Showing posts with label mental health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mental health. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 July 2018

Humanity Care: UPGs and SDGs 2

Mental Health and Non-Communicable Diseases 

Applications for the
Church-Mission Community and Unreached People Groups
(MH/NCDs--CMC/UPGs)

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There is a new advocacy article on mental health that Kelly has co-authored. It was written for the general public to better understand how mental health is linked to the physical non-communicable diseases (NCDs)--e.g., cancer, diabetes, respiratory, cardio-vascular, and the impact of unhealthy nutrition/diet, obesity, inactivity, harmful use of alcohol, tobacco, etc. The article is directly related to SDG 3.4: By 2030, reduce by one third premature mortality from non-communicable diseases through prevention and treatment and promote mental health and well-being.”  United Nations, Sustainable Development Goal 3.4
  

The article just went on the website for the NCD Alliance’s Enough Campaign—“Our health. Our right. Right now.. This major, global Campaign is bringing together the voices of hundreds of organizations, calling governments to fulfill their commitments to prevent and treat NCDs and doing so en route to the third High-Level Meeting on NCDs to be held at the UN New York this September. We have been tracking with the global efforts to prevent and treat NCDs for seven years (e.g., see Kelly’s summary of his time at the first NCD High Level Meeting on NCDs at the UN, CORE Member Care, 30 September 2011).  


We think MH-NCDs is especially relevant for the mission of the global-local Church e.g. (mental health as mission). We also see major applications for those working with Unreached People Groups (UPGs). See below for more information and perspectives oriented for the Church-Mission Community (CMC). Please do feel free share with others!
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Linking Mental Health/NCDs and UPGs
Opportunities for the Church-Mission Community
Mental health as mission--What are we waiting for?

“Take special note that approximately 80% of the [estimated 40 million annual] deaths from NCDs occur among people in low-middle income countries (LMICs). I hasten to add that many of the world’s poor live in LMICs and are in fact part of people groups that lack a viable Christian presence [Unreached People Groups, Least-Reached People Groups].”
Kelly O’Donnell, Finding our Global Integration Voices, CORE Member Care (30 September 2011).

By 2030, reduce by one third premature mortality from non-communicable diseases through prevention and treatment and promote mental health and well-being.”  United Nations, Sustainable Development Goal 3.4

Presenting a New Advocacy Article for Mental Health
Linking Mental Health and the NCD Alliance Campaign Priorities for the 2018 United Nations High-Level Meeting on NCDs is a new advocacy article, authored by Julian Eaton, Kelly O’Donnell, Lucy Westerman, and Fiona Adshead. Here is the summary: “Mental health conditions are one of the major groups of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) with crucial relevance in efforts to control and prevent NCDs. Mental health also has links to cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular and respiratory diseases and other physical NCDs. By considering mental ill health and other NCDs together, we can improve the lives of people affected by NCDs worldwide, and guide advocacy at global, regional and national level for strong commitments at the September 2018 UN High-Level Meeting on NCDs.”

The piece was done in association with the NCD Alliance, the World Federation for Mental Health, and the Mental Health Innovation Network. It was just posted on the NCD Alliance’s website (Enough Campaign) and is already making its rounds far and wide. This short piece contains many infographics and six key messages for action in order to quickly orient you to mental health and NCD issues and indeed the NCD epidemic.


Increasing Relevance for the Church-Mission Community and UPGs
The Church-Mission Community (CMC) has a vast number of local members/ministries around the world that are in strategic places to potentially help those with mental conditions and promote mental wellbeing. Mental health as mission is a viable albeit overlooked component of sharing the good news and good works—mission strategy. Here are two quotes that shine light on opportunities for the increased engagement by the CMC in mental health/NCDs, especially among Unreached People Groups (UPGs).

