Advertisement

We need your help now

Support from readers like you keeps The Journal open.

You are visiting us because we have something you value. Independent, unbiased news that tells the truth. Advertising revenue goes some way to support our mission, but this year it has not been enough.

If you've seen value in our reporting, please contribute what you can, so we can continue to produce accurate and meaningful journalism. For everyone who needs it.

Professor Brendan Kelly

Opinion I'm a psychiatrist, and here's what Ireland's mental health services need

Brendan Kelly writes about what he’s learned in his decades of working as a psychiatrist and how best to serve people.

I AM A psychiatrist, a medical doctor who specialises in the treatment of mental illness.

Psychiatry is different to other branches of medicine. Psychiatric diagnoses are based on symptoms and stories rather than tests and scans. Each person comes with a unique set of troubles and strengths, problems and solutions. Everyone is different.

This is why I love psychiatry: nothing is stable, everything changes, and each person is unique. The suffering is real, but so is recovery after a time of crisis. I am in constant awe of the body’s ability to heal and the mind’s capacity to grow.

It helps that psychiatric treatments work for most people most of the time, even for severe conditions such as depression, bipolar disorder (manic depression), and schizophrenia. Numerous research studies show that cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) and antidepressant medications not only alleviate depression but also reduce relapse. Mindfulness-based therapies are also effective, making the range of options very broad. Even psychedelics might have a role.

Some treatments deliver benefits beyond what I might expect. Antipsychotic medication reduces symptoms of severe mental illness but is also associated with lower risk of early death in schizophrenia. Combined with psychological interventions and social support, treatment can make an enormous difference.

Psychological and psychiatric treatments are not perfect. Side-effects can occur. Sometimes, it takes time to identify a therapy that helps. But there are a growing number of psychological approaches and new medications that act in different, better ways, to suit a broader range of people. One size does not fit all.

I qualified as a doctor in Galway in 1996 and have worked in the Irish mental health service for almost a quarter of a century. At this stage, I must have seen tens of thousands of people with depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and a range of other conditions.

Community solutions

I have also seen many people with unhappiness or problems of living, rather than mental illness. These issues require family support, the help of friends, and strong community networks. Psychiatric services are at their best when we focus on mental illness, rather than the emotional ups and downs of everyday life. It is harmful to medicalise unhappiness.

We suffer, heal, and help each other in families, communities, and societies. We need community solutions for problems of living, accessible psychological care for mild psychological problems, and specialist inpatient and outpatient services for serious mental illness.

Mental health services have changed dramatically over recent decades. In the 1960s, Ireland had over 20,000 people in psychiatric hospitals, the highest rate in the world. By 2020, we had 1,826 adult psychiatry inpatients, and 50 under the age of 18 – a dramatic reduction.

We have the third lowest number of psychiatry inpatient beds per 100,000 population in the EU. Our involuntary admission rate (“sectioning”) is half that of England.

This shift to community care is very positive, but low admission rates come at a price – people with mental illness in prison, homeless, or at home, too ill to accept treatment, but not ill enough for treatment without consent under mental health legislation.

We need more inpatient beds, but nobody wants to return to the days of “mental hospitals”. Community services need a substantial boost, especially for children and adolescents.

Budget problems

Ireland devotes just 5.1% of our health budget to mental health. Sláintecare recommends 10 per cent. The World Health Organisation suggests 12%. In the UK, it is almost 13%.

This low budget has knock-on effects. Recruitment problems are endemic in psychiatry. Consultant posts commonly attract zero applicants. Better resourcing would help with recruitment, morale, and staff retention. Like all health professionals, doctors enter medicine to help people, but need supports and a robust framework to do so.

Positive change is possible. Between 1990 and 2016, the global rate of suicide fell by a third. While there is still much more progress to be made, and even one suicide is one too many, this is an enormous change by any standards. Even in the midst of the Covid-19 pandemic, suicide in the US fell by almost 6% in 2020. Even at the worst of times, some things can get better.

Used correctly, psychological and psychiatric treatments work for most people most of the time, but they are not perfect and are not enough on their own. Psychological engagement and social support are vital. A balance is needed, delivered with humility, holism, and hope.

We need more services to make this happen. Social and political activism is essential, to achieve better funding for psychiatric services, more housing for people with mental illness, a meaningful safety net for those who fall between the cracks, and reform of criminal law, court procedures, and prison policies to better protect the rights of people with mental illness.

These issues extend well beyond the health service. Every family in Ireland is touched in some way by psychological problems, mental illness, or suicide.

When it comes to mental health, there is no “them”; there is only “us”. We need to fix this – and we can.

Brendan Kelly is Professor of Psychiatry at Trinity College Dublin and author of In Search of Madness: A Psychiatrist’s Travels Through the History of Mental Illness (Gill Books).

Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.

View 26 comments
Close
26 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic. Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy here before taking part.
Leave a Comment
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Mallon
    Favourite Paul Mallon
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 7:34 AM

    Poor, poor people. Given LSD with no prior knowledge or experience, must have been like a horror movie.

    74
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Jamie Rooney
    Favourite Jamie Rooney
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 10:15 PM

    must have been fucking savage!!

    9
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Martin Jordan
    Favourite Martin Jordan
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 8:21 AM

    The Irish government used to put it in breakfast rolls and red bull from 2004-2008

    52
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Jones Frank
    Favourite Jones Frank
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 8:34 AM

    Apparently they used to hand it out to those attending tribunals, it helped their abstract creative juices to flow

    20
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Conor Oneill
    Favourite Conor Oneill
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 7:26 AM

    LSD is a safe drug unlike cocaine or heroin. It’s actually safer than alcohol or ciggerettes. There is a bbc YouTube documentary about it http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRgb5coMXGk&feature=youtube_gdata_player

    43
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Ryan oneill
    Favourite Ryan oneill
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 7:33 AM

    You’ve never had a bad trip!

    74
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute random
    Favourite random
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 8:15 AM

    It seems that surprise-LSD is a different beast altogether….

    52
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Kitalpha
    Favourite Kitalpha
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 8:49 AM

    If you want to see just how deep the rabbit hole goes read Tranceformation of America by Cathy O Brien. This is only the tip of the iceberg and will be NOTHING compared to the documents that will never see the light of day or the ones that will be unclassified in the future.

    18
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Lara Gillespie
    Favourite Lara Gillespie
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 9:22 AM

    Hallucinogens can be succesfully used to treat depression. They are now finding that Ecstasy, in a controlled setting, is the only successful treatment for US veterans returning to the states from Iraq who are suffering from PTSD brought on by the trauma- to everyone- by war. There was a conference in San Francisco last year on the subject of hallucinogens as psychological treatment. This article is reminiscent of the extreme portrayal of pot in the 1950′s movie called Reefer Madness. God knows the CIA wouldn’t want us all to get our hands on LSD because it can lead to the realisation that authority is a rediculous farce. There is a psychiatrist in Ireland now promoting putting lithium in the drinking water to address depression (that’d be illegal medication without consent) but if that extreme thought is being entertained–maybe acid would be a better additive. Of course I’m joking :-)

    14
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Paul Mallon
    Favourite Paul Mallon
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 11:20 AM

    I think LSD should me mandatory on your 18th birthday.

    14
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute B7584
    Favourite B7584
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 12:04 PM

    The use of MDMA has been well known for a long time in treating PTSD & emotional issues.

    EVERYBODY should try a trip, even a half a trip just once.

    17
    See 2 more replies ▾
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Shanti Om
    Favourite Shanti Om
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 3:21 PM

    @ Paul, certain tribes such as the Bwiti tribe in Cameroon use hallucinogens (or in this case as it is deemed sacred, an entheogen) such as Iboga as a rite of passage into adulthood. The experience is supposed to encourage empathy and compassion by inducing a sort of “life review” where the person experiences their life from the point of view of those around them.

    There was a show ages ago on BBC called “Tribe” where the film maker went to stay with them and did the Iboga ceremony, it’s worth a look if you can track it down..

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Jamie Rooney
    Favourite Jamie Rooney
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 10:19 PM

    to be honest, I’d bet heavily that the flouride in water is the source of a lot of the nation’s depression and subservience!
    An irony about MDMA (ecstacy to all y’all), is that it was given/tested on US soldiers in Korea and Vietnam in the name of trying to achieve the perfect soldier…. one without fear and without a need for sleep.
    ReeferMadness was complete right-wing propoganda, same as the news coverage of the same topics still remains today!

    4
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute David Higgins
    Favourite David Higgins
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 8:34 AM

    Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds :D

    13
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Craig Maguire
    Favourite Craig Maguire
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 9:07 AM

    sounds like something out of fringe… was it doctor bishop running the experiments??

    10
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Tracey Dickens
    Favourite Tracey Dickens
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 7:35 AM

    Bet Dr Olsens family doesn’t think that!!

    9
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Ed Kavanagh
    Favourite Ed Kavanagh
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 1:21 PM

    Why is it that people are willing to believe this but won’t believe the FBI report that said there were no phone calls from the 911 passengers because It wasn’t technically possible. The only evidence of box cutters come from a call that the FBI say didn’t happen..

    Olson’s Story Contradicted by the FBI

    The most serious official contradiction of Ted Olson’s story came in 2006 at the trial of Zacarias Moussaoui, the so-called 20th hijacker. The evidence presented to this trial by the FBI included a report on phone calls from all four 9/11 flights. In its report on American Flight 77, the FBI report attributed only one call to Barbara Olson and it was an “unconnected call,” which (of course) lasted “0 seconds.” According to the FBI, therefore, Ted Olson did not receive a single call from his wife using either a cell phone or an onboard phone.

    Back on 9/11, the FBI itself had interviewed Olson. A report of that interview indicates that Olson told the FBI agents that his wife had called him twice from Flight 77. 10 And yet the FBI’s report on calls from Flight 77, presented in 2006, indicated that no such calls occurred.

    This was an amazing development: The FBI is part of the Department of Justice, and yet its report undermined the well-publicized claim of the DOJ’s former solicitor general that he had received two calls from his wife on 9/11. – globalresearch

    Food for thought…

    9
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Dave O'Shea
    Favourite Dave O'Shea
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 7:53 AM

    Now it’s lariam….. But what’s more frightening….. It’s prescribed

    8
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Unitedpeople Ireland
    Favourite Unitedpeople Ireland
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 10:22 AM

    This has been known for some time hasn’t it?

    I’ve been reading about this for the last near five years alone with documentation available then along with details via a dad that sued the USA government over the effects it had on his son.

    Crazy stuff that I suspect we only know 5% at most, what the hell they were – are? – doing!

    7
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Eugene O' Neill
    Favourite Eugene O' Neill
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 9:32 AM

    Here’s a good link about CIA experiments in France were 7 people died as a result.
    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/france/7415082/French-bread-spiked-with-LSD-in-CIA-experiment.html

    2
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Brendan Kelly
    Favourite Brendan Kelly
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 8:47 PM

    The Dr. Olsen mentioned was a member of Gottleib’s team who was apparently going to blow the whistle according to Jon Ronson’s ‘The Men Who Stared At Goats’ (which later became an incredibly shit film).

    Olsen’s death is also the source of the myth that LSD, Mushrooms and other hallucinogenics make you believe you can fly.

    1
    Install the app to use these features.
    Mute Ciarán Murphy
    Favourite Ciarán Murphy
    Report
    Mar 27th 2012, 1:42 PM

    This 1974 “Family Jewels Report” deals mainly with domestic CIA abuses but some of the documents are staggering http://www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv/NSAEBB/NSAEBB222/index.htm

    1
Submit a report
Please help us understand how this comment violates our community guidelines.
Thank you for the feedback
Your feedback has been sent to our team for review.

Leave a commentcancel

 
JournalTv
News in 60 seconds