Audio By Carbonatix
Anxiety over the outbreak of Covid-19 especially the fear of catching the virus combined with depression caused by the collapse of businesses has led to an upsurge of mental illness in Kumasi, Ghana’s second largest city.
The Psychiatry Unit of the Komfo Anokye Teaching Hospital (KATH), a specialist mental facility for the middle belt and northern sectors, has been seeing more mental cases in the aftermath of the lifting of the partial lockdown, imposed in Greater Kumasi, and other parts of the country, by the government to contain and stop the spread of the virus.
Dr. Ruth Owusu-Antwi, Head of the Unit, told journalists that daily reported cases had shot up from between 12 and 15, to 20 and 25.
Follow up cases had also climbed to about 120 from the pre-lockdown figures which ranged between 80 and 100 cases.
The Unit, established in 1981, has not seen any expansion over the years, and the continued increase in admissions and Out-Patients Department (OPD) cases is putting intense pressure on it.
It has been seeing about 15,000 patients, every year, but has space for only 11 beds, something that is making it difficult to deliver quality care.
Dr. Owusu-Antwi said the inadequate space was forcing doctors and nurses to sit in the corridors to provide services to patients, adding that, this was bad for patient-doctor confidentiality.
Doctors are often compelled to discharge patients, earlier than they should - before their full recovery.
She made reference to a recent study conducted at the Accra, Pantang and KATH Psychiatry, which showed that the latter “has the highest relapse rate” and said this was attributable to the situation, where patients are made to go home when they are not fully recovered.
She therefore appealed to the government, individuals and organizations to support the facility to complete an expansion project, it had started.
Dr. Owusu-Antwi gave the other causes of psychiatric problems as post-partum psychosis, depression, anxiety disorder and substance dependency disorders.
She underlined the unswerving determination of the Unit to continue to provide quality professional psychiatric services to improve the mental health of the people despite the constraints.
She asked that more clinical psychologists are employed by the government to assist in handling the rising cases of mental illness.
Latest Stories
-
Tera Carissa Hodges joins global creatives to discuss cultural sovereignty at AfroCannes 2026
13 minutes -
TCDA CEO leads charge to scale up cashew apple value addition opportunities
21 minutes -
MGL’s May Day Egg market ends in resounding success as crowds turn out for affordable eggs
59 minutes -
Energy expert advocates increased private-sector role in power distribution to tackle dumsor
1 hour -
Tony Asare Writes: A clotted artery, by-passes and detours
1 hour -
No road project cancelled under Mahama’s reset agenda — Roads Minister
1 hour -
Mahama praises IGP Yohunu, hails intelligence-led policing at Krobo-Odumase commissioning
1 hour -
“Energy situation is stable” – John Jinapor assures Ghanaians
1 hour -
Ghana Tuna Association reaffirms sustainability commitment on World Tuna Day
1 hour -
Mahama commissions Odumase Krobo Divisional Police HQ, boosts operations with vehicles
2 hours -
Roads Minister urges contractors to stay on site, assures prioritised payments
2 hours -
Suhuyini credits Ameri plant for averting 2024 power crisis in Kumasi
2 hours -
Thirteen killed in Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon, health ministry says
2 hours -
Tano North MP sounds alarm over galamsey devastation, accuses officials of shielding perpetrators
2 hours -
Digital wealth, analog poverty: Why technology isn’t closing the gap
2 hours