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Rwanda reports increase in mental health disorders among patients

The Ministry of Health in Rwanda said Monday (Oct 10), cases of mental health disorders have increased in since the beginning of this year.
The ministry said in a statement, at least 7,817 patients consulted for depression at Ndera Neuro-Psychiatric Teaching Hospital from January to August, higher than 1,743 that were recorded last year.
The majority of the new cases were middle-aged people. The data showed that 54 percent of registered patients were male, 46 percent female while children below 19 years of age accounted for 20 percent of the total number of patients.
The statement said, as World Mental Health Day was observed Monday (Oct 10): "The Ministry of Health is committed to implementing all relevant interventions to reduce incidence of all mental health disorders, including depression.”
Other top mental illnesses registered in Rwanda included schizophrenia with 35,581 cases so far reported this year, epilepsy with 13,337 cases and those reporting acute and transient psychotic disorders totaling 10,977.

According to health officials, schizophrenia makes one interpret reality abnormally while acute and transient psychotic disorders are triggered by psychological stress.
Overall, 96,357 patients with mental disorders were recorded in the first eight months of this year, representing a 29.6 percent increase compared to last year, according to the data.
This year's global theme for World Mental Health Day is "Make mental health and well-being for all a global priority."
UN agency: Over 100 asylum seekers evacuated from Libya to Rwanda
The World Health Organization (WHO) representative in Rwanda Brian Chirombo said in a message that the global health agency is supporting the Rwandan government in collaboration with other partners, to update the mental health strategic plan that sets new targets for expanding mental health care services to be achieved by 2024.
He said: "The strategy will seek to increase access to quality mental health services by decentralizing and integrating it into primary health care, ensuring services are appropriately budgeted and resourced across sectors.”
On Monday (Oct 10), the WHO said more than 116 million people, mainly adolescents, are living with mental health illnesses in Africa, attributable to socioeconomic pressure among other strains.
Source: xinhua
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