| Indian Journal of Medical Ethics | ||||||
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Medical ethics in the context of the national mental
health programme Bhargavi Davar Introduction National Mental Health Programme As such, the NMHP is in tune with the Alma Ata Declaration. More importantly, we must also see it as being in line with the politics of health policies in the emerging ( third) world order organised mainly by the WHO, with nation states by-and-large relinquishing their welfare functions to private enterprises or to community practice. The salient features of the community package of the NMHP are: (i) tying up mental health care with the existing general health infrastructure, such as the public health centres and the district hospitals, and training the existing staff, (ii) tying up mental health care with already existing community development programmes and promoting culture friendly cures. Even though the NMHP says nothing specific about the use of purely medical techniques like drug therapy and electroconvulsive therapy, it seems to imply that it favours non- invasive techniques of treatment. The NMHP states: ‘There is good evidence to say that about 15- 20% of all patients who seek help in general health services both in developed and developing countries, do so for emotional and psychosocial problems. Current medical methods of dealing with these problems by unnecessary investigations and costly medicines are not only inadequate and ineffective but produce widespread frustration to both the seeker and the provider of these health services’. The NMHP also has a place for the practitioners of the Indian systems of medicine, who should play their ‘distinctive role in the field of health. The agenda of the NMHP is then to humanise mental health practice by articulating the ‘proper’ mental health principles, that is, the principles of community care. The NMHP has been proclaimed a historical landmark document in our national health policy. Given the fact that we did not have any document at all until 1982 on mental health policy, this proclamation is excusable. Community care philosophy, which the NMHP embodies, is probably also a more humane alternative for the mentally ill to the highly restrictive and regulative mental hospital services (2). However, the NMHP is at best ineffective, and at worst it promotes the dehumanised models of cure that it explicitly rejects. Mental health practice All interpersonal negotiations in social practice must inevitably involve the use of stereotypes, increasing one’s vulnerability to social control. Choosing to deal with the system of health is already to accept the possibilities and liabilities of such control. This is even more descriptive of health systems that seek to modify human behaviour. But whether one retains one’s dignity within the system depends on the power one has in these negotiations. The degree of choice one has over what happens to one within the mental health systems arguably reduces with psychotherapy, psychopharmacology, electroconvulsive therapy and psychosurgery, in that order. One has very little lay information about the changes associated with drug use and other body techniques. Frequently, one experiences irremediable bodily changes, such as tardive dyskinesia, occurring with long term use of neuroleptics or anti- psychotics. The shock of having to deal with a pair of suddenly crippled limbs can be an added trauma to someone already suffering from a severe mental illness. The sense of betrayal one feels at not having been informed before by her doctor of the likely consequences of the drugs she has been using is understandable. Need for studies Electro-convulsive therapy Even if one grants that the knowledge base we have on ECT justifies its use, the ethical basis of ECT depends upon how closely the practical conditions of administering ECT conform to certain standards of medical care; whether clear diagnostic criteria are practised (not just prescribed in the treatment manuals) in the use of the treatment; and whether informed consent is obtained, and whether such consent includes information about possible cognitive deficits following ECT. Agarwal, above, in listing the problems about abuse of ECT techniques in the country, notes that the question of patient’s consent is rarely looked into by practitioners. The problem, here, as with the prescriptions and use of drugs, is that no information is available. The NMHP commits itself to non- invasive cures by resourcing ‘proper’ principles of community care. But it does not specify policies for the use of the medical cures. While the policy prescribes in general terms the administrative structure of mental health care through the community, it remains silent on the nature of ‘proper’ principles and practices. Does the silence on these issues imply a sanction of these widely practised medical cures? Mental health care for all More significantly, the use of the medical models- drug therapy or ECT for cure is almost inevitable in the case of these illness. In treating psychotic disorders, mental retardation or epilepsy, a practitioner is almost never called upon to invent non- invasive techniques or forms of psychotherapy. If drug use or ECT can be justified at all, it is justified all the more easily in the case of these endogenous types of mental disorders than other common types. So while the NMHP seems to pledge its philosophy on the side of non- invasive and community close techniques, it prioritises illnesses in such a way that the use of medical models of cure is inevitable. There are of course economic reasons for the studied ineffectiveness of the NMHP to serve community needs. Covertly adopting the medical model ensures that no additional resources are spent on mental health. The very terms of the NMHP state this quite emphatically. NMHP approaches (a) Integration of the mental health care service with the existinggeneral health services; (b) to utilise theexistinginfrastructure of health services and also to deliver the minimum mental health care services; (c) to provide appropriate task oriented training to the existinghealth staff; (d) to link mental health services with theexistingcommunity development programme.'( Emphasis added). The design of the programme is such that we make do with existing infrastructure and personnel, ensuring that no extra expenditure is incurred in implementing the mental health programme. The medical practitioners can be ‘trained’ to address mental health issues also, and also the PHC staffers. Psychotherapy, which works in the more frequent common disorders, requires expert training, institutional and organisational investments. If the state wanted to implement the mental health policy in principle, it would require to spend much more than if it simply linked up mental health with existing health facilities. This attitude to minimise resources spent on mental health care is completely consistent with the recent trends of the dimunition of state funding for health care in general (13). Thus, while the NMHP openlv proclaims a community care philosophy, it works by prioritisations which will ensure that the medical model will prevail, also ensuring that no additional costs will be expended for mental health care. By remaining silent on the nature of treatment options to be made available in community care, it does not call into question or debate the widespread medical models of mental health cure. References Bhargavi Davar, Department of Philosophy, University of Hyderabad, Gachibowli, Hyderabad 500 046. 2nd International Conference on Health and Human Rights, October 3- 5, 1996, at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. Organised by The Francois- Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights, Harvard School of Public Health, 8 Story Street, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA, Tel: 617- 496- 4392, Fax: 617- 496- 4380, Email: FXBCENTER@ IGC. APC. ORG The conference format includes plenary sessions, field reports, round- table discussions and skill- building sessions. Twenty- one wide ranging topics are listed for discussion. Contact M S Beth Falk at the above address for more information.
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