“NCDs can affect you and me and our loved ones. And they can and do affect mission/aid workers and certainly the people with whom they work. Understanding and preventing NCDs and encouraging healthy lifestyle choices should be a core part of the member care that we provide in mission/aid and in any global health efforts…”

“Take special note that approximately 80% of the [estimated 40 million annual] deaths from NCDs occur among people in low-middle income countries (LMICs). I hasten to add that many of the world’s poor live in LMICs and are in fact part of people groups that lack a viable Christian presence (UPGs, LPGs). Who are the people and organizations that are explicitly talking about the epidemic of NCDs in terms of people groups and Christian witness/responsibility? Or for that matter who is addressing the massive untreated mental health disorders in LMICs in view of Christian witness/responsibility? There is a huge opportunity for the church-mission community to confront the NCD epidemic as part of our commitment to bring love and healing to the peoples of the earth.” Kelly O’Donnell, Finding our Global Integration Voices, CORE Member Care (30 September 2011)


Mental Health as Mission: Resources for the CMC
-- New Global Member Care Model: February 2017
--Psychological First Aid: August 2016
--Global Mental Health as Mission–Overview and Opportunities: April 2016
--Migrant Care–Hospitality for Humanity: October 2015
-- Trauma: July 2015
-- Creative Tools for Healing: October 2014
-- Doing Mental Health Well: May 2014
--Mental Health and Psychosocial Support: September 2013
-- Mental Health as Mission: September 2012

Friday, 30 September 2011

MC-MH: Global Integration--6

Finding Our GI Voices

United Nations, New York

We are sharing a few thoughts on future directions for integration. Integration is a field of study which brings together the disciplines of mental health and theology in order to better understand and help humans and thus glorify God. The ongoing/additional links between member care (MC) and mental health (MH) are highly relevant for the global development of integration—global integration (GI). And GI is potentially very relevant for the global development of mission/aid and human health.

Note: This is a longer entry. For a quick overview see the yellow highlights. There are also many documents/links mentioned below. For a quick multimedia overview, watch the WHO video on NCDs. See also the Executive Summary from the World Health Organization’s Global Status Report on Non-communicable Diseases 2010.
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It is 20:00, 20 September 2011. I am on a train going from New York to New London. USA. It has been a rich and full two days at the United Nations High-Level Meeting (HLM) on Non-communicable Diseases (NCDs) and at the two previous days of meetings among the global mental health (GMH) community. I attended these events in my capacity as Coordinator of the Mental Health-Psychosocial Working Group for the Geneva-based NGO Forum for Health.

To my left, the illuminated Empire State Building soars effortlessly into the night sky. To my right, hundreds of twinkling lights peep out from the Long Island shoreline. And in front of me is the 13-page Political Declaration that was agreed upon yesterday by UN member states on combating non-communicable diseases. My weary body gently sways in time to the the rhythm of the train’s lateral movements as we scurry northbound along the steel tracks. Although my eyes are heavy with tiredness, my soul is invigorated as I reflect on what I experienced during these four full days.

Reflections on the United Nations HLM on NCD
There was an unmistakable, resounding SOS, packaged in exhortations and at times rebukes, sent out right at the start of the General Assembly on 19 September (see photo). Leading the charge were UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, WHO Director-General Margaret Chan, and many heads of state who in their opening speeches heralded the dire need for the world community to take action against NCDs and their causes. To paraphrase the Secretary-General: member states, civil society, and the private sectors must resolutely work together and “get tough” on NCDs, “hold everyone accountable”, and make sure that the disgraceful actions of a few (mostly levied against the tobacco, food, alcohol and media industries) do not sully the reputation of the many which are doing such important work to foster our progress.
Opening of the UN General Assembly in New York, 19 September 2011

(click here to watch a video of Ban Ki-moon's speech at the HLM)
(click here for the text of his remarks at the HLM)
(click here to watch a video of Margaret Chan's speech at the HLM)
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The four NCD disease entities being focused on are cardiovascular, chronic respiratory, cancer, and diabetes. These NCDs collectively represent a massive “epidemic” that accounts for approximately 38 million deaths each year. A substantial amount of these deaths are preventable and premature. As a reference point it is somewhat akin to attrition in the mission sector among the estimated 12,000 mission workers who leave for preventable, premature, and likely permanent reasons each year— although human death through NCDs of course is far graver. (Global Member Care: The Pearls and Perils of Good Practice 2011, pages 6-8)

Four risk factors (modifiable behaviors) associated with these NCDs are repeatedly emphasized: inactivity (lack of exercise), poor diet (including high intake of tans-fats, salts, and sugars), tobacco use, and alcohol abuse. Added to these risk factors is the key area of mental health (e.g., mental health state and mental disorders) as it too plays a crucial role in the prevention, development, and control of these NCDs.

