BAGHDAD --
Iraqi psychiatrists are seeing what they call a disturbing spike in mental
health disorders as the war passes its fourth anniversary -- a problem
compounded by Iraq's lack of mental health workers, facilities and services.
Several mental health care professionals suggest the number of untreated
or under-treated people nationwide reaches into the millions, and the
consequences could permanently harm generations.
"Iraqis are being traumatized every day," said Dr. Said al-Hashimi, 54, a
psychiatrist who runs a private clinic and teaches at Mustansiriya Medical
School in Baghdad. "No one knows what will result from living through this
continuous trauma on a daily basis."
The government-run Ibn Rushd psychiatric center in the Iraqi capital
provides examples of damaged people looking for help.
In a sparsely furnished office inside the hospital, Iraqis file in to
describe their ailments to Dr. Haider Adel Ali, a somber 40-year-old
psychiatrist.
Fanzia Jaafer, a 65-year-old housewife, has suffered from severe
depression and suicidal thoughts since viewing the corpse of her son, whose
head was nearly torn off by gunfire late in 2003.
Sundes al-Dulaimi, 27, said she has endured chronic headaches, insomnia,
loss of appetite and panic attacks after the slaying of her 55-year-old father
by a Shiite militia in June.
Zaman al-Keelany, 15, has experienced flashbacks of a rocket destroying a
building in her neighborhood. The high school freshman said she has managed to
continue her studies, but breaks down whenever she hears a loud noise.
Though no reliable research exists on the state of Iraqis' mental health,
the preliminary results of a survey of 10,000 primary school students in the
Shaab section of north Baghdad, conducted by the Iraqi Society of Psychiatrists
and the World Health Organization, reveals widespread problems.
The study, not yet published, found at least 70 percent of students were
suffering from trauma-related symptoms, according to Mohammed al-Aboudi, Iraq's
national mental health adviser. Aboudi said those numbers appeared so high that
the survey was redone -- only to come up with similar results.
Ten-year-old Ahmed al-Dulaimi (no relation to Sundes al-Dulaimi) is one of
the young Iraqis struggling to function.
Computer-savvy Ahmed, who enjoys playing soccer, stopped talking and
refused to eat or drink when his family moved last year from their west Baghdad
home to Fallujah for three months. They had moved after receiving a threatening
letter with a bullet enclosed.
They have returned home and say Ahmed's condition is improving. But the
boy is continuing psychiatric treatment at Ibn Rushd as an outpatient, and Ali
has prescribed antidepressants while advising the boy's family to prevent him
from watching violence on television.
"We're now finding an elevation of mental health disorders in children --
emotional, conduct, peer, attention deficit," Hashimi said. "A number are even
resulting in suicide."
For some Iraqi doctors, the increase in the number of children
traumatized by violence is apparent at the workplace and at home.
"I look into the eyes of children whose parents have been killed or are
imprisoned every day," said Dr. Nadal al-Shamri, a pediatrician at the Medical
City health complex in Baghdad. "The psychological trauma is so deeply
ingrained in some children that they may never lead a normal life."
Al-Shamri said his 7-year-old son suffered an apparent nervous breakdown
last year and stopped eating after the slaying of a close friend's father.
"It's difficult for me to eat after watching him cry," al-Shamri said.
During Saddam Hussein's 24-year reign, mental health was a forbidden
topic, psychiatrists said. But today, things don't seem much better.
Iraqi psychiatrists, like most medical professionals here, are suffering
from training and funding shortages. No psychotherapy or crisis centers exist,
and Ibn Rushd is the only psychiatric hospital in the capital of 6 million
people.
Patients at Ibn Rushd receive free treatment and medication, but those who
can afford care at a private clinic pay roughly 5,000 Iraqi dinars -- nearly
$4 -- for visits that usually last 30 minutes to an hour.
A shortage of prescription medication has resulted in a Health Ministry
order limiting treatments to 10 days.
There is a similar shortage of psychiatrists, who have been among the
professionals and intellectuals leaving Iraq in response to a campaign of
intimidation.
Mental health adviser al-Aboudi, who also heads the Iraqi Society of
Psychiatrists, estimates at least 140 of the country's 200 psychiatrists have
been killed or have fled during the past four years.
Ali, who earns $300 monthly, is determined to remain, and he has the scars
to prove his courage: two bullet wounds in his right arm from an assassination
attempt in his clinic last year.
Remarking on Iraq's diminishing psychiatric resources, Ali said, "There is
little interest from the government. We ask for training and assistance with
(creating psychiatric) centers, but get nothing."
While consulting a string of patients one morning last month, Ali offered
advice, prescriptions and, perhaps most important, compassion.
Jaafer, the housewife with suicidal thoughts, was cloaked in a traditional
black abaya and clutched a white tissue in her right hand as she sat on a chair
adjacent to Ali's desk and described the difficulties of coping with the
killing of her 29-year-old son, Haider, more than three years ago. "Whenever I
remember seeing his body at the morgue, I start to cry," said Jaafer, who
complained of insomnia and losses of memory and appetite.
To make matters worse, Jaafer said, her family provides no support or
sympathy. "They don't believe I'm really suffering," she said. "They just tell
me to stop crying."
Ali looked down at his desk and paused for a moment to let Jaafer wipe the
tears.
"We have all lost a dear one -- you should try to speak to other women
who have lost their children," he said, before writing her a prescription for
Valium.
That's about the best someone like Jaafer can hope for during a visit to
the hospital. Anyone who wants or needs other psychiatric treatment "must go
abroad," Ali said.
With no end to Iraq's troubles on the horizon, mental health professionals
say the entire population eventually will require some type of healing. Hadoon
Waleed, a psychology professor at Baghdad University, painted a grim picture
when questioned about the future.
"Within five years of the falling of the regime, all Iraqis will be
traumatized," he said. "We will all need treatment."
© 2007 Hearst Communications Inc.
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