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Monday, September 5, 2011

How a Banyan Tree Helped Change Mental Health Care

Jakarta Globe, Dewi Kurniawati, September 04, 2011

Due to financial constraints and because mental illness is
 often considered a mark of shame, many people still keep mentally
 challenged loved ones shackled at home, even in parts of Jakarta.
 (JG Photo/Yudhi Sukma Wijaya)


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When you visit state-run Soeharto Heerdjan Mental Hospital in Grogol, West Jakarta, these days, the old image of a miserable asylum warehousing unwanted castoffs of society has changed to something much cleaner, more humane and caring.

The change took decades — and the transformation turned on two victims, a patient and a banyan tree.

First, the tree.

Despite casting badly needed shade in scorching Jakarta, the banyan tree is often considered to be a “spirit nest” by some superstitious Indonesians and one such tree was giving the hospital a bad reputation.

“We decided to cut down the old banyan tree in front of this hospital to remove the enduring image of a scary place,” said Retno, a spokeswoman for the hospital.

Unfortunately, it takes more than just the symbolic sacrifice of a banyan tree to change the image of a mental hospital that was built under the Dutch in 1923 and has long been seen as frightening.

A decade ago an incident took place that focused hospital administrators on deeper problems than a tree full of black magic.

One night a patient named Uyung was restrained in a two-person isolation room but the situation went terribly wrong. Another patient in the room somehow broke free from his chains and gouged out Uyung’s eyes.

The details have never been fully understood because the staff member on duty that night fled after locking the isolation room from the outside.

The hospital only realized something had happened after patients from other rooms screamed when they saw blood flowing from underneath the isolation room’s door.

Uyung, now blind, lives permanently in the hospital under state care, meaning he receives free treatment as compensation. His mother visits once a week because his poor family can’t afford to have him back in their tiny house.

The incident shocked and embarrassed officials, who started changing the way things were done at the facility to emphasize treatment and community outreach instead of the old solution of just locking up troubled patients to keep them off the streets.

“We are a product of the past. After the Uyung incident, radical changes took place in mental hospitals across the country,” said Laurentius Panggabean, medical treatment director at Soeharto Heerdjan. “At that time, mental institutions were more like prisons instead of hospitals.”

Laurentius said changes include new procedures for treating patients that highlight their safety and comfort. “The thing is, you can’t measure what happened in the past by current standards because we had limited resources back then,” he said, adding that even today sometimes paramedics fail to meet basic requirements, like avoiding negligence.

Revolutionary Break

“History teaches us that sometimes it takes a great revolution to make changes. In this place, it was Uyung,” said Asmarahadi, a psychiatrist who heads the inpatient unit at the hospital.

“In those days, paramedics used a hose to bathe patients and they wouldn’t even realize a patient had died. … That’s something you won’t see today.”

The hospital has room for 300 inpatients, although it is currently occupied by 200 patients.

According to Asmarahadi, most patients at the hospital suffer from chronic mental disorders that are usually diagnosed at a late stage.

“We need to educate people through outreach programs so they can spot mental disorders at an earlier stage,” he said.

“We have to admit that awareness of mental health has never been a priority,” said Irmansyah, the director of mental health at the Health Ministry.

“The budget for mental health is small because we are still trying to reach the UN’s Millennium Development Goals,” he said.

Mental health is not one of eight development goals agreed on in 2000, like the eradication of extreme poverty and improvement of maternal health. Indonesia, along with other developing countries, is still trying to meet the 2015 deadline.

Another issue is that while those who have money can seek treatment in private clinics, poor Indonesians have little choice in a country where mental illness is still considered a mark of shame. Too often families use shackles instead of costly treatments in hospitals. The presence of chained patients even in parts of Jakarta prompted the Health Ministry to promote the “Shackle-free Indonesia” campaign last year.

Health Ministry data shows that there are a total of 33 mental hospitals across the archipelago, 27 of them state-run. There are six provinces without any mental health facilities, including nearby Banten, where large numbers of shackled patients are still found.

The limited options are considered inadequate to treat an estimated 800,000 people suffering from chronic mental disorders. Another 20 million are struggling with emotional problems and some 400,000 children experience various mental illnesses.

“Under regional autonomy laws, local governments should also be responsible for mental health,” the Health Ministry’s Irmansyah said.

A New Approach

It is clear things have changed for the better at Soeharto Heerdjan.

In the old days, the hospital would send officers patrolling the streets for schizophrenics roaming around naked. Today, that task has been taken over by the provincial social affairs agency, which only provides treatment after a patient is given an evaluation at the hospital’s emergency room.

One afternoon, the ER was busy handling patients it had just received from the social affairs agency. Patients, their names written on their arms, waited quietly in a hallway before getting a checkup and a free lunch.

Down a different hallway, the hospital’s social outreach unit had gathered dozens of patients and family members for therapy. They stretched their arms and legs in a mental health exercise, following instructions from a psychiatrist.

Siti, 55, was taking part.

Her son was diagnosed as a schizophrenic seven years ago. He is undergoing free treatment under Jakarta’s health care cost-sharing scheme (SKTM), although she has to renew the qualification letter every 21 days.

“It’s actually a burden for me to renew the letter every time it expires,” Siti said.

Although the SKTM is free for the poor, she still has to deal with a bureaucracy she considers “difficult” and transportation to and from the hospital is expensive.

“I want my son to just stay here, and I can visit regularly. Every time I bring him home, he creates problems for the family and my neighbors,” she said.

“That is exactly why we have this regular meeting. So that the family realizes their role as the primary support for schizophrenic patients,” said Safyuni, the hospital’s head of social outreach.

“Our society is so heavily burdened by the stigma of mental illness that we need to struggle to promote family support, because they need to know that with regular control and medication, schizophrenic patients can be treated,” Safyuni said.

It is a message that does not sit well with Siti, who would like to have her son institutionalized. “They should just turn mental hospitals into shopping malls if they refuse to take patients,” she said in disappointment. “What is the use of a hospital if they don’t want to treat patients?”

For all the changes, it is clear there is still a long way to go, with or without that banyan tree.

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