Taken together, these four NCDs and their risk factors are “lifestyle diseases” that are developed over the course our one’s life and often from one’s way of living life. NCDs must also be definitely understood in the socioeconomic context that influences and reinforces them (e.g., poverty, lack of medical care, poor nutrition). They are also “problems without passports,” since they effortlessly cross all borders be they national, generational, ethnic, gender, etc.


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Reflections on Mental Health and Global Integration
Being at the UN meetings was an enriching and somber experience. I interacted with and/or listened to health advocates, researchers, practitioners, government officials, and health ministers. The meetings were attended by dozens of heads of state. People seemed sincerely committed to make a difference. It was great to be there and great to have been working together to combat NCDs before, during, and after this high-level meeting.

Nonetheless, many in the civil society and political sectors also wanted more explicit references and action points on mental health. Over the course of the two-day high-level meetings, there was almost no mention of the crucial role of mental health in the causes and treatments, the prevention and control of NCDs. Mental health-related co-morbidity is all over the pages of the research and the lives of NCD sufferers (e.g., depression for diabetics, see the summary from the Young Professionals Chronic Disease Network et al). Mental, neurological, and substance use conditions (MNSs) currently affect—and in many cases torment--some 450 million people worldwide, with the worldwide lifetime prevalence rate being about 25%. In addition, the new publication by the World Economic Forum and Harvard School of Public Health, among other findings, puts the annual cost of mental and neurological illnesses (also classified as NCDs) at 2.5 trillion US dollars, about three times the annual cost for cardiovascular illness.

For perspective though, almost everyone is positive about the need for good mental health. No one I met was anti-mental health at all . And it is true that there are many WHO-related documents regarding GMH (issues, research, resources). However this important historical input from WHO and other GMH sources was not prioritized in the high-level meeting nor in the overall NCD action plans—at least not yet. The rationale was that mental health has already been addressed amply over the past decade, for example via the WHO’s mhGAP program and thus it is being dealt with in other venues.

Four Missing Voices
Here are “four voices” that were missing at the HLM in New York. Again for some perspective, I know that others too have their own lists of missing voices based on their concerns/emphases: e.g., those involved in human rights, poverty eradication, maternal and child health, etc. There are so many challenging issues which plague humanity, and so many relevant and respectable voices clamoring for attention!

Voice One. There was a limited, albeit encouraging voice in the 13-page Political Declaration about the importance and integration of mental health in combating NCDs. Here are the two helpful references to mental health in this document.

"We, Heads of State and Government and representatives of States and Governments….5. Reaffirm the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health; 17. Note further that there is a range of other non-communicable diseases and conditions, for which the risk factors and the need for preventive measures, screening, treatment and care are linked with the four most prominent non-communicable diseases; 18. Recognize that mental and neurological disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease, are an important cause of morbidity and contribute to the global non-communicable disease burden, for which there is a need to provide equitable access to effective programmes and health-care interventions;..."

Voice Two. There was an almost non-existent voice about mental health during the meetings that I attended, from civil society, governments, and private industry. No plenarist that I heard dealt with it. And there was almost no time allotted for participants to raise questions and make comments at the main meetings about anything, mental health or otherwise. However, the Assistant Director General of WHO, Dr. Ala Alwan, was in fact briefly queried from the floor about the absence of mental health in the discourses. He affirmed the importance of mental health and said that it would be considered when the WHO Executive Board meets in January 2012 to work towards a review procedure to measure how the Political Declaration is being put into practice by member states. (WHO is tasked with this responsibility in the Political Declaration).

