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OPINION article

Front. Psychiatry, 10 June 2021
Sec. Public Mental Health
This article is part of the Research Topic System level Interventions, Prevention Strategies, Mitigation Policies and Social Responses during COVID-19 that Improve Mental Health Outcomes: Evidence from Lower- and Middle-Income Countries (LMICs) View all 32 articles

Lessons Learned From a Low-Income Country to Address Mental Health Needs During COVID-19

  • 1Department of Population Health, New York University, New York, NY, United States
  • 2Fogarty International Center (FIC), Bethesda, MD, United States
  • 3University of South Carolina Lancaster, Lancaster, CA, United States
  • 4State University of New York Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY, United States

Introduction

As of April 2021, more than 130 million Coronavirus-2019 (COVID-19) confirmed cases and 2 million deaths were reported in 223 countries, territories or regions (1). The devastation caused by the global health crisis surpassed that which was caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) epidemic and the Ebola outbreak. Evidence shows COVID-19 is associated with high mortality, transmission rate, and strict biosecurity restriction. COVID-19 has affected many segments of society such as neighborhood quarantines, nighttime curfews, and states of emergency imposed worldwide. World economies have declined, borders and markets closed, trade and agricultural production have faltered, creating cascades of human and material losses. Psychological stress above and beyond the fear-provoking consequences of the disease itself.

A systematic review of cross-sectional studies published during the first 5 months of 2020 revealed an alarming rate of symptoms of anxiety (6.33 to 50.9%), depression (14.6 to 48.3%), posttraumatic stress disorder (7 to 53.8%), psychological distress (34.43 to 38%), and stress (8.1 to 81.9%) in the global population including in high and low- and middle-income countries such as the US, Denmark, Italy, Spain, China, Iran, Turkey, and Nepal. These studies also showed that the female gender, being$$ less than ≤40 years, a diagnostic of chronic/psychiatric ailments, unemployment, student status, and frequent exposure to social media/COVID-19 related news were risk factors for adverse mental health outcomes (2).

In light of these current and unimaginable realities of a global panic and trauma, it is thus incumbent on all of us to protect against, manage, and rebound from COVID-19. However, since the world has not dealt with the scope and magnitude of such a global disaster in a century (Spanish Flu being the last major pandemic), we were unprepared administratively and psychologically. We remain ill-equipped to handle the demands of COVID-19. To deal with this pandemic, some countries, such as the United States, have invoked the spirit of war to cope administratively and psychologically with the COVID pandemic (3). A war mentality may have psychological benefits in some instances, such as the appropriate lauding of healthcare and frontline workers as heroes and the sense of being part of a community fighting against a common enemy—COVID-19. Although a war mentality may positively affect the administrative response to fighting COVID-19 by providing a more robust supply chain management of personal protective equipment (PPE), it presents some drawbacks. A war mentality may not be the best approach to address and cope with COVID-19 pandemic as it will likely induce a constant state of fear, alarm, victimhood syndrome, and xenophobia. A war mentality may not be the best approach to cope with a pandemic, as it may induce victimhood syndrome where individuals protest against harsh public health policies such as shelter-in-place and physical distancing. The war mentality has to lead to higher levels of xenophobia against people of Asian descent, as seen in the horrific spate of recent attacks against Asian Americans in the United States. The use of “othering” caused by COVID-19 is a maladaptive coping strategy where foreigners are seen as scary and used as the scapegoats (e.g., the constant prejudicial undertones of COVID-19 being a Chinese virus) (4). All of these approaches are antithetical to the appropriate prescription and remedy of surviving a disaster.

The Case for Psychological First Aid and Related Approaches During COVID-19

We argue that instead of a war mentality, a global natural disaster mentality, one rooted in psychological first aid framework and other related approaches such as psychoeducation, and psychosocial support is needed (5, 6). It will help us address the administrative and psychological needs to survive COVID-19. According to the Inter-Agency Standing Committee, common reactions during an outbreak may include avoidance of health facilities, fear of being infected, feeling powerless to protect oneself and others, anxiety, worry, loneliness with self-isolation, depression, triggers of previous stressors. One such stressor that could be particular for this outbreak is the risk of getting infected or infecting others since many guidelines are not being followed, mistaking other health problems with symptoms of COVID-19, and uncertainty about the outcomes of the pandemic (7). Given the prolonged uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic, one psychological model, psychological first aid could be helpful to recognize the potential mental health distress and stress that affected populations are facing (8).

