The Malta Independent on Sunday

Alliance for Mental Health: let’s work with the government to get people e out of hospital and into community care

- Helena Grech

The Alliance for Mental Health (A4MH) has called on the government to include critical stakeholde­rs to make a real difference to the way mental health treatment is provided, and eventually bring people out of mental health facilities and into community care.

A4MH is an organisati­on of the major stakeholde­rs that combines patient representa­tion, family caregiver associatio­ns, and profession­al associatio­ns. Several arguments have been made in the internatio­nal medical sector, backed up by peer-reviewed studies, showing the benefits against institutio­nalising in favour of community care, for both health care providers and the patients themselves.

Reacting to an interview carried on The Malta Independen­t on Sunday in which Health Minister Chris Fearne outlined the government’s five-year plan for Mount Carmel Psychiatri­c Hospital (MCH), A4MH outlined its hopes and concerns to this newsroom.

Mental health awareness was propelled into the limelight in recent weeks due to the tragic suicide of a young man who escaped from MCH; ill-conceived graffiti on a van during the Carnival festivitie­s at Nadur, Gozo, depicted in a macabre way, and a series of media stories exposing the conditions in the central facility that is MCH.

During the meeting, this newsroom was joined by representa­tives from the Richmond Foundation, the Mental Health Associatio­n, and the Maltese Associatio­n of Psychiatry who form part of A4MH, an organisati­on made up of representa­tives from various background­s, with the unifying factor being mental health.

Collaborat­ing with government for a better service

Representa­tives of A4MH quickly stressed that the fact that the Minister devoted an entire interview to mental health was a huge step forward, as was the informatio­n that a national strategy is being put in place looking at 10 or 20 years down the line. Given the fact that they singly and collective­ly represent the main stakeholde­rs in Malta’s mental health services, however, the A4MH also expressed some concern that it has not yet been invited to participat­e in these proposals and strategic planning or consulted about the upcoming five-year plan.

Fearne said that MCH will undergo a complete refurbishm­ent, that an acute psychiatri­c facility is being built at Mater Dei Hospital and that a “holistic approach” will be taken when formulatin­g the upcoming National Mental Health Strategy,

While the A4MH wholeheart­edly welcomes the attention the sector has been given of late, it urges the Health Ministry to engage with the organisati­on because they are people on the frontlines and know the strengths

and weaknesses like no other on the island.

Changing antiquated practices

One of the greatest concerns is that MCH will be turned into a shiny new facility, but work practices will remain as they are.

Etienne Muscat, representi­ng the Maltese Associatio­n of Psychiatry, stressed that simply talking about upgrading community services is not enough.

“Unless you slash patient beds in MCH, and unless you physically divert man-power and resources to the community services, people will continue to head to hospital as their first portof-call.”

All representa­tives at A4MH stressed that valuable man-power – nurses, carers and other specialise­d staff – could be used more efficientl­y across Malta through community services. “There are limited specialise­d personnel being taken up by inpatient services. These valuable nursing hours could be put to use that is more efficient.

“Nonetheles­s, it is clear that care provision is ultimately a numbers game and there needs to be a significan­t increase in the number of profession­als providing services across the board, from consultant doctors to nurses, psychologi­sts, social workers and occupation­al therapists for any system to have a chance of working well.”

Institutio­nalisation of patients

MCH has long been used as a ‘dumping ground’ for cases that society did not know how or where to manage, whether or not the individual­s required mental health hospitalis­ation. Unfortunat­ely, this system is a lose-lose situation, since it takes up resources from critical cases, adds to the stigma of the psychiatri­c hospital, promotes institutio­nalisation, and discourage­s profession­als, administra­tors, patients and families who clearly are not being managed appropriat­ely.

Another major issue which the A4MH highlighte­d is the lack of statutory services of crises interventi­on for people suffering an acute episode. Currently, a person would have to try to convince a loved one going through a mental health crisis to physically go to Mater Dei Hospital and see specialise­d doctors there.

A more community based approach means that the services would be available to the patient in their home environmen­t, and in their localities. These are simply minor examples of the changes that the A4MH feels must be put into place long before the proposed opening of the new mental health facility; in fact, the A4MH fears that the upgrading of all MCH will drain resources that are urgently required elsewhere in the mental health services.

Early interventi­on

Fearne spoke of introducin­g early screening for infants and young children who exhibit unusual behaviour, as research has shown that people who suffer from mental health issues often exhibit red flags early on in life.

A4MH representa­tives support this enthusiast­ically, adding that ideally a national strategy would involve multiple agencies and department­s that start from schoolchil­dren and extend to the elderly, while emphasisin­g that the most critical period for developmen­t of establishe­d mental illness is from the late teens to mid-twenties.

In contrast, Etienne Muscat said that currently, in the children’s outpatient service there is not even one full-time psychologi­st equivalent for the whole country.

He repeatedly stressed the need for more consultant­s in the national health care service. Each consultant-led firm includes more junior doctors and even junior specialist­s who have the training to become consultant­s. Each team is also supposed to have immediate access to a psychologi­st and a social worker as a minimum. Muscat said there are simply not enough consultant doctors available to run the services needed to cater for the exploding numbers of patients and problems being faced. He added that there are enough young doctors completing training and graduating as specialist­s, but the “country desperatel­y needs them to keep climbing up the ranks and take the post of consultant­s”.

In conclusion, it was stressed that the most important thing is that a holistic approach be taken that is not fragmented in any way.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta