Living
Bettering the lives of the mentally ill
USP chairperson Susan Keter (far left), poses with representatives of USP partner organisations outside the Basic Needs offices in Nairobi. From left: Susan, Jeremiah Kyalo, Japheth Makana, Janet Amegatcher, Nyawira Nyakio Nyammo and Moosa Saali. Photo/COURTESY
Posted Sunday, October 26 2008 at 13:12
This Friday, October 31, mentally ill people will be on several minds as Kenya marks the World Mental Health Day. It will be a day to remember the pain and frustration that come with mental conditions.
Those who have suffered from a mental illness not only have to put up with the anguish that comes with the condition, but stigma and discrimination as well. Several people, including families of the mentally ill person seldom understand their conditions. As a result, the sufferers are often dumped in mental institutions, widely referred to as loony bins, while some are abandoned and left to fend for themselves on the street.
The situation is further compounded by the inadequate resources that mental health institutions have to care for patients and the limited number of rehabilitation centres. Treatment for mental conditions is also often expensive and several patients are unable to afford the medicines that more often have to be taken for a lifetime.
These patients therefore get limited treatment for their conditions, and some never fully recover. It is truly a tough world for people living with mental illnesses.
It is these problems that inspired Susan Catherine Keter to form a network of support groups for people who are undergoing or have passed through psychiatric treatment. Susan, the chairperson of the Users and Survivors of Psychiatry Kenya suffered from depression in 2001 and unlike many others who have suffered from the condition, she refused to take it lying down.
Dissatisfied by the psychiatric treatment she was receiving, Susan sought to build her knowledge of the illness so as to understand her condition. She is seemingly winning the battle, as she is now helping others to overcome and deal with mental diseases.
USP Kenya was registered in December last year and is housed at the Presbyterian Church of East Africa Kangemi.
It is an NGO within the framework of the World Network of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry and it received initial support from Basic Needs UK in Kenya and Schizophrenic Foundation.
“Basic Needs started a clinic in the Kangemi church compound in 2005 which offered psychiatric services. Last year, Basic Needs gave USP the offices and we now facilitate support groups formed by those who have suffered from mental conditions,” says Susan.
Other than exchanging critical information on how to manage mental illnesses, the members also group to run income generating activities.
“USP Kenya facilitates these groups by training them in leadership, group dynamics, financial management and business enterprises,” says Susan. “Often, people who experience mental conditions lose their jobs or sources of income. When they join such groups, they are able to uplift their economic status and can therefore continue supporting themselves and accessing medication, which can be quite expensive. ”
The support groups can be found in Kangemi, Wangige and Kikuyu. Their activities run from poultry keeping to detergent and bead making projects.
Carers of the mentally ill people are also encouraged to join. “In these groups, members share information to improve each others lives, and it is good for their family members to also be a part of the groups so that they are in a better position to care for them,” explains Susan.
To her, research and information is such an integral part in understanding mental illnesses, which is why she deemed it fit to establish a resource centre in the office.
In the centre, are stacks of newsletters, journals, periodicals and books on various mental conditions. “I encourage users of psychiatry and their families to get a hold of such information, in order to manage the condition effectively,” she says.
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Submitted by paul arithiPosted October 27, 2008 07:20 PM




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The job USP is doing is amazing. People with mental illness are highly stigmatized in most societies all over the world and more so in Kenya! Public education need to help de-stigmatize mental illness and demystify mental illness! This task is enormous but can be done. I support you cause! Keep up!