Friday, 19 April, 2024
HomeSouth AfricaSAHRC orders adequate housing for mental health patients

SAHRC orders adequate housing for mental health patients

The South Africa Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) has ordered the Department of Human Settlements to finalise its special national housing programme for people with psycho-social and intellectual disabilities. The Times reports that the order was made in the commission’s report into the status of mental healthcare in the country, which was prompted by the Life Esidimeni tragedy which claimed the lives of at least 144 psychiatric patients.

A total of 1,711 mentally ill people were moved from Life Esidimeni homes into ill-equipped and underfunded NGOs in 2016 in Gauteng.

The report says the study found that mental health was grossly neglected and under-prioritised. "While mental health overall is a neglected area, this particular sub-field is especially under-prioritised, with the result that violations of the rights of this group are perpetrated regularly in the form of cruel, degrading and inhumane treatment that places them at risk for abuse," read the commission’s report.

The report quotes spokesperson for the commission, Gail Smith, as saying they found considerable under-investment in mental health by government.

Explaining its findings, the commission said it saw mental health as neglected because of a low national health budget. "Budgeting for mental health in South Africa, like the rest of the world, is extremely low given prevalence numbers. A 2014 report stated that just 4% of the national health budget was disbursed for mental health services in South Africa" the SAHRC said.

The report said the commission indicated that while there was a need for special housing for those with mental health disabilities, providing enough beds at existing facilities was not enough.

"The shortage of beds in existing facilities, specifically for children and adolescents with intellectual and psycho-social disabilities remain a concern. A rights-based approach would suggest that the mere adding of these beds would be insufficient," the commission said.

It suggested that more needed to be done to integrate those with disabilities – such as mental health – back into their communities, and cited the need to provide appropriate community-based services using hospitalisation only as a last resort.

[link url="https://www.timeslive.co.za/news/south-africa/2019-03-28-mental-health-is-neglected-and-under-prioritised-in-sa-human-rights-commission/"]The Times report[/link]

MedicalBrief — our free weekly e-newsletter

We'd appreciate as much information as possible, however only an email address is required.