Disaster for SA mental health

SAPA

The sudden move by medical aid schemes to deny chronic medication benefits for various mental illnesses has been condemned as the biggest disaster to hit psychiatric care in South Africa in  the last 10 years. 

The arbitrary and unilateral move, which could endanger the lives of thousands of sufferers  across the country, has drawn widespread criticism from leading groups involved in mental  healthcare including the SA Depression and Anxiety Group (SADAG) and the healthcare consumer  watchdog, Rights Education and Activism for Consumer Healthcare (Reach). 

Serious regression risks

People suffering from bipolar mood disorder (BMD, previously known as manic depression) and  depression are particularly at risk, says Zane Wilson, founder of SADAG. 

As with numerous physical diseases such as hypertension, sufferers of BMD and depression can and  do function as productive contributors to the economy and highly capable members of society at  large. But this is only possible with continued proper medication and monitoring. 

Without regular medication, sufferers not only risk serious regression with resultant personal  setbacks and even hospitalisation, but more dire consequences including suicide and even violent  attacks, says Wilson. 

Medical schemes sharply criticised

usreen Khan, national co-ordinator of Reach, slammed medical schemes for shirking their moral responsibilities and making a mockery of legislation governing medical schemes. 

Outraged patients, many of them successful business leaders and heads of families and whose  conditions have stabilised under consistent treatment, have inundated SADAG and Reach with complaints. 

The Council for Medical Schemes is basing the lack of published guidelines for the treatment of  BMD on the fact that too few medications are registered. This does not take into account the  thousands of patients who are stabilised on current medication, says Khan.  

It is understandable that treatment guidelines need to be structured on solid evidence-based  data. One needs to take into account that, even though certain medications might not be registered in SA, they are however registered abroad. The consequences of the slow registration process for medicines in SA are being borne by patients here. 

No treatment protocol for BMD

We cannot understand how an industry, funded by consumer money, refuses to consult with those  very consumers. Instead they discuss critical issues affecting the very lives of their members in  clandestine cabals and then, insensitively and callously notify members that they have decided to  pull the rug out from under them. 

Although BMD has been included in the list of so-called '25 prescribed minimum benefits (PMB)' conditions for chronic medication, individual schemes are refusing to cover costs on the grounds  that no treatment protocol exists for BMD. 

In effect, this verbal sleight-of-hand means there are only 24 PMBs, excluding bipolar mood  disorder, says Khan. 

Still recognised as chronic diseases

REACH approached the Council of Medical Schemes to assist in drawing up guidelines regarding  mental healthcare benefits, but, in essence, we were told we would be contacted if our inputs  were needed. It was a case of don't call us, we'll call you. They never called, says Khan. 

In a bizarre twist, these illnesses, including BMD, are still recognised as chronic diseases -  just not funded any more. Medical schemes are not legally bound to reimburse patients for  medications for BMD. There should be very specific guidelines underpinning the lack of a protocol  for the treatment of BMD. For example, patients stabilised for a specific period of time should  be reimbursed by their medical scheme. 

Depression is acknowledged as the world's second biggest cause of adult deaths, and BMD causes  violent mood swings, ranging from feelings of euphoria to abject despair. 

Potential for catastrophe

BMD sufferers may fall into a manic state resulting in extreme violence and even homicide if  their condition is untreated. 

The potential for catastrophe is very real, warns Khan. 

It comes as a major disappointment to us at SADAG, especially after several encouraging advances in mental healthcare in recent time, says Wilson. 

We have made important advances in bringing mental illness out of the closet, in addressing the  crisis of the growing number of teen suicides, in interacting with global funders such as the  World Bank and even saw nationwide focus on the mental health issues on 10 October - World Mental Health Day. 

This unilateral and impassible step is a serious setback for all the good we have done to date. Because so much stigma still lingers around mental illness as distinct from physical illness, extra care must be exercised in the diagnosis and treatment of diseases such as BMD and depression. 

This kind of draconian step by medical schemes only aggravates the situation. That it was taken  without any consultation whatsoever is unconscionable, says Wilson. 

Hostile environment alienates sufferers In addition to the spectre of having to spend hours in queues at state hospitals, thousands of people on chronic medication now have to thread their way through a veritable labyrinth of  different interpretations, conditions and sub-conditions and a host of products within individual medical schemes. 

This sort of hostile environment serves only to alienate sufferers and place potentially disastrous stress on people whose ability to cope is at best tenuous. We cannot understand how medical schemes reached such an illogical and insensitive crisis. 

We will pursue every means available to get them to reconsider, say Wilson and Kahn. – ( Source: SAPA 27 October 2003).