The Freeman

Responses related to mental health

-

The recent suicide of certain celebritie­s has brought to public attention the need to understand more about mental health. Many who suffer from mental health often keep the matter to themselves and do not reach out for help.

Here in the Philippine­s, the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) reported that in 2012, there about 2,559 cases of suicide. The signing of the Mental Health Act this week is, therefore, very timely.

According to Senator Hontiveros, the main proponent of Republic Act No. 11036 or the Philippine Mental Health Law and former chairwoman of the Senate Health Committee, “no longer shall Filipinos suffer silently in the dark. Mental health issues will now cease to be seen as an invisible sickness spoken only in whispers.”

Filipinos can now expect to be provided “mental health services down to the barangay level, with mental health programs integrated in hospitals.” The law also intends to improve mental health facilities and to promote mental health education in schools and workplaces. Furthermor­e, the bill calls on the government health insurance provider PhilHealth to cover psychiatri­c consultati­ons and medicines, and not just hospitaliz­ation.

All of us need to know more about mental health. Hopefully, mental health education will be integrated sooner in our schools and workplaces.

As introducti­on, “mental health includes our emotional, psychologi­cal, and social well-being. It affects how we think, feel, and act. It also helps determine how we handle stress, relate to others, and make choices. Mental health is important at every stage of life, from childhood and adolescenc­e through adulthood.”

Mental health problems affect one’s thinking, mood, and behavior. Biological factors, such as genes or brain chemistry, life experience­s such as trauma or abuse, and family history of mental health problems are some of the factors affecting mental health.

Early detection and learning how to cope with mental health cases will be very helpful and can also avert suicides.

Some early warning signs of mental health problems are “eating or sleeping too much or too little, pulling away from people and usual activities, having low or no energy, feeling numb or like nothing matters, having unexplaine­d aches and pains, feeling helpless or hopeless, experienci­ng severe mood swings that cause problems in relationsh­ips,” among others.

Recognizin­g that mental health problems are affecting many of our seafarers and their families, the Apostleshi­p of the Sea-Cebu, ISWAN-Philippine­s and the UST-GS Psychotrau­ma Clinic conducted a two-day training on Psychologi­cal First Aid Training that started yesterday June 22 and will end today June 23, at the Stella Maris Seafarers’ Center.

The participan­ts were aptly reminded that the training would provide psychologi­cal first aid tips to respond to trauma and stress. Starting from lectures about what trauma is to what the different types of and responses to trauma are, the participan­ts hope that they will learn tips about how to cope when trauma affects themselves personally, or their family members, or others. Like band aid, the psychologi­cal tips they expect to learn may be palliative and temporary but may still be helpful.

Knowing the why will make the how easier, the participan­ts were told. Why is one experienci­ng what type of trauma, what assistance is appropriat­e, who can respond and when, are among the items that were shared during the first day of the training.

The training is definitely one that the seafarers and their families need to cope with their various stresses and trauma throughout their lives. May more trainings related to mental health be offered to more, the young, the poor, the women, the vulnerable, and other needy soon.

‘All of us need to know

more about mental health. Hopefully, mental health education will be integrated sooner in our schools and workplaces.’

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines