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Need for More Mental Health Services for the Young

09 Dec, 2018 |

Oman  is  an  emerging  economy  which  has  witnessed  rapid  development  and  demographic  shift  over  the  past  four  decades.  With  such  changes,  the  country  has  witnessed  a  surge  in  the  number  of  young  people  with  various  mental  health  problems.  A specialist in behavioral medicine at SQU Hosptial, in a commentary, says that despite the increasing need for mental health services for the young, there is a scarcity of such services in Oman due to severe shortage and maldistribution of facilities. In a paper published in London Journal of Primary Care, Dr. Hassan Mirza from the Department of Behavioral Medicine at SQU Hospital, outlines how Oman is delivering mental  health  services for the young despite the challenges.

Citizens constitute 54% of the population of Oman, with half of that population less than 25 years of age. Dr. Hassan Mirza’s article says that Muscat is the largest city of Oman where the majority of the population resides, and the only city with Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS). “Overall, there is a scarcity of CAMHS in Oman”.

Oman’s national health system is offered free of charge to all the citizens from birth to grave. The World Health Organization  (WHO),  in  its  first-ever  comparative  analysis  of  health  systems  in  2000,  ranked  Oman  first  among  191  WHO  member  states  for  its  overall  performance  on  the  level  of  health.  The United Nations 2010 Human Development Report listed Oman at the top of the world’s 10 leading countries that have made the greatest progress in recent decades in public health. As  a  relatively  high-income  country  in  the  past  four  decades,  Oman  has  benefited  from  improved  standards  of  living. But, according to Dr. Mirza,  the  country  has  witnessed  a  surge  in  the  number  of  young  people  with  cognitive,  emotional  and  behavioral  disorders.  He says, “Despite this surge, many do not seek care from qualified mental health professionals”.

The first CAMH service was established in late 1990’s at the Sultan Qaboos University Hospital (SQUH) with rudimentary services. More recently, CAMHS has developed a more comprehensive and multidisciplinary approach. Due to the demand, beds are available for urgent admissions, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, making it the only psychiatric inpatient service for young people in Oman. It aims to offer comprehensive care for children and young people up to the age of 18 presenting with mental health disorders.  The  service  at SQU Hospital offers  both  outpatient  and  inpatient management, with the latter being a unique service making  it  mandatory  for  a  caregiver  to  reside  with  the  young person on the ward during the inpatient stay. Such policy  has  attracted  major  public  appeal,  making  it  the  service of choice for inpatient management over the sister institute, Al-Massarah Hospital (AMH), which is the only psychiatry hospital in Oman operated by the Ministry of Health, and has very recently started to offer admissions for  young  people.  In addition, ancillary initiatives such as psychometric services have gained momentum. This is  complemented  by  the  necessary  social  support  and  by  the  generation  of  school  reports  by  psychologists  and  social  workers  within  the  multidisciplinary  team.

Moreover, in 2017, for the first time, the Ministry of Social Development in Oman launched a 24/7 child protection hotline, which aims to combat child abuse and neglect in the country. The toll-free hotline is a leading national project to protect children in Oman, and works  closely  with all health care institutes across the country, including CAMHS at SQUH. The unit’s ultimate goal in SQUH is for the multidisciplinary teams to work  collaboratively  in order to help and assist patients and families to work towards recovery together.

In the last quarter of 2016, a pilot project for adult attention deficit  hyperactivity  disorder  (ADHD)  was initiated at SQUH. This was the first and currently the only adult ADHD service in Oman with an ambition to be the centre for research, training, and spreading awareness of adult ADHD. The clinic has been very well received by the service users and their caregivers, as in the past, there was  no  provision  for  the  management  of  young  people  that continue to experience ADHD symptoms into adult- hood, with many being discharged from the CAMHS unit to  their  general  practitioners  without  a  comprehensive  shared care plan.

“Currently, the only two institutes with CAMHS in Oman, SQUH and AMH, offer services to the whole country. Both are  located  in  Muscat,  require  many  service  users  to  commute  long  distances,  resulting  in  children  missing  school  and  care  givers  taking  the  day  off  work.  Therefore, it is due to these current challenges that future perspectives  focus  on  ensuring  that  more  psychiatry trainees  pursue  careers  in  child  and  adolescent  psychiatry, with an ambitious vision to develop basic CAMHS in all secondary and tertiary health care providers in Oman”, Dr. Mirza concludes his paper.

Dr. Mirza’s analysis appeared in the London Journal of Primary Care, 2018 Vol. 10, no. 4, 121–122.

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