Voice Three. At the HLM itself, colleagues in the GMH field seemed by and large not present (or at least not visible/audible). There were few or no resources or summary documents available on mental health and NCDs. Many excellent NCD-related materials though were on tables in the back of meetings/rooms. In the run up to these meetings though, there was substantial, credible input about mental health, via several written statements on mental health and NCDs (as well as good opportunites for civil society/NGOs to express their concerns and dialogue about NCD-related matters at special UN/WHO gatherings--Moscow, April 2011; Geneva, May 2011; New York, June 2011). These statements culminated in two final Statements sent out in August/September 2011to colleagues and organizations, Ministers of Health, and government missions to the UN. The Statements call for mental health to be included in the agenda and action plan for the prevention and control of NCDs. One of these Statements was made by the World Federation for Mental Health and the other Statement was done jointly by the NGO Forum for Health (based in Geneva) and the NGO Committee on Mental Health (based in New York and part of the Conference on NGOs--CoNGO). (click here to see the one-page Statement and the approximately 100 signatories) Another helpful document that I received at a pre-UN meeting off-site was the two-page summary on mental health and NCDs (mentioned previously) done by the Young Professionals Chronic Disease Network et al as part of their overall recommendations and concerns about NCDs.
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Voice Four. All of this leads us to the focus of these weblog entries, Global Integration. There was also a missing voice from colleagues in the Christian faith-based community who are involved in integration. Could it be that integration and Global Integration did not show up? Or perhaps if it did, it did so more privately behind the scenes via people who informed by their professional work and faith, helped to shape the content and outcomes of the NCD process and documents. Very likely so. I know for sure too speaking more broadly, that many. many people of Christian faith from other disciplines and areas of concern, as is so often the case, were involved in the extremely important global NCD agenda.

My botttom line thought though is this. Integration as we know it (at least in what I call the the CANE context: Clinical-counseling, Academic, North American, Evangelical) may be quite at home and much needed in our classrooms or therapists’ offices. But Global Integration as we develop it must go beyond these familiar and important places. It must intentionally and resolutely venture into high-level conference rooms and government offices as well as settings chronically plagued  by human misery via horriffic povery, intractable conflicts, natural disasters, human rights violations, and limited to no access to adequate health care, especially mental health. WWJD....if he were a mental health professional?! 

Consultation at Cornell University Medical Center, New York, 17 September 2011.
"Mental Health as a Global Priority: One Voice, One Strategy" 
organized by the World Federation forMental Health with various co-sponsors. 

Looking Forward
I was thrilled, impressed, and grateful for the progress and commitments being made to prevent and control NCDs. I am glad social determinants of health (especially poverty and human rights) in NCDs were highlighted. I look forward to seeing the tangible outcome measures that WHO is to put together—to hopefully require (vs suggest/encourage) tough accountability for this important Political Declaration. I look forward to seeing mental health being increasingly included in the NCD agenda. I look forward to the growing coordination and unity among GMH as it gives strategic input on high-priority issues for human health. And I sincerely hope that Global Integration will increasingly find its voice in the global health agenda and the world body.

Reflection and Discussion
**Which of the NCD-related materials/ links above are of the most interest to you?
**How does or could the fight against NCDs affect your work in member care and mission/aid?
**What could be done to connect Global Integration more with the global realities related to human health?

Thursday, 30 December 2010

Member Care and Lausanne 3: Blog Four


The Lausanne 3 Conference brought together some 4000 people this past October in South Africa. Here are excerpts from one of the seven MCA blogs at the Global Conversation portal at Lausanne 3.

The main question of this particular blog:
How do mental disorders affect those in Unreached People Groups--and other vulnerable groups? Is the mission/aid community, like other social sectors and governmental bodies, focusing adequate resources on identifying and helping the millions of people who struggle with psychological conditions? Yes, No, or Probably?!



“Mental health is defined as a state of well-being in which every individual realizes his or her own potential, can cope with the normal stresses of life, can work productively and fruitfully, and is able to make a contribution to her or his community.”
World Health Organization, October 2009 http://www.who.int/features/factfiles/mental_health/en/index.html

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Mental disorders: What exactly are the issues, who has the responsibility to help, and what has been done and can be done? Have a look at these statistics as well as the resources below from the World Health Organization (WHO). See also our 20 March 2010 entry on Well-Being for All.

Global Mental Health Statistics—The Quick Overview
**According to WHO, mental, neurological, and substance use disorders “are common in all regions of the world, affecting every community and age group across all income countries. While 14% of the global burden of disease is attributed to these disorders, most of the people affected—75% in many low-income countries—do not have access to the treatment they need.” (WHO, launch of the mhGAP program)
• over 150 million have depression
• 25 million have schizophrenia
• 50 million have epilepsy
• over 100 million have drug or alcohol use disorders
• over one million suicides/year.

**In addition, “people with these disorders are often subjected to social isolation, poor quality of life and increased mortality. These disorders are the cause of staggering economic and social costs.” (WHO Department of Mental Health, The Bare Facts).

