The Star Early Edition

‘Friendship benches’ exported to W Cup

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SITTING next to a patient with depression on a garden bench in Zimbabwe’s capital Harare, 70-yearold Shery Ziwakayi speaks gently, offering accessible therapy with a warm and reassuring smile.

“You have made the right decision to come to see mbuya,” she tells her client, using the Shona word for “grandmothe­r” and offering a handshake.

A Zimbabwean doctor has come up with a novel way of providing desperatel­y needed mental health therapy for his poorer compatriot­s by using lay health workers, colloquial­ly referred to as “grandmothe­rs”.

Psychiatry professor Dixon Chibanda’s concept is simple: a wooden park bench where people experienci­ng common mental disorders sit and receive free therapy.

Chibanda’s Friendship Bench has proved popular and offered much-needed, accessible therapy. Decades of economic hardships and deepening poverty have taken a mental toll on many Zimbabwean­s, imposing a huge burden on underfunde­d and understaff­ed psychiatri­c health services.

The Friendship Bench has helped bridge a shortage of profession­al health-care workers in Zimbabwe – which has only 14 psychiatri­sts, 150 clinical psychologi­sts and less than 500 psychiatri­c nurses serving a population of 16 million people.

“We need these alternativ­e innovation­s to narrow the gap and my idea is to use grandmothe­rs to provide therapy,” said Chibanda, wearing dreadlocks

and round-framed spectacles.

The benches are spaces “to share stories and through storytelli­ng we can all be healed,” he said.

His therapy model is now being exported to the football World Cup in Qatar, where 32 benches – each representi­ng a team competing in the Fifa tournament – will be set up to cast the spotlight on global mental health.

The World Cup project is in partnershi­p with the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), whose chief, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, has praised the initiative as “a simple yet powerful vehicle for promoting mental health”.

It is “a reminder of how a simple act of sitting down to talk can make

a huge difference to mental health,” Tedros said recently.

Other countries which have adopted the friendship bench model include Jordan, Kenya, Malawi, Zanzibar and the US – where 60000 people in the Bronx and Harlem areas have accessed the therapy.

In Zimbabwe, about 70% of the population live below the poverty threshold.

Chibanda’s idea of friendship benches germinated after a patient he was treating at a government hospital took her life.

“She didn’t have $15 (R862) bus fare to come to the hospital to receive treatment for the depression,” he said. |

 ?? AFP ?? COUNSELLOR “Gogo” Shery Ziwakayi, right, sits on a ‘Friendship Bench’ in conversati­on with a client during a free mental health therapy session in Harare earlier this month. |
AFP COUNSELLOR “Gogo” Shery Ziwakayi, right, sits on a ‘Friendship Bench’ in conversati­on with a client during a free mental health therapy session in Harare earlier this month. |

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