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Mental health care in Fiji
Authors:Odille Chang
Abstract:Fiji is one of the largest island nations in the South Pacific. It is multicultural and has an economy based on tourism and sugar production. Like many developing countries Fiji faces the double burden of communicable and non‐communicable diseases as well as a third emerging burden of accidents and injuries. Fiji lacks data on the national prevalence and burden of disease of mental disorders. Using World Health Organization estimates there is over a 90% treatment gap for mental disorders. Contributing to this treatment gap are the misconceptions and stigma surrounding mental illness leading people to seek alternative treatments. Fiji's mental health services were established in 1884, comprising a single ward to care for mentally ill expatriates. Services have since expanded to include a 136‐bed inpatient facility (St. Giles Hospital), which provides outpatient, psychosocial rehabilitative and community psychiatric services. Mental health services remain centralized at St. Giles, with follow‐up in the community supported by a well‐established public health hierarchy and by medical personnel at the divisional hospitals. St. Giles is also responsible for conducting mental health awareness and training for health workers and the public and provides input at a national level for mental health policy, plans and legislation. Psychiatric training is available at the undergraduate nursing and medical levels. The Fiji School of Medicine is in the process of developing a postgraduate psychiatric program. With its limited resources Fiji needs to integrate mental health services into the general and public health systems to achieve a comprehensive and integrated mental health system.
Keywords:Fiji  mental health  psychiatry  services
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