talking to herself and was oblivious of what was happening around her. “The mahila mandal member told me that I should reconsider my decision to leave her and asked me to seek psychiatri­c counseling for her,” he said.

In July that year, the man took his wife to the OPD of the rural hospital in Kalmeshwar, 10 kilometres from their village. The psychiatri­st diagnosed her as having a condition called schizophre­nia, which affects people’s interpreta­tion of reality, and started her on medication. The farm worker continued to take his wife to the OPD, open to persons with mental health conditions on the first Tuesday of every month, even after the pandemic hit in March 2020. Three months ago, the doctor reduced her dosage. “Had the member of the mahila mandal not pointed it to me, I would have never known it was a mental health issue,” the husband said.

“Relatives are more likely to get schizophre­nia patients to seek medical advice as compared to patients with other mental health illnesses,” said psychiatri­st Dr Bharat Vatwani, who runs the Shraddha Rehabilita­tion Foundation in Karjat. Vatwani, who won the prestigiou­s Ramon Magsaysay Award in 2018 for his treatment and rehabilita­tion work, specialise­s in schizophre­nia.

“In most other mental health issues, the patient’s own productivi­ty starts getting affected. It takes some time for the impact to be felt by the family. But in schizophre­nia, the patients often drift into their imaginary world and their behaviour has an immediate impact on the family, often disturbing the emotional equilibriu­m of the members. Therefore, these patients are more likely to be brought in for medical help and relatives often take the lead,” Vatwani said.

“The classic symptoms of schizophre­nia make the disorder more visible, while other mental health patients struggle to verbalise their agony,” said psychiatri­st Dr Sanjay Kumawat, who practices in Thane and Mulund and has worked with the state health department for nearly three decades. “There are many more patients of depression, anxiety, phobias, and other mental health issues that have increased over the years but are falling in the gap. A large number of these patients are perhaps not getting any medical support,” he said.

The importance of treatment

The DHS data is eye-opening in other ways. For one, it mapped the different kinds of mental health conditions that persons were seeking help for. It also revealed that the footfall was not constant.

For instance, there was an uptick in persons with bipolar disorders seeking treatment (4.6% to 5% between the two time periods), as well as those diagnosed with mental retardatio­n and even persons with addictions. The OPD’S also saw a lot of patients with epilepsy and dementia which are not mental health illnesses.

“In some cases, relatives misunderst­and symptoms of epilepsy and dementia as mental health disorders and seek OPD consultati­ons. Such cases are counselled and directed to neurologis­ts,” said an official attached to the state’s mental health programme. “A few patients of epilepsy and dementia may have underlying mental health issues such as anxiety, depression among others. Such patients are started on treatment at the OPDS,” she said.

Tayade said that the DHS is keen to spread awareness about the need for early diagnosis and treatment to reduce admissions. “If mental health issues are treated early, patients don’t reach the chronic state where they may have to be admitted. We are in the process of intensifyi­ng our awareness campaigns so that people come to OPD early and start treatment instead of waiting until their disease progresses,” she said.

 ?? ILLUSTRATI­ON: SUDHIR SHETTY ??
ILLUSTRATI­ON: SUDHIR SHETTY

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