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Can Mental Health Services Spur Economic Recovery in Ebola-ravaged Liberia?
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MAD in AMERICA March 9, 2015
What's the key to rebuilding Liberian communities and igniting the country's economic recovery in the wake of the devastation of the Ebola epidemic and civil war? Expanding mental health services, reported articles in Nature, Devex, StarAfrica and other outlets.
A new three-year, $3 million effort to expand mental health services in Liberia is being funded by the government of Japan through a World Bank-administered trust fund, reported Devex. "Developers of the project hope that an increased focus on mental health will help spur economic recovery and growth in the devastated region by helping build social capital and community trust, while fostering positive coping behaviors," stated Devex. "A new squad of child mental health clinicians will be deployed to approximately 60 schools, while community-based interventions beyond Ebola-affected communities will be strengthened...."
The Chief Medical Officer of Liberia, Dr. Bernice Dahn, put numbers to the scope of this new emergency that was demanding immediate action, reported StarAfrica. Due to the Ebola outbreak and years of civil war, Dahn told StarAfrica that "about 400,000 are suffering from mild mental illness, while 115,000 others have mental disorder."
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Also see
Can mental health services spur economic growth in Ebola-affected West Africa? (Devex, February 27, 2015)
Ebola’s mental-health wounds linger in Africa (Nature, March 3, 2015)
Liberia: Over 500,000 suffer mental illness due to war, Ebola-Official (StarAfrica, March 6, 2015)
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