The PFA is a novel intervention that respects the dignity, culture and capacities of others (9). According to Shultz and Forbes (2014). PFA is characterized by five key elements which are: safety, calming, connectedness, self-efficacy, and hope. In other terms, PFA is a human-centered and culturally-tailored early intervention that includes a provision of information, comfort, emotional care, and instrumental support to individuals exposed to acute stress. As a frontline intervention, PFA is not meant to be delivered by mental health professionals. The goal is to habilitate an array of lay workers, ranging from professional disaster responders (emergency services personnel, medical emergency teams) to teachers and clergy to administer it. PFA frameworks are currently largely accessible and available in multiple languages. Education on PFA is offered through a variety of live, online, mobile, and mediated training modalities (6).

In the following section, we will summarize our observation of how PFA and other related psychological frameworks were disseminated and integrated with the reinforcement of the Haitian mental health system; and into non-governmental organizations (NGO's) interventions in the aftermath of one of the most devastating disaster in Haitian history (8, 9), to address administrative and psychological needs of the country, and argue for the adoption of PFA for COVID-19.

Learning From Haiti'S Psychological First Aid and Mental Health Strategy 2010 Earthquake

Haiti's response post-2010 earthquake paradigmatically changed how the country deals with natural disasters, specifically its public health response. Prior to the 2010 earthquake, there was no cogent mental health policy by the Ministere de la Santé Publique et de la population (Ministry of Health) (MSPP), despite several attempts to create one by Bijoux (10). The undervalued priority of mental health issues in Haiti may explain the delayed creation and implementation of a mental health policy. Prior to the disaster, there was no systematic planning for services. The number of mental health professionals was very limited. In 2003, a joint Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) and WHO report identified ten psychiatrists and nine psychiatric nurses working in the public and private sectors in Haiti. In addition, these professionals work mostly in Port-au-Prince, where individuals have to travel from the countryside to receive mental health services. There is a psychiatric hospital in Port-au-Prince and another one about 22 miles from the capital of Port-au-Prince. In the second largest public hospital in the country, Hospital of Justinien in Cap-Haitien (northern side), with limited monthly psychiatric services (10). In 2011, in the field of mental healthcare services the WHO report identified:

• 27 psychiatrists (0.28 psychiatrist per 100.000 inhabitants)

• 14 physicians with no specialization in psychiatry (0.14 per 100.000 inhabitants)

• 36 nurses per 100.000 inhabitants

• 194 psychologists, i-e two per 100.000 inhabitants

• 82 social workers, i-e 0.86 per 100.000 inhabitants

• 1 occupational therapist

• 1 neurologist

• 2 speech therapists.

Mental Health in the Aftermath of the HAITI 2010 Earthquake

Weeks after the earthquake, there was a mobilization of Haitian psychologists toward the implementation of a national mental health policy in the country. Several meetings were held from March 2010 to December 2010 to plan and implement the formation of l'Association Haitienne de Psychologie (AHPsy) (Haitian Psychological Association). The newly formed association aimed to partner with other stakeholders in defining a national plan for mental health. As a result, AHPsy held its first conference in June 2011. A plethora of local and international psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, nurses, spiritual healers, instructors, and educators participated in that conference and shared their data, findings and knowledge on psychological trauma and other related issues (11). Three years later in 2014, a 60-pages document entitled “Mental Health Component” was published by the MSPP (12).

Training of Human Resources in Psychological First Aid and Other Related Approaches

In the aftermath of the earthquake, Haiti became the new El Dorado as non-governmental organizations and international organizations (IOs) entered the country to provide emergency care and “psychological first aid” to amputees in a state of posttraumatic shock, and those with other physical injuries (9). Multiple training sessions, workshops and conferences between Haitian and foreign psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers were organized in Haiti and abroad.

Implementation of Ideo and Uramel and First Psychological Trauma Center in Haiti

L'Institut de Development Personnel et Organisationnel- (IDEO) (Institute for Personal and Institutional Development) and the Unite de Recherche et d'Action Medico-Legale-URAMEL (Unit of Research and Medico-Legal Action) partnered to offer psychological first aid training and trauma-focused care before the 2010 earthquake. In the aftermath of the earthquake, they received international funding from “Terre des Hommes and Trauma Aid Germany” to launch Haiti's first comprehensive Psychological Trauma Center (Center de Psychotrauma) in Port-au-Prince. According to an interview with the Haitian online press agency Alterpresse in January 2014, URAMEL's head reported having conducted more than 17,000 therapy sessions for 3,869 people (13). The Report published in 2016 by IDEO (14) indicated that from December 2011 to April 2015, children's mental health and development were largely taken into account in their overall program.

