Dubai Telegraph - Patients brave mental health desert in Mauritania

EUR -
AED 4.213128
AFN 72.274165
ALL 95.82505
AMD 432.610172
ANG 2.053602
AOA 1051.991743
ARS 1602.058592
AUD 1.62491
AWG 2.067847
AZN 1.946198
BAM 1.952227
BBD 2.307876
BDT 140.602685
BGN 1.960937
BHD 0.432938
BIF 3402.24774
BMD 1.147211
BND 1.465749
BOB 7.946457
BRL 6.005076
BSD 1.145908
BTN 105.693493
BWP 15.624474
BYN 3.413453
BYR 22485.325948
BZD 2.304582
CAD 1.571317
CDF 2598.431776
CHF 0.906021
CLF 0.026437
CLP 1043.86968
CNY 7.980283
CNH 7.905961
COP 4249.852797
CRC 538.231412
CUC 1.147211
CUP 30.401078
CVE 110.064053
CZK 24.439258
DJF 204.047465
DKK 7.472522
DOP 69.94413
DZD 151.736916
EGP 60.085037
ERN 17.208158
ETB 180.499165
FJD 2.542104
FKP 0.862506
GBP 0.864148
GEL 3.120203
GGP 0.862506
GHS 12.472229
GIP 0.862506
GMD 84.313418
GNF 10045.921601
GTQ 8.782965
GYD 239.861034
HKD 8.988337
HNL 30.335541
HRK 7.533958
HTG 150.188415
HUF 391.473541
IDR 19495.695365
ILS 3.587156
IMP 0.862506
INR 106.04877
IQD 1501.052946
IRR 1515522.440914
ISK 143.206441
JEP 0.862506
JMD 180.250911
JOD 0.813397
JPY 182.933027
KES 148.620839
KGS 100.32354
KHR 4594.691453
KMF 492.153602
KPW 1032.539825
KRW 1714.24211
KWD 0.352205
KYD 0.954853
KZT 553.337346
LAK 24589.998219
LBP 102611.112968
LKR 356.816995
LRD 209.685344
LSL 19.277321
LTL 3.387415
LVL 0.693936
LYD 7.344591
MAD 10.765199
MDL 19.937513
MGA 4770.290754
MKD 61.53132
MMK 2409.31785
MNT 4100.701193
MOP 9.241288
MRU 45.686386
MUR 53.482911
MVR 17.736019
MWK 1986.573061
MXN 20.329201
MYR 4.502797
MZN 73.313996
NAD 19.277321
NGN 1574.213511
NIO 42.16504
NOK 11.125535
NPR 169.114403
NZD 1.970827
OMR 0.441115
PAB 1.145903
PEN 3.955461
PGK 4.941065
PHP 68.676661
PKR 320.095393
PLN 4.276927
PYG 7437.583088
QAR 4.188453
RON 5.09304
RSD 117.41012
RUB 93.210041
RWF 1672.346752
SAR 4.305081
SBD 9.236949
SCR 16.0868
SDG 689.473717
SEK 10.765865
SGD 1.468022
SHP 0.860705
SLE 28.223759
SLL 24056.443157
SOS 653.706511
SRD 43.102415
STD 23744.941298
STN 24.45599
SVC 10.02665
SYP 127.197991
SZL 19.262831
THB 37.304415
TJS 11.000121
TMT 4.020973
TND 3.384521
TOP 2.762207
TRY 50.696726
TTD 7.770779
TWD 36.633867
TZS 2988.483316
UAH 50.516271
UGX 4326.082902
USD 1.147211
UYU 46.584543
UZS 13854.644826
VES 511.938387
VND 30150.98656
VUV 137.191631
WST 3.159658
XAF 654.761585
XAG 0.014203
XAU 0.000229
XCD 3.100394
XCG 2.065121
XDR 0.814313
XOF 654.761585
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.611097
ZAR 19.21256
ZMK 10326.274118
ZMW 22.315161
ZWL 369.401315
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    1.7200

