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Why we need a mental health law in PH

'Every Filipino should be entitled to mental health programs and services. Mental health problems in the
country has long been dismissed and not given any priority at all'

It is alarming that many youth today are contemplating on hurting themselves and ending their lives,
when they should be planning for their future.

Do you still remember the following cases of suicide being in the news?

A controversial former military chief shot himself in the chest while visiting his mother's grave.

A young lawyer, who worked for a well-known bank, strangled himself to death because he cannot bear
the stress of being investigated for a multi-million loan grant to a businessman.

A freshman scholar of a state university took her own life after she was forced to be on leave from the
university due to her unpaid tuition.

A bipolar socialite model fell from her condo in an apparent suicide.

A student from an international school jumped to his death after he was accused of plagiarism by his
teacher.

A family of 5 on a completed suicide-murder case (as facilitated by the parents) after their business went
bankrupt.

A recent case of an alleged suicide attempt by a young politician with a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

And just this March, a Northern Luzon State University first year student opted to end her life because
she was not able to take her midterm examinations, and unable to pay her boarding house forcing her
to quit school, again due to financial problems.

The list goes on and on. The media will continue to report the fatalities and government agencies will
again be pointing fingers at each other. The Filipino people will continue with their lives, continuing to
bear the emotional and psychological burden not just on their shoulders but also in their worn out
minds.
Is this the current trend or is this a result of media sensationalizing the news on suicide? Is it true that
many Filipinos are now afflicted with mental and emotional disabilities?

How can we save the youth from being a suicide fatality? How can we save the future generation from
the claws of death? Do we really need to have high statistics on suicide as proof that it deserves our full
attention before we do something about it?

Mental health of the Filipino youth

In 2014, the report “Health for the World’s Adolescents" by the World Health Organization (WHO)
revealed that depression is the predominant cause of illness and disability for both boys and girls aged
10 to 19 years old. Suicide is the third leading cause of death among adolescents.

In 2012 alone, an estimated 1.3 million young people worldwide died because of suicide. Furthermore,
the report stated that half of all the people who develop mental disorders show their first symptoms at
the age of 14. If adolescents with mental health problems get the care they need, their deaths or
suffering throughout life can be prevented. (Read: Depression, the indiscriminate stalker)

Unipolar depressive disorders is one of the projected leading causes of disease and injury burden by
2030, according to the 2004 WHO Global Burden of Disease Report. And since the burden of depression
and other mental health conditions are seen to be on the rise globally, the World Health Assembly, in a
resolution issued in May 2012, called for a comprehensive, coordinated response to mental disorders
from health and social sectors at the country level.

A research conducted by Lapeña, Tarroja, Tirazona & Fernando of DLSU-SDRC on the Filipino youth’s
views on mental health revealed that the problems confronting the youth include lack of resources and
conflict within themselves or with others.

The researchers recognized that some of the youth's coping strategies are positive - seeking help,
actively resolving, and talking about the problem. But they also noted how other strategies that the
youth use - such as engaging in negative and escapist behaviors, excessive drinking, taking drugs, acting
out, or simply ignoring the problem - are not desirable. This research showed that even without
intervention, Filipino youth are able to cope with their difficulties by relying on their inner resources.

But of course, the Filipino youth still needs to be guided and led towards mental health interventions
that are available to cater to their needs and to eliminate the stigma attached to mental health
problems, as well as to seeing a mental health professional. (READ: Can Facebook stop you from
committing suicide?)

The Natasha Goulbourn Foundation has been actively campaigning awareness on depression and suicide
prevention. As a non-profit organization, however, it has many limitations in reaching out to every
corner of this country since its operations rely solely on donations. Yet, the foundation is doing its best
to maximize every opportunity to educate the Filipino people about how to recognize the signs and
symptoms of depression, what people can do to help the depressed, and where to get help.

That's why Jean Goulbourn, the President of NGF, supports and campaigns for the initiative of the
Philippine Psychiatric Association's (PPA) Mental Health Act, which aims to protect the rights of people
with mental disorders and disabilities by putting in place an official body that will oversee the policies
and programs that need to be developed to prevent and treat mental illnesses.

The Philippine Mental Health Act of 2014 has already been filed in the Senate by Sen Loren Legarda, but
the online petition for signature from the public, as support to push the passing of this law, is still
ongoing at Change.Org.

Unhappy citizens, unhappy country

It has long been overdue. Every Filipino should be entitled to mental health programs and services.
Mental health problems in the country has long been dismissed and not given any priority at all.

The country spend millions and billions for the never-ending investigations on pork barrel scams, ill-
gotten wealth, multi-million infrastructure projects gone wrong etc, and these drag on for years yet still
remains unsolved. This, while more and more Filipinos become oppressed, repressed, and distressed.

No wonder the Earth Institute of Columbia University revealed in the 2012 World Happiness Report that
the Philippines only ranked 103rd among 155 countries and is considered to be one of the least happy
countries in Southeast Asia.
In order to build a mindstrong nation and be armed with socio-economically and psychologically
competent citizens, we must first acknowledge the fact that there are no programs and policies
designed to protect the mentally ill, prevent mental illness, and promote mental health in the country at
present. As they say, it's better late than never.

If we continue to just shrug our shoulders and dismiss this issue, the Philippines will remain a third world
country plagued not just by corruption but with corrupted minds from the lack of awareness and
services that will cater to the mental, emotional and psychological well-being of its people.

To invest in mental health is to invest in national development. To raise mindstrong Filipinos is to raise
the nation's competency and resilience while fostering hope and optimism and strengthening the
holistic wellness of the Filipinos.

Let us not be a country of weary, anxious, depressed and mentally unstable citizenry. We are
responsible for our own psychological health. Let us support the Mental Health Act. Let us make our
voices heard and show the government the pressing need for a mental health law.

It is for our own protection from the multi-faceted mental health problems that each of us Filipinos deal
with every day. - Rappler.com

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