Integrative Approaches of PFA

Plas Timoun (Children's Corner)

The First Lady of the Republic of Haiti, Elizabeth Préval, initiated a project called Plas Timoun, to help children cope with stressful events such as grievance, loss of homes, and relocation to temporary shelters, etc. A group of six buses were parked in the courtyard of the Haitian Art Museum in “Champ de Mars,” the largest public square in the capital at that time transformed into a vast temporary accommodation camp. In Champs de Mars, children benefited from eight workshops: painting, theater, reading, games, music, pottery, sport and socio-educational activities1.

The Response of the Haitian Church With Catholic Relief Support

As a result of the support provided by Secours Catholique (Catholic Relief), a non-profit catholic association that indicated having provided psychological assistance to more than 15,000 children since 2012, the “Cellule D'Aide Psychologique” (Psychological Assistance Unit) (CAP-CHR) was implemented. In an attempt to respond adequately to the numerous requests for psychological services from the community, following January 2010, the Haitian Conference of Religious (CHR), through this structure, the CAP was initially created in support of religious structures. The CAP is a group of Christians with skills in psychology but also laypersons sharing the same Christian values. In May 2011, the association CAP-CHR was recognized by the Ministry of Social Affairs of Haiti. The purpose of the CAP-CHR was to mobilize and train teams of undergraduates in psychology to work with families, throughout schools and provide them with tools for their psychological reconstruction.

Eleven years after the most devastating natural catastrophe in Haiti's history, the memories and the scars of the earthquake are alive in the Haitian collective psyche. And Haitian mental health professionals unanimously acknowledged that the disaster shed light on the importance of mental health for disaster-preparedness initiatives in this disaster-prone island. From this psychological standpoint, what lessons could high-income countries learn from the Haitian experience with the 2010 earthquake? We recommend avoiding the spirit of war which was adopted by some world leaders as a coping strategy to COVID-19, rather in Table 1, we propose a roadmap toward the dissemination of culturally-tailored psychological first aid and other related approaches to address mental health outcomes of the pandemic.

TABLE 1
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Table 1. A roadmap toward the dissemination of culturally tailored psychological first aid frameworks during Covid-19 pandemic.

Conclusion

In summary, 10 years after the Haiti 2010 earthquake, great progress has been made in public policies, programs and the provision of services in the field of mental health. As a result of such progress, in April 2020, to ensure that psychological care became more accessible, AHPsy launched a helpline. For nearly 3 weeks, as COVID-19 made waves in the country, attendants received calls from dozens of Haitians in need of professional psychological support. According to the head of this service, the former President of AHPsy, “Although the service was not created specifically for COVID-19, it was set up in the midst of a coronavirus pandemic. Surprisingly, we are receiving very few cases of psychological distress in connection to the COVID-19 pandemic,” says Ronald Jean Jacques (15). Could Haiti's long history of coping with historical traumas and natural disaster a buffer against adverse mental health outcomes during COVID-19? One year since the first case of COVID-19 has been reported in Haiti, at the end of March 2021, Haiti was among the countries with the least COVID-19 confirmed cases (<13,000) and death (<300) (16). Certainly, some could argue that, this is due to a lack of testing, limited tourist activities and commercial relationships with the outside world. For historical and socio-economic reasons, global health authorities were anxious about the impact of COVID-19 on the first Black republic along with other low and middle-income countries (LMICs). As of April 2021, surprisingly, according to the Haitian Ministry of Health, Haiti is coping well with the COVID-19 pandemic.

Author Contributions

All authors listed have made a substantial, direct and intellectual contribution to the work, and approved it for publication.

Funding

JB research was supported by funds from the NIH (T32HL129953), AS was supported by NIH-funded K01HL135452 and R01HL152453, GJ-L was supported by NIH-funded K07AG052685, R01MD007716, and R01HL142066, and EL was supported by the Fogarty International Center and National Institute of Mental Health, of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number D43 TW010543.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Footnotes

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Keywords: 2019 coronavirus disease, Haiti 2010 earthquake, psychological first aid, war mentality, low and middle income country

Citation: Blanc J, Seixas A, Louis EF, Conserve DF, Casimir G and Jean-Louis G (2021) Lessons Learned From a Low-Income Country to Address Mental Health Needs During COVID-19. Front. Psychiatry 12:576352. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.576352

Received: 01 July 2020; Accepted: 20 April 2021;
Published: 10 June 2021.

Edited by:

Stefan Swartling Peterson, Karolinska Institutet (KI), Sweden

Reviewed by:

Anu Mary Oommen, Christian Medical College & Hospital, India

Copyright © 2021 Blanc, Seixas, Louis, Conserve, Casimir and Jean-Louis. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Judite Blanc, juditeblanc@yahoo.fr

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