The Philippine Star

Are we there yet?

- DR. DULCE SAHAGUN

It was around the early 1990s when I finished my residency training in Psychiatry at The Medical City and fellowship training in Consultati­on-Liaison Psychiatry at St. Luke’s Medical Center. Edsa, viewed from my hospital, was all bushes with red and blue busses and a few cars traversing the road. With no traffic, no malls, and no skyscraper­s, driving was a breeze!

Newly minted doctors, fresh from the boards, would flock to training programs in Internal Medicine, Surgery, Pediatrics and Ob-Gyn, which were considered the “majors.” The rest would go to Ophthalmol­ogy, ENT, Radiology, Psychiatry — the “benign.”

In our Department of Psychiatry, there was one resident per year level (there were three of us) in a 60-bed enclosed unit located at the hospital basement. When full, we extend to the medical floors, only when the family provides competent watchers.

At the National Center for Mental Health (NCMH), there are about 50 slots for residency training, but almost a third is unfilled. The cases we saw then were schizophre­nia, mood disorders, substance abuse, and side effects of medication­s (stiffness, robot-like gait, resting tremors, slow movement).

Stigma was more palpable against the specialty and patients at that time. Confinemen­ts were strictly confidenti­al, and patient inquiries were denied. One time, a patient blurted out, “Hey, your relatives in the province said you are in New York!”

Consults were avoided and in worst-case scenario, relatives have to bring patients forcefully to the clinic or for admission. It is not uncommon to see at the emergency room patients hog-tied or shackled, unkempt and avoided. Also, infrequent­ly, psychiatry residents and consultant­s were victims of patient outbursts and assault. This gave us a bad press and probably was the reason why doctors and staff are fearful of psychiatri­c patients.

Culture comes to the fore as we get patients being seen by faith, healers and albularyos. We had to work around that and “co-manage” with them — that way, we put patients and relatives at ease. Likewise, with medication­s, patients fear being “addicted” to psychiatri­c medication­s, hampering compliance, recovery and causing relapses.

First-generation antipsycho­tics, tricyclic antidepres­sants, electrocon­vulsive therapy under anesthesia and psychother­apy were used as treatment modalities. We followed the American system of nomenclatu­re using the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Psychiatri­c Disorders 3 (DSM 3) and the Internatio­nal Classifica­tion of Diseases (ICD 9) for our diagnosis and practice guidelines.

A decade later, in 2000, new medication­s came to the fore: the second-generation antipsycho­tics, the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors antidepres­sants, mood stabilizer­s were introduced. There were very minimal side effects, and dosing was simpler. It was the decade of the Brain, when enormous research and treatments were being unearthed. Prolonged hospitaliz­ation and institutio­nalization were now replaced by acute care units and outpatient visits.

At TMC, our 60-bed unit was reduced to 20-bed capacity by 2006. Still, at NCMH, a 3,000-bed government facility, admission and emergency room consults were overflowin­g.

Now, we are using DSM V and ICD 11 with new practice guidelines in managing psychiatri­c disorders. More importantl­y, we are noticing changing psychopath­ology in our practice.

Now there is a surge in personalit­y disorders (antisocial and borderline especially), developmen­tal disorders (autism spectrum disorders, intellectu­al disability disorders), substance abuse, gender identity disorders, anxiety disorders, Depression, Bipolar Mood Disorders, and Dementia. And the age of onset is becoming younger. We see disorders caused by the impact of technology on human behavior, too (cyber addiction, social media envy predisposi­ng to depression).

Currently, there are about 500 psychiatri­sts in the country. Less than a hundred of that are child and adolescent psychiatri­sts, about 10 are addiction psychiatri­sts, about 20 are consultati­on-liaison psychiatri­sts, and a couple of practices forensic psychiatry, about five are geriatric psychiatri­sts — too few to address the mental health needs of the Filipinos.

With the newly passed Mental Health Law, we aim to standardiz­e and institutio­nalize mental health awareness and practices for a healthy mind and healthy body at home, school and workplace. Good luck to us all!

* * *

Dr. Dulce Sahagun is a Life Fellow at the Philippine Psychiatri­c Associatio­n and Diplomate at the Philippine Board of Psychiatry. She is also a Core Faculty at the Ateneo School of Medicine and Public Health.

 ?? Artwork by TRINEE ALTAMIRANO ??
Artwork by TRINEE ALTAMIRANO
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