A HEALING
MOVE
Admissions to the Angoda
Mental Hospital have been smoothened by the opening
of a brand new five-bed ICU
By Kumudini Hettiarachchi
These men and women are brought in
against their will and taken kicking and screaming to
the wards, sometimes dragged by their hair or the scruff
of their neck, in a most inhuman manner.
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Dr. Harischandra Gambheera |
This is how mentally "disturbed"
patients have been admitted to the Angoda Mental Hospital
now known as the Institute of Psychiatry throughout
the years, stripping them of any vestige of dignity
all human beings, ill or not, deserve.
However, a month ago, on August 15,
that changed, with admissions to this hospital being
smoothened by the opening of a brand new five-bed Intensive
Care Unit (ICU).
Since then 231 mentally ill patients
have passed through the ICU into the relevant wards
for treatment.
Commending the hospital's Director
Dr. Jayan Mendis for bringing in the ICU concept to
Angoda and revolutionizing mental care here, Acting
Director Harischandra Gambheera says this is the only
hospital to which "involuntary" admission
of mentally ill patients can take place.
Under the archaic Mental Health Act
which is 137 years old, relatives cannot admit any "highly
disturbed" patient against their will to any other
hospital, says Dr. Gambheera who is in charge of Angoda
in the absence of its Director.
Explaining that when patients are
brought in to the Outpatients Department against their
will and have to be admitted there is much resistance,
he says with the fully-equipped ICU in place, the patients
are sedated, depending on their aggression, kept for
12 hours under constant monitoring and then sent to
the wards when calmer.
Otherwise there is a battle between
the hospital staff and the patient while the concerned
relatives look on. This obviously jeopardizes the image
of the hospital and people point fingers at the way
the mentally ill are being treated. When they are thus
dragged to the wards which are far away from the OPD,
the "settled" patients already in the ward
too become "unsettled", says the Acting Director
adding that the ICU just next to the OPD has helped
to make admissions easier and smoother.
This has helped mitigate the humiliating
treatment and also preserve the rights and dignity of
the mentally ill, he stresses.
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Pix by M.A. Pushpa Kumara |
The 1,200-bed Angoda Hospital established
way back in 1926 has a general adult psychiatry unit,
psycho-geriatric unit (for those above 65) and a forensic
psychiatry unit (for alleged offenders and even sentenced
offenders). MediScene learns that two more units for
children & adolescents and mothers and babies are
on the drawing boards.
According to Dr. Gambheera the training
room for mental health personnel had been relocated
to another area in the hospital and the ICU in lovely
shades of peach with pinkish-reddish (salsa) screens
installed there. The equipment for the ICU has been
donated by the Sri Lanka-Australia-New Zealand Association
through the Australian High Commission.
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