**Ten Facts on Mental Health (click link for a quick overview)

Some Core Resources—The Big Picture
**The WHO Report on Mental Health and Development: Targeting People with Mental Health Conditions as a Vulnerable Group. “The WHO report demonstrates that people with mental health conditions are vulnerable – not because of any inherent weakness, but as a result of the way they are treated by society. It illustrates how people are not only missed by development programmes, but can be actively excluded from these programmes, this despite the fact that an explicit goal of development is to reach the most vulnerable. It also presents a number of evidence-based strategies which are known to improve development outcomes for persons with mental health conditions and all vulnerable groups. The WHO report is a call to action to all development stakeholders – multilateral agencies, bilateral agencies, global partnerships, private foundations, academic and research institutions, governments and civil society – to focus their attention on mental health. By investing in people with mental health conditions, development outcomes can be improved.” (Dr. Michelle Funk, WHO Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse)

**The mhGAP Intervention Guide for Mental, Neurological and Substance Use Disorders in Non-Specialized Health Settings is a technical tool developed by WHO to help health care providers who are non-specialists manage primary conditions like depression, psychosis, bipolar disorders, epilepsy, developmental and behavioural disorders in children and adolescents, dementia, alcohol use disorders, drug use disorders, self-harm/suicide and other significant emotional or medically unexplained complaints. It is a model guide to be adapted for national and local needs.
**Integrating Mental Health into Primary Care: A Global Perspective is a special report by WHO/Wonca on how mental health has been integrated into primary health care systems in different countries (e.g., India, Iran, South Africa, Brazil). The report also outlines skills needed to help people with mental disorders.
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Reflection and Discussion
1. Based on the opening video and your own perspectives, whose responsibility is it to help those in “Unreached People Groups” who struggle with various mental conditions?

2. Can a focus on mental health conditions, like other major areas of human need, be a distraction from the more “spiritual” emphasis of mission and the more physical emphasis of aid? Or can mental health needs get lost between these two emphases? What do you think?

3. Share an observation or a practical example about how mental health, as defined by the WHO towards the top of this entry, has been practically integtrated into mission/aid work.

Friday, 30 April 2010

Culture and Diversity in Member Care—Part 7

International Cases:
Understanding the Diversity of Disorders

The Captive Robin, John Anster Fitzgerald, c.1864

Up the airy mountain, down the rushy glen,
We daren’t go a hunting, for fear of little men.
Wee folk, good folk, trooping all together;
Green jacket, red cap, and white owl feather….

By the craggy hillside, through the mosses bare,
They have planted thorn trees, for pleasure here and there.
Is any man so daring, as dig one up in spite,
He shall find their sharpest thorns, in his bed at night.

The Fairies by William Allingham (1824-1889)
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Elves, spooks, dwarves, demons, spirits, faeries, jinns, and all kinds of other-worldly creatures. The folklore of people around the world—and their serious belief systems too—are filled with them. Some of these entities are seen as elusive, playful, and mostly benign; others are viewed as noisome pranksters whose mischief interferes with one’s work and life; and still others are seen as malignant predators who can destroy people and thus need to be avoided or placated on a regular basis.

In member care, as in life, we want to promote understanding, respect, and competency regarding human diversity and cultural variation. Yet how far do we go when someone’s belief system significantly contrasts with our own worldview, scientific approach, and understanding of the development and resolution of human health issues? In some cases we can find some sturdy common ground (e.g., seeing sadness as being related to hard experiences). In other cases though the only common ground is quicksand (e.g., an acute life-threatening bout of appendicitis or cerebral malaria being related to the evil eye and needing to be treated via a potion or talisman.)

As the culture-bound syndromes and international case studies below indicate, people from so many cultures do in fact attribute their “visible wellbeing to invisible beings” along with nasty curses and a host of other ideas which baffle our understanding of “cause and effect” (e.g., shenkui in China involves marked anxiety or panic accompanied by semantic complaints in males, attributed to excessive semen loss.) Many cultures still view human health, including the origin and cure of problems then, as inextricably influenced by a supernatural or at least paranormal world.

Ready to be stretched in your understanding of mental health in different cultures? If so, tighten your belts, unpack your conceptual bags, put your conventional member care tools temporarily in the file cabinet, and try to get a hold of (and grasp!) the “unusual” materials from the sources below!

Or if you can’t wait to locate/access these sources, then check out Curious Mental Illnesses Around the World and read the short descriptions of koro, latah., brain fag, anorexia, and amok.

