Abstract

BackgroundThis survey provides data on the Mental Health System in Ghana for the year 2011. It supplies essential planning information for the implementation of Ghana’s new Mental Health Act 846 of 2012, a renewal of the Ghana 5 year plan for mental health and it contributes to international knowledge base on mental health. It provides a baseline from which to measure future progress in Ghana and comparison data for use in other countries. In addition to reporting our findings we describe and analyse deficiencies and strengths of the Ghana mental health system.MethodsWe used the World Health Organization’s Assessment Instrument for Mental Health Systems (WHO-AIMS) to collect, analyse, and report data on the mental health system and services for all districts of the ten regions of Ghana. Data was collected in 2012, based on the year 2011.ResultsIn 2011, Ghana was a lower middle income country with a population of approximately 25 million. A mental health policy, plan and legislation were in place. Mental health legislation was outdated and no longer in line with best practice standards. Services were significantly underfunded with only 1.4% of the health expenditure going to mental health, and spending very much skewed towards urban areas. There were 123 mental health outpatient facilities, 3 psychiatric hospitals, 7 community based psychiatric inpatient units, 4 community residential facilities and 1 day treatment centre, which is well below what would be expected for Ghana’s economic status. The majority of patients were treated in outpatient facilities and psychiatric hospitals and most of the inpatient beds were provided by the latter. There were an estimated 2.4 million people with mental health problems of which 67,780 (ie 2.8%) received treatment in 2011. The were 18 psychiatrists, 1,068 Registered Mental Nurses, 19 psychologists, 72 Community Mental Health Officers and 21 social workers working in mental health which is unbalanced with an unbalanced emphasis on nurses compared to what would be expected.ConclusionsThe main strength of the mental health system was the presence of a long established service with staff working across the country in outpatients departments and hospitals. The main weakness was that government spending on mental health was very low and the bulk of services, albeit very sparse, were centred around the capital city leaving much of the rest of the country with almost no provision. Service provision was dominated by nurses with few other professions groups present.

Highlights

  • This survey provides data on the Mental Health System in Ghana for the year 2011

  • Mental Health Policy and Plans Policy is formulated by the Ministry of Health and implemented through the Ghana Health Service

  • In 2011, a mental health policy that had last been revised in 1996 was in place. It did not cover the integration of mental health into primary care, downsizing psychiatric hospitals or the protection of human rights of patients but it did include the following WHO-AIMS components:

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Summary

Introduction

This survey provides data on the Mental Health System in Ghana for the year 2011. It supplies essential planning information for the implementation of Ghana’s new Mental Health Act 846 of 2012, a renewal of the Ghana 5 year plan for mental health and it contributes to international knowledge base on mental health. In addition to reporting our findings we describe and analyse deficiencies and strengths of the Ghana mental health system This survey was conducted to meet pressing needs for high quality information for the Mental Health System in Ghana for; Renewal of the 2007–2011 Mental Health Programme of Work. Over 100 countries have participated in the WHO AIMS project [1] It was first conducted in Ghana in 2005 [2] but that survey was limited and relied on much extrapolation. This is the first mental health system survey in Ghana that has covered the whole country. The population in 2010 was 24,392,000 million of which, 51% were living in urban areas [3]

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