MENTAL HEALTH
For some time everything seemed to be
going on normally in the household. Then in December of the following year, we took her to a psychiatrist who, after a detailed
examination, prescribed some medicine and advised us to ensure that the girl was not subjected to any pressure. Unfortunately for us the
doctor did not warn us that the disease might take a serious turn, and perhaps she did not know that in cases involving teenagers, more
than the drug ECT, family therapy is of utmost importance. She failed to advise us to approach the National Institute of Mental Health
and Neurological Sciences (NIMHANS) where alone this therapy was available in those days. This serious lapse on the part of the doctor
proved to be the ruin of a youngster's life and that of our whole family.
In July 1992 the illness blew up leading to an attempted suicide. Since then my daughter is undergoing treatment and has been put on all
the known drugs, including ECT, CPZ, CBZ, Haloperedol, Clozapine, Rispiridon and Aripiprazol. With these drugs not even the symptomatic
problems of the patient are taken care of. My daughter remained sick throughout her adolescence, her education was disrupted and so also
the development of her personality. With the loss of her learning ability, her inter-personal communication skills are now almost zero.
And with no worthwhile help coming from the Government or other agencies, we, the parents of this only child are finding it extremely
difficult to cope with the responsibility of caring for a patient who needs constant help and monitoring. We have gone through a virtual
hell all these years and the family has been wrecked mentally, physically as well as financially.
It pains us no end when even sensible people in our society react to a mental patient in delirium thus: "Maro ek do
thappad, pagal sidha ho jaega" (Give him a slap or two and the insane will be all right). Since they do not ordinarily die from their
illness, nor is mental illness contagious, nor is their disability physically visible, mental patients are being systematically and
continuously ignored and denied the social rights they deserve. Therefore, along with a change in mindset, there is a desperate need for
reform in the treatment of the mentally ill in our country, especially those with schizophrenia.
Although the hype about Clozapine, as the first reports indicated, has somewhat abated, these reports have now been replaced with the
despairing outcry from affected families: "Who will take care of my patient after I die?" The number of families covered by self-help
groups is so insignificant that it barely exceeds 500. Currently, there is no meaningful compensatory relief available for families
caring for mentally ill members. The awful communication gap among these families, and the unsupportive attitude of the media have served
as an ideal sanctuary for fooling, mauling, financially milking and depriving mental patients and their families.
Only on specific occasions, such as the World Mental Health Day, the Indian newspapers carry an article compulsorily authored by a
psychiatrist giving a rosy picture. Therefore, the full dimensions of the problems and needs of these patients and their families remain
unknown, and affected families are kept from coming together and voicing their problems in public.
Diane Froggatt, a leading authority on the subject who is Secretary of the World Fellowship for Schizophrenia and Associated Disorders,
commented in a private communication to the author : "Even those taking the absolutely best medications, be they Clozapine or Olanzapine
or others, do not claim to be cured. They are relieved of some of their worst symptoms but everyone knows that the negative symptoms are
barely touched by even the new medications. People may recover enough so that their parents can bear them at home and that the home is
not in chaos as it might have been before, but cure and recovery are not yet possible... people want to believe in recovery and are
therefore searching for even the tiniest evidence that some people are recovered, but there is no research to support this."
Today, it is therefore exceedingly important to urge governments not to jump on the 'recovery' bandwagon prematurely. Instead, they
should, at a minimum, move forward first on the essential reforms listed below. .. The Amendment Committee constituted under Prof. Amita
Dhanda defined mental illness as follows:
"Mental illnesses are disorders of mind that result in partial or complete disturbance in the person's thinking, feeling and behaviour
which very often result in recurrent or persistent inability or reduced ability to carry out activities of daily living, self-care,
education, employment and participation in social life. These disorders would include schizophrenia, obsessive compulsive disorder,
bipolar disorder and moderate or severe depression of at least three years duration with proof of continuous treatment."
All those who qualify as per this definition should be brought under the People With Disabilities Act (PWDA).
The annual budget allocation for the disabled should specify the amount earmarked for mental patients. Actual spending for mental
patients is almost zero. Indians donate generously to religious institutions but rarely if ever to organisations doing work for mental
patients. Therefore, at least 25 per cent of the Government budget for the disabled should be earmarked for mental patients.
Mental patients should have representation in all discussions and deliberations about their care. The patient representative should be
someone with a proven track record of rendering dedicated service in a rehabilitation center for at least ten years.
For female mental patients the issue of "Guardianship" is extremely important. NGOs under strict supervision of a Disability Commissioner
should be allowed to take up the responsibility at the expressed wish of the families. The arrangement should be made between families
and organisations and given proper legal sanction without any hurdle. Model holistic rehabilitation-cumpermanent homes should be
established as a joint venture of the Government, NGOs and families of chronic schizophrenic women.
The Government should seriously consider issuing of special India Relief Bonds bearing at least 12 per cent interest to NGOs working with
mental patients.
The members of this vast neglected group of schizophrenics, comprising almost one per cent of the population, are as much citizens of the
country as their 'normal' counterparts. As it is practically impossible that they take care of themselves, it is all the more important
that the State should provide them the means to live a dignified life. There is a real need to do reasearch on mental illnesses in order
to support these patients with appropriate treatments and posttreatment benefits to help them to reintegrate into society. Larger
budgets, more research and better treatment facilities are essential. The issues regarding these citizens need to be highlighted and the
society as a whole needs to be sensitised to their plight, and their support elicited through contributions of time and money.
Debabrata Kanjilal
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This issue of Manushi: Table of Contents
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