For an overview of culture bound syndromes, go to: http://homepage.mac.com/mccajor/cbs_intro.html
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Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders: Fourth Edition TR (DSM IV-TR)
(American Psychiatric Association, 2000)
This is the most widely used diagnostic manual for psychological disorders. The fourth edition was published in 1994, revised in 2000, and the next version is due in 2013 (DSM-V). One of its most helpful contributions regarding the role of culture is found in the appendix "Outline for Cultural Formulation and Glossary of Culture Bound Syndromes". It consists of two parts:

• a. Part one is a short outline to evaluate the cultural context as it relates to diagnosis and treatment (e.g., cultural identity/connection, cultural explanations of a person's problems, cultural understanding of social stressors and supports, cultural factors influencing the client-clinician relationship, and the overall impact of cultural factors on diagnosis and care).

• b. Part two provides a fascinating list of some of the more common "afflictions and illnesses" that are found in different cultures and which can be encountered in clinical practice. Some of these conditions overlap with DSM-IV diagnoses although often the types of symptoms, course, explanations, and social responses are influenced by the local cultural perspectives. Unfortunately we have not found an online source for viewing this material (please let us know if you find one) and hence one has to get a hard copy of the book.

Diagnostics and Statistics Manual IV-TR Casebook
(American Psychiatric Association, 2000)
The very helpful casebook includes 70 pages of various examples of diagnoses and problems in different countries and cultures. These examples are included in the section called "International Cases." This section offers the local cultural/indigenous views of afflictions/illnesses along with DSM IV diagnostic considerations. You will note that in many of these cases there is the attribution and complaint some sort of spirit possession/influence. Unfortunately we have not found an online source for viewing this material (please let us know if you find one) and hence one has to get a hard copy of the book.

Reflection and Discussion
1. What did you think of the descriptions of the disorders mentioned in:

2. How might some of the supernatural attributions in other cultures affect the member care work you do or as you live and work cross-culturally? Any examples?

3. Disorders in Western psychology usually involve three elements:
**Distress emotionally
**Disability behaviourally
**Duration over time.

Recall a situation in your life when you were really struggling and all three elements were going on.
Did you have a “disorder” and if so what was it?

4. Some argue that disorders are better understood as responses to life circumstances/challenges rather than some invading pathogen or pathological entity. What do you think?

5. In your worldview, is there a distinction between imaginary spirits and actual spirits? If so, describe.

Monday, 19 April 2010

Culture and Diversity in Member Care--Part 6

Global Mental Health: Issues and Interviews

Skina, aged 9, being treated for injuries from a cluster bomb.
It exploded while she and her cousins were playing with it.
Photo taken 20 August 2006. Courtesy IRIN.

Humans, close-up.
Contributing in new ways internationally.
Connecting in new ways intentionally.
Crossing sector/discipline zones.
Crossing conflict/calamity zones.
As a member care field.
As a member caregiver.
Humans, close-up.
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Spotlight:
"The Banyan is a not for profit organization based in Chennai, India. It works for the cause of homeless persons with mental illness. Over the last 13 years, The Banyan has rescued over 1500 women and enabled close to 1000 women, not just recover from the illness but to also trace their lost steps back to their families and communities." See the short video:  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=THdLdJDc6go
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One helpful way to stay in touch with international health issues--and to stretch beyond our own cultural and disciplinary boundaries-- is via multimedia resources available on line. An example is the short interviews done with international researchers and practitioners in mental health and related areas, from Global Health TV. Have a look at some of these video links below from Global Health TV. Each one is about three minutes long.

We continue to encourage us all to provide and develop member care in light of the global health context and other important international issues. We find that it is helpful to stay connected with a health area and/or international issue that we are particularly passionate about (including organizations, practitioners, resources etc related to the area/issue). A byproduct is that we will probably enhance our understanding of cultural variation and human diversity and thus be more effective in member care.

Conference Preview for Geneva Health Forum 2010—Movement for Global Mental Health
Dr. Vikram Patel (author of Where There Is No Psychiatrist and editor of the Lancet journal series on Global Mental Health) gives a short update on some of the issues for mental health internationally and a preview of what he will share at the Geneva Health Forum next week.