    71.72

    +2.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.95

    -0.17%

  • NGG

    -0.0100

    90.89

    -0.01%

  • RIO

    2.0300

    89.86

    +2.26%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    16.4

    -0.91%

  • AZN

    2.1100

    192.01

    +1.1%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.99

    0%

  • GSK

    0.3800

    53.77

    +0.71%

  • RELX

    0.3300

    34.47

    +0.96%

  • BCE

    0.6521

    25.9

    +2.52%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    12.54

    -0.4%

  • VOD

    0.1900

    14.6

    +1.3%

  • BP

    0.2300

    42.9

    +0.54%

  • BTI

    1.0100

    60.94

    +1.66%

Patients brave mental health desert in Mauritania
Patients brave mental health desert in Mauritania / Photo: MICHELE CATTANI - AFP

Patients brave mental health desert in Mauritania

The wall was tagged with graffiti above 22-year-old Sidi's bed in the lone psychiatric hospital in Mauritania, a country whose mental health system is as sparse as its desert landscapes.

Text size:

"Stress kills your neurons," said the message scrawled in room 13, one of just 20 beds available for psychiatric patients in the African country of five million people, which sits between the Atlantic and the Sahara.

Sidi's father, Mohamed Lemine, traced his son's mental health troubles to a frustrated attempt to emigrate to the United States.

"His friends got him into these problems. They put the idea in his head of leaving the country, but the bank turned down his loan application," Lemine said.

"After that, he became sad and started taking drugs."

At a loss on how to handle Sidi's increasingly violent psychotic episodes, Lemine finally brought him three days previously to the Nouakchott Centre for Specialised Medicine, home to the country's only psychiatric ward, where he was admitted with a diagnosis of psychosis.

Lemine, a retired army officer with a neatly trimmed white beard, had installed a mat in his son's room to keep watch over him.

Like most patients, Sidi was expected to remain in the centre only a few days. Beds and staff are too scarce for longer stays.

"We need to increase the number of beds. Lots of patients travel long distances to come here, and there's no other psychiatric care infrastructure," said one of the centre's doctors, Mohamed Lemine Abeidi.

- Family affair -

The centre's 20 rooms line a wide, turquoise-and-cream-coloured corridor that is filled with constant bustle: women bringing their children meals; a man visiting his brother; a worried uncle trying to calm his paranoiac nephew.

Non-violent patients are also allowed to stroll the hall, accompanied by relatives.

They greet the head nurse, joke with the security chief, and talk to anyone who will listen about their concerns of the day, from politics and erectile problems to Satanic visions.

"Almost all the patients are accompanied by their families," said Abeidi, calling it a "cultural specificity" of Mauritania.

Outside the door to the ward, dozens of people were gathered, making tea as they waited.

Like all Mauritania's mental health professionals, Abeidi, a psychiatrist, studied abroad, given the lack of training programmes in the country.

"We're still quite limited, but there's been an improvement" in psychiatric care since the 1970s, he said with a smile, leaving his office after yet another day packed with appointments.

The 1970s is the decade when doctor Dia Al Housseynou first brought mental health care to Mauritania, an arid, predominantly Muslim country deeply attached to the Sahara, both geographically and culturally.

- Doctors in tents -

Now 83, Housseynou lives in a bougainvillea-covered house in the centre of the capital, Nouakchott.

As a young man, he studied abroad in Senegal, completed internships in several European countries and wrote his thesis on family therapy before returning to Mauritania in 1975 and convincing authorities of the importance of mental health care.

He set up the traditional desert tents known as "khaimas" in the courtyard of the national hospital, where families could bring their loved ones for doctor's appointments.

Three years later, the hospital opened a dedicated psychiatric service. The Centre for Specialised Medicine was inaugurated in 1990.

But Housseynou said he was nostalgic for the days of tents.

"Architecture is key in caring for the ill. When we build closed wards, everyone in their own room, it becomes a prison," he said, adding that Mauritania did not need "Western-style psychiatry".

Inside the psychiatric ward, many patients deemed violent are chained to their beds.

"It's not hospital policy, but it's up to families whether to restrain their loved one or not," said chief security officer Ramadan Mohamed.

Sidi had a chain attached to his left foot.

Hospitalisation is often the last resort for families, Abeidi said.

"Most patients undergo traditional treatments before turning to psychiatry," he said.

"The patient sees a 'marabout' (traditional religious figure), and if the family and the marabout see that's not working, they refer them to the hospital."

W.Zhang--DT