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Links
between HIV and mental illness overlooked
IRIN News
May 29, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/Report.aspx?ReportId=78476
The links between
HIV and mental illness are so multi-layered, and little understood,
that doctors often struggle to determine which came first. Mental
healthcare professionals in South Africa sometimes battle to understand
the causes of a patient's psychosis or dementia, without knowing
that the patient has a late-stage HIV infection, while their colleagues
in the HIV/AIDS sector have little or no training on how to deal
with patients with mental illnesses.
"There are no specific
mental health services for people living with HIV," said Prof
Melvyn Freeman, co-author of a study by South Africa's Human Sciences
Research Council, which found that 44 percent of a sample of 900
HIV-positive individuals were suffering from a mental disorder.
Mental illnesses can
themselves be risk factors for HIV. Some mental disorders lead to
greater promiscuity; others can make sufferers more vulnerable to
sexual abuse and exploitation. Even depression can increase an individual's
HIV risk.
"If you don't feel
there's much point in your own survival, you don't see the point
in taking precautions to protect yourself," noted Freeman,
who has advised the UN World Health Organization on how better to
integrate mental health into its HIV/AIDS initiatives.
Conversely, people with
HIV are more likely to develop mental illness than the general population.
The effects that HIV and AIDS can have on an individual's mental
health range from the depression and anxiety that may accompany
an HIV-positive diagnosis, or the death of loved ones, to the dementia
and psychosis that can occur when the disease becomes more advanced
and affects the brain.
"One of our biggest
challenges in psychiatry is this epidemic," said Dr Greg Jonsson,
a psychiatrist at the vast Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital, on the
outskirts of Soweto, Johannesburg's most populous township. "We
weren't really trained in HIV; [psychiatrists] were sending these
patients to ARV [antiretroviral treatment] clinics, and the problem
with that was they weren't trained in psychiatry."
The end result, said
Jonsson, was that patients with psychiatric problems were being
marginalised and often excluded from treatment, on the basis that
they were not considered capable of remembering to take the pills
every day. Non-compliance while on ARV treatment results in the
development of drug-resistant forms of the virus that are even more
difficult to treat.
"We know people
who have neuro-psychiatric disorders related to HIV respond to ARVs,"
said Rita Thom, a psychiatrist at the University of Witwatersrand
who has researched mental disorders in HIV-positive people. Ensuring
that the patients get the drugs is the first major hurdle, added
Thom; helping them to adhere to the drugs is the second.
One-stop
shop
With
funding from the Aurum Institute for Health Research, an independent
medical scientific organization, Jonsson, along with a nurse, an
occupational therapist and a psychologist, decided to open a special
clinic at Baragwanath's psychiatric section for HIV-positive patients
who were also suffering from mental illness.
"The goal is to
treat the HIV and also treat the mental illness, because at the
ARV clinics they're so overwhelmed that they don't pick up on the
depressions and the dementias and the anxiety," said Jonsson.
Starting in March, the
clinic has become a one-stop shop for patients to pick up both their
psychiatric and HIV medication, meet with Jonsson and, if they are
able, participate in a support group.
The group meeting on
a recent Friday at first proceeds like any other.
Linda* talks passionately
about the difference ARV treatment has made to her health, while
Zanele* voices her ambivalence about starting the life-long drug
regimen. The facilitator explains the difference between HIV and
AIDS, and how ARV drugs can help, but are not a cure.
"So HIV can't be
cured?" asks Sipho*, a young man in a baseball cap who has
been quiet up until this point.
The facilitator patiently
reiterates that the virus can be managed with ARVs, but that there
is no cure as yet.
"What are ARVs?"
asks Sipho, who is then unable to say for sure whether or not he
is taking them.
Clearly, this is no ordinary
support group. "Many of you are here because you don't only
have HIV, you have another illness as well," says the facilitator,
and the discussion takes a new turn.
Sipho tells the group
he has schizophrenia. "I had a Gogo's [Zulu word for grandmother]
voice crying in my throat," he says, demonstrating with a strangled
growl. "My mother said I must see a doctor. Now I'm okay."
Zanele confides that
she is bi-polar: sometimes she is very angry and sad, at other times
very happy.
Linda is recovering her
memory after being in a coma for two weeks. "I was blank until
last week - it was very scary," she later told IRIN/PlusNews.
She believes the coma
was brought on by stress caused by members of her community. "They
saw me losing weight and they were laughing at me; they told my
boyfriend I was HIV and he left me. I was very stressed out,"
she said.
Although stress may have
played a role, according to her doctor, it was an HIV-related disease
- tubercular meningitis - that caused Linda to slip into a coma
and subsequently lose her memory. Her fairly rapid recovery in recent
weeks is probably the result of her taking TB drugs and then beginning
ARV treatment earlier this month.
"My sister used
to have to remind me [to take the pills], but now she doesn't have
to," Linda said proudly.
No guidelines
There
are no special guidelines on how to adapt HIV/AIDS treatment to
the special needs of psychiatric patients, but according to Jonsson
and Liselle De Wee, the clinical psychologist who facilitates the
support group, education plays a vital role in helping patients
who find it difficult to adhere to their medication schedules.
Clinic staff frequently
repeat and reinforce information about how patients should take
their medication and encourage patients to choose a treatment "buddy"
- a family member or friend who will remind them to take their daily
drugs.
"People recovering
from psychosis might not be able to integrate information as well
as other people," said De Wee after the support group meeting.
"You always have to check that the penny has really dropped."
While ARVs will treat
the HIV infection and usually help with HIV-related dementia, other
drugs may be needed to manage unrelated mental illnesses like schizophrenia.
According to Jonsson, interactions between the two sets of drugs
are another source of "huge problems" that still require
more research.
Mental
health services in short supply
Other
than the new clinic at Baragwanath, which only has about 45 patients,
South Africa's public health sector has no specialized mental health
services for people living with HIV. Psychiatrists and psychologists
prepared to work for the state are in short supply, and those willing
to work in the field of HIV are even rarer.
"The other psychologists
in my department, not all of them want to be involved with this.
HIV is very draining and they have other interests," said De
Wee, who volunteers her time to work at the clinic. "I've got
a passion for this, and if it wasn't for that I definitely wouldn't
be here."
The need to incorporate
mental health services into HIV/AIDS treatment is clear. "The
models are: you either bring specialist mental health professionals
into the [HIV/AIDS] service, or you train the HIV professionals
to deal with it; what probably needs to happen is a bit of both,"
said Rita Thom, the psychiatrist from Witwatersrand University.
"Mental health services
are so underdeveloped in South Africa that if we can piggy back
on HIV services, we might improve services for everyone."
*Not their
real names
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