The Global Burden of Depression
According to the World Health Organization, depression will be the leading cause of illness around the globe. Dr Ian McPherson from the National Mental Health Unit in England shares about the relationship between employment and mental health and the need to prioritise mental health in the global health agenda.

Overcoming Global Oppression Against Women
Sheryl WuDunn is a Pulitzer prize-winning author .She shares about her new book, Half the Sky: Turning Oppression Into Opportunity for Women Worldwide. The material in the book can be used as a toolkit to take action against oppression.

Stress in the Womb
Prenatal stress can have a long-term consequences. Here is a snippet from Vivette Glover, a researcher at Imperial College London, who advocates that reducing stress during pregnancy could help prevent emotional and behavioural problems in children.
 http://www.globalhealthtv.com/#/news/stress_in_the_womb/

Global Mental Health
The Movement for Global Mental Health was launched in 2009 in Athens. Its purpose is to improve services for people with mental health conditions worldwide, promote human rights/protection of those affected, and for more research in low-middle income countries. Psychiatrist Professor Vikram Patel explains that mental health deserves an equal footing with other major health problems such as HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria and maternal health.

Reflection and Discussion
1.What did you think of the Banyan video from Chennai, India?

2. Which of the four interviews above interested you the most and why?

3. What is an international health area and/or international issue that really interests you?

4. Briefly mention how you stay practically informed and connected to an international health area or international issue.

5. List three ways that member care workers and those with member care responsibility can benefit from staying connected to international health areas and international issues. 

Saturday, 20 March 2010

Culture and Diversity in Member Care—Part 4

Well-Being for All

 Would you tell me the way to Somewhere…
There’s room from for us all in Somewhere…
The Somewhere meant for me.
Walter de la Mare

“Mental health is defined as a state of well-being
in which every individual realizes his or her own potential,
can cope with the normal stresses of life,
can work productively and fruitfully,
and is able to make a contribution to her or his community.”
World Health Organization, October 2009
http://www.who.int/features/factfiles/mental_health/en/index.html
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Promoting the well-being of mission/aid workers is the major focus of member care. As we support workers with our services/resources we also vicariously support the people with whom they work. Some of these people, along with their friends, relatives, communities, and indeed nations are seriously affected by mental, neurological, and substance use disorders.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO) these disorders “are common in all regions of the world, affecting every community and age group across all income countries. While 14% of the global burden of disease is attributed to these disorders, most of the people affected—75% in many low-income countries—do not have access to the treatment they need.” (WHO, launch of the mhGAP program, http://www.who.int/mental_health/mhgap/en/index.html) In addition, “people with these disorders are often subjected to social isolation, poor quality of life and increased mortality. These disorders are the cause of staggering economic and social costs.” (WHO Department of mental health, The Bare Facts http://www.who.int/mental_health/en/index.html)

Making Connnections
Is there a connection between member care, the international mental health field, and the emphasis on human diversity/cultural variation? You bet! One way to better support mission/aid workers via member care is by equipping all of us to better understand: a) how mental health issues affect the diversity of people with whom we all work and b) how a particular culture understands/deals with mental health issues. Sadly, in many cases there will be major misinformation, stigma, and lack of resources to help those who struggle with mental health. Mental health per se may also not be an important component of discipleship, church growth, relief care, human rights, or other emphases in mission/aid. It could be and should be. 

One practical way for those in member care to help is to connect with some of the core materials from organizations like WHO. For example, have a look through the WHO web site in the mental health area section. Much of it is designed to give people a quick grasp of the worldwide mental health situation.

Some suggestions:
1. Begin with these two multimedia items:
**Watch the five minute video about WHO’s 2008 mhGap program. This video gives a good overview of international mental health needs and makes a plea to work together to help people to promote mental health for all. There is no health without mental health! http://www.who.int/mental_health/mhgap/en/

2. Then have a look at:
**The Bare Facts is a  fact sheet on mental health statistics (e.g., an estimated 877,000 people commit suicide each year). http://www.who.int/mental_health/en/index.html
**Some core reflections on human rights, law, and mental health.
http://www.who.int/mental_health/policy/fact_sheet_mnh_hr_leg_2105.pdf

3. For more detailed reviews and information:
**Links to special articles that review global mental health in the Lancet journal from the UK (2007).
**The Mental Health Atlas from 2005 which “provides essential information on mental health for 192 countries includes including epidemiology, mental health policy, substance abuse policy, national mental health programme…mental health facilities…and other relevant information.”
 http://www.who.int/mental_health/evidence/atlas/

One need not be a mental health professional to benefit from the information and resources listed on the WHO site! You will likely find the material to be practical for your own life and work in member care and mission/aid. Remember: an important part of respecting human diversity involves respecting people from all cultures who struggle with mental disorders. They especially are vulnerable and have rights to adequate care, opportunities, and well-being.

More Thoughts on Mental Health/Member Care
“Hundreds of millions of people worldwide are affected by mental, behavioural, neurological and substance use disorders. For example, estimates made by WHO in 2002 showed that 154 million people globally suffer from depression and 25 million people from schizophrenia; 91 million people are affected by alcohol use disorders and 15 million by drug use disorders. A recently published WHO report shows that 50 million people suffer from epilepsy and 24 million from Alzheimer and other dementias.” (WHO, The Bare Facts, http://www.who.int/mental_health/en/index.html)

Mission/aid personnel are often in influential places where they can help make a difference. Greater awareness and some basic training about mental health issues especially in their setting/cultural context can be a great way to support their work with others. Member care workers themselves can also consider ways—new ways—to use their training to help make a difference in the diverse settings where mission/aid workers are located. There are plenty of national Christian workers (12 million) along with “foreign” mission workers (4000,000) who could be better supported and further trained to consider mental health issues in the ministry/work that they are doing. (stas from Johnson, Barrett, an Crossing, January 2010, International Bulletin of Missionary Research).

Reflection and Discussion--And Leave A Comment!
1. Respond to the rationale above that advocates for the increased involvement of the member care field in international mental health issues. For instance, is this a distraction, a specialized focus, a responsibility, an opportunity, etc? Are there any other rationales that are impportant to mention?

2. Briefly describe how linking member care and international mental health relates to respecting human diversity/cultural variation.

3. An emphasis on respecting human diversity and cultural variation may not always have a positive impact on the quality of member care that we provide mission/aid workers. How is this so? Give a couple examples.

4. What are some possible ways that you and your organizations could get better informed and practically involved in mental health as described above? What would you specifically like to do?

5. Which of the mental health materials on the WHO web site were the most helpful for you? How could you share these materials with others?

Monday, 22 February 2010

Culture and Diversity in Member Care—Part 2

Mental Health for All

Up into the cherry tree
Who should climb but little me?
I held the trunk with both my hands
And looked abroad on foreign lands.
Robert Louis Stevenson


We are reviewing materials that promote understanding, respect, and competency regarding human diversity and multicultural settings. One of the most outstanding resources we know is a book written to practically help health care workers in almost any setting around the world—Where There is No Psychiatrist. Member care workers and all those with member care responsibility, regardless of their mental health backgrounds, will also find this manual to be very helpful and at times probably even fascinating!

Think of this as a reference tool to better support the well-being of mission/aid personnel. Think of it also as a tool for mission/aid workers to get a better understanding of common mental health problems that can affect the variety of people with whom they work.

Where There Is No Psychiatrist: A Mental Health Care Manual (by Vikram Patel, Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2003) Summary below and purchase information is from Teaching-Aids at Low Cost (TALC). You can also preview this book at Google Books.

“After giving the reader a basic understanding of mental illness, the book goes on to describe more than 30 clinical problems associated with mental illness, and uses a problem-solving approach to guide readers through their assessment and management. There is also a section which contains quick reference information for common problems. The manual is divided into four sections with the first giving an overview of mental illness and dealing with the different types of mental disorders using a simple classification; the second deals with clinical problems including a chapter on the most disturbing and worrying clinical problems that you will encounter, the third covers integrating mental health and considers how mental health can be promoted in the community, the fourth discusses localising the manual for your area and accessing resources.”

Reflection and Discussion
1. Recall a cross-cultural situation in which you were trying to help a person with mental health needs. What helped and what did not help?

2. List three basic principles for helping someone from another culture who seems to be struggling with some type of life problem.

3. How might you approach someone who is struggling with a problem if this person were a colleague, or a neighbour, or a student/person you were training?

4. How could some of the materials in Where There Is No Psychiatrist be used to further train people in your organization/setting? Who would specifically benefit from going through this training?

5. List a couple ethical considerations when using the materials in this book in cross-cultural settings.