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Mental Health Implications of COVID-19 in Kenya
Author(s) -
Marylyn Ochillo,
Ivy Elsie
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
europasian journal of medical sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2717-4654
pISSN - 2717-4646
DOI - 10.46405/ejms.v2i2.111
Subject(s) - mental health , population , medicine , depression (economics) , kenya , government (linguistics) , anxiety , referral , indigenous , health care , pandemic , psychiatry , environmental health , economic growth , nursing , covid-19 , disease , political science , ecology , linguistics , economics , macroeconomics , philosophy , pathology , biology , infectious disease (medical specialty) , law
Dear Editor, As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to spread rapidly worldwide, it is certainly having an immense effect on the mental wellbeing of people thereby increasing the number of people with elevated levels of stress, depression, or anxiety.1 Developing countries will undoubtedly have serious mental health implications due to the poor or almost non-existent mental health services. In Kenya, mental health is still somewhat neglected mainly because only 0.05% of the Governments’s health budget allocation goes to mental health.2 The allocated health budget largely focuses on communicable diseases despite the impact of mental health on the Kenyan population. Although there are no accurate data on the prevalence of mental disorders in Kenya, various studies have shown that the prevalence of depression generally varies from 19% in household review studies2 to 42% among the general population visiting the health facilities.3 Similar to other African countries, Kenya has a shortage of mental health professionals. Mathari hospital is the country’s only mental referral facility where one nurse handles up to 150 patients.4 In a country with only approximately 100 psychiatrists serving a population of 45 million, only a third of the psychiatrists work in the government health facilities.5 The rest of the psychiatrists work in private health facilities that are generally more expensive making them inaccessible to the majority of the population due to the unaffordable consultation fees.

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