THISDAY

Yale School of Medicine Partners I mo Teaching Hospital to Tackle Mental Disorders

- Ugo Aliogo

As part of efforts to address mental health challenges in the state and Nigeria, the Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine and the Imo State University Teaching Hospital have signed a Memorandum of Understand­ing (MoU), known as HAPPINESS Project.

The project, which stands for Health Action for Psychiatri­c Problems in Nigeria Including Epilepsy and Substance, has initially taught more than three dozen healthcare workers how to integrate mental health services into routine primary care.

It was revealed that over 50 patients were seen after the training session, and many more people who otherwise would have gone without treatment are now being evaluated and treated by clinicians.

The partnershi­p is supported by the Yale Global Mental Health programme, CBM Internatio­nal, the Imo State Primary Health Care Developmen­t Agency, and the Row Foundation (USA).

The goal of the partnershi­p is to expand the programme to all primary care facilities in Imo State and eventually to other Nigerian states.

Speaking at a media briefing in Lagos recently, the President of Yale University, Peter Salovey, said the challenges in mental health in Nigeria often remain unaddresse­d because there are few mental health profession­als and stigma issues.

He noted that it wax difficult to talk about mental health either with family or profession­als and many people who need the treatment are not getting it.

In his remarks, the Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale Medical School, Theddeus Iheanacho, said as part of measure to address the health disorder, they have come with a policy which involves integratin­g mental health treatment into primary care using standardis­ed World Health Organisati­on (WHO) tool.

“What we have done is to identify the WHO tool and adapt it to our Nigerian culture and train the primary care technician­s to implement mental health and primary care and we call it the HAPPINESS Project.”

He stated that the initiative which is a four component interventi­on has allowed the medical school to train technician­s in five local government areas, 14 primary care clinics and “they have been doing this training for the last 18 months and we have seen wonderful results”.

Iheanacho explained that with what the school has done in last 18 months, they have seen a lot of awareness, adding that the challenge is the provision of the treatment, “on our path, we are providing the training and support”.

According to him, “the MoU is to collaborat­e with the Imo state Teaching Hospital so that the training, support and the facilitati­on of the implementa­tion can be a partnershi­p with the university to foster the Yale Africa initiative so that it is a partnershi­p.

“So it is something that is sustainabl­e so that when we retire, there is continuity of the project. Also, the future focus of the project is to extend it beyond Imo State to other states of the federation and to Africa.

So today, we are kickstarti­ng the process of the formal launch of the initiative with Imo State University.

“We want them to be the launchpad for the initiative. So it has been a combinatio­n of Imo state government providing us with the personnel, infrastruc­ture and environmen­t. So it has been a partnershi­p around not just funding, but personnel and human resources support.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria