Pubdate: Fri, 15 Dec 2000 Source: Daily Graphic (CN MB) Copyright: 2000 Portage la Prairie Daily Graphic Contact: P.O. Box 130, Portage la Prairie, Manitoba, Canada, R1N 3B4 Fax: (204) 239-1270 Website: http://www.bowesnet.com/dailygraphic/ DRUGS AND MENTAL CASES DR Sammy Allotey, specialist in charge of the Pantang Psychiatric Hospital in the Greater Accra Region, has disclosed that 17,000 mental patients have been treated and discharged from the hospital this year alone. He also indicated that a total of 250,521 mental patients have been treated and discharged by the hospital since its establishment 25 years ago. Dr Allotey, who made this known at the end-of-year fund-raising gathering on Wednesday, also expressed concern about the increasing numbers of young people reporting with mental cases arising from drug abuse and appreciable numbers of women who have been emotionally and physically abused (see centre pages). It is true that the rising incidence of mental cases is a global phenomenon from which Ghana and other countries cannot completely claim immunity. Globalisation has made nonsense of the otherwise wide distances that separate nations and actively facilitated the bringing together of people of diverse ethnic, religious, racial, social, economic and other backgrounds. With this advantage of proximity engendered by globalisation has come a variety of influences both positive and negative. But whilst we have been relatively slow, mainly because of our level of development, in making advances in the technological sphere to enable us to close the yawning technological gap between us and the developed world, we have rapidly assimilated some negative traits and values from the developed world which have had and continue to have far-reaching consequences for our nations and people. The proliferation and increasing use of hard drugs such as marijuana, cocaine, heroin and others are, in a large measure, reported to account for the rise in the number of mental cases in the society. It has particularly become attractive for the youth to take to such drugs as a result of peer pressure or as inducement to indulge in acts of mischief or the supposed pleasure they give them. In some of our second cycle and tertiary institutions, the indulgence in hard drugs has been wrongly and dangerously elevated to the status of enlightenment with those who shy from their use being tagged as "uncivilised". But the bigger danger in this regard has been the erroneous impression in the ranks of many students that resorting to the use of hard drugs enhances their ability to assimilate their lessons and thus boost their academic performance. Largely on the strength of this misconception, a good number of students, many of whom are brilliant enough to pass their examinations without any external assistance, have ended up in psychiatric hospitals and ruined their educational career. The revelation by the authorities of the Accra Psychiatric Hospital recently to the effect that an appreciable number of students have come there seeking medical attention on account of drug abuse is but a testimony to this serious concern raised by us. T he Graphic perceives education and the exertion of more parental influence, including that of teachers at school, as important factors that can help stem the tide of the increasing drug abuse in the society. In this challenging 21st Century that we have entered, a healthy, strong and well-educated and focused youth represents the hope for the future. It is, therefore, a matter of serious concern for considerable numbers of the youth to waste their lives on drugs and instead of being assets, have rather become liabilities whom the state has to spend huge sums of money to rehabilitate. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom