The Prague Post - Ghana's mentally ill trapped between prayer and care

EUR -
AED 4.35028
AFN 75.216997
ALL 96.488551
AMD 446.639581
ANG 2.120035
AOA 1086.236435
ARS 1657.536407
AUD 1.676866
AWG 2.132199
AZN 2.019688
BAM 1.955973
BBD 2.389212
BDT 145.092858
BGN 1.951727
BHD 0.446604
BIF 3506.96276
BMD 1.184555
BND 1.497069
BOB 8.226729
BRL 6.211566
BSD 1.186205
BTN 107.508527
BWP 15.592382
BYN 3.381529
BYR 23217.277527
BZD 2.385811
CAD 1.615685
CDF 2671.171242
CHF 0.911071
CLF 0.025884
CLP 1022.057316
CNY 8.183675
CNH 8.158694
COP 4335.364602
CRC 572.028963
CUC 1.184555
CUP 31.390707
CVE 110.274773
CZK 24.263007
DJF 211.23872
DKK 7.471101
DOP 73.843739
DZD 153.693645
EGP 55.431129
ERN 17.768325
ETB 184.521543
FJD 2.621953
FKP 0.868061
GBP 0.870358
GEL 3.168715
GGP 0.868061
GHS 13.043156
GIP 0.868061
GMD 87.06606
GNF 10411.483203
GTQ 9.098806
GYD 248.181994
HKD 9.257658
HNL 31.348587
HRK 7.537314
HTG 155.267206
HUF 377.616585
IDR 19959.751343
ILS 3.670604
IMP 0.868061
INR 107.502512
IQD 1554.03772
IRR 49899.378544
ISK 145.02537
JEP 0.868061
JMD 185.52861
JOD 0.839803
JPY 181.114879
KES 152.74822
KGS 103.589372
KHR 4767.221249
KMF 491.590601
KPW 1066.108258
KRW 1712.890241
KWD 0.363125
KYD 0.988588
KZT 582.861653
LAK 25409.961631
LBP 106210.079903
LKR 366.850572
LRD 220.639553
LSL 18.938681
LTL 3.497683
LVL 0.716525
LYD 7.479663
MAD 10.845261
MDL 20.121386
MGA 5176.45874
MKD 61.665041
MMK 2487.15687
MNT 4223.612986
MOP 9.551546
MRU 47.341397
MUR 54.406834
MVR 18.248113
MWK 2056.886779
MXN 20.356992
MYR 4.62078
MZN 75.704505
NAD 18.941879
NGN 1604.905648
NIO 43.652026
NOK 11.274393
NPR 172.006709
NZD 1.963216
OMR 0.455458
PAB 1.186305
PEN 3.978553
PGK 5.095236
PHP 68.603489
PKR 331.64379
PLN 4.216364
PYG 7753.687136
QAR 4.323483
RON 5.09643
RSD 117.445088
RUB 90.903882
RWF 1732.473092
SAR 4.442325
SBD 9.529961
SCR 16.694426
SDG 712.508288
SEK 10.603591
SGD 1.495498
SHP 0.888723
SLE 28.962078
SLL 24839.524797
SOS 676.731407
SRD 44.766731
STD 24517.896393
STN 24.501137
SVC 10.37992
SYP 13100.674472
SZL 18.933678
THB 37.041068
TJS 11.192192
TMT 4.145942
TND 3.421303
TOP 2.852124
TRY 51.793949
TTD 8.043713
TWD 37.238616
TZS 3087.933161
UAH 51.268061
UGX 4199.37215
USD 1.184555
UYU 45.964073
UZS 14497.284757
VES 465.210358
VND 30762.892723
VUV 141.054658
WST 3.212769
XAF 655.984676
XAG 0.015903
XAU 0.000242
XCD 3.201319
XCG 2.137889
XDR 0.815872
XOF 656.015136
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.338522
ZAR 18.993806
ZMK 10662.411239
ZMW 21.799932
ZWL 381.426219
  • BCC

    -1.5600

    86.5

    -1.8%

  • CMSD

    0.0647

    23.64

    +0.27%

  • BCE

    -0.1200

    25.71

    -0.47%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    23.75

    +0.21%

  • JRI

    0.2135

    13.24

    +1.61%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    0.3900

    58.93

    +0.66%

  • NGG

    1.1800

    92.4

    +1.28%

  • RIO

    0.1600

    98.07

    +0.16%

  • AZN

    1.0300

    205.55

    +0.5%

  • BTI

    -1.1100

    59.5

    -1.87%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    15.57

    -0.32%

  • RELX

    2.2500

    31.06

    +7.24%

  • BP

    0.4700

    37.66

    +1.25%

  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    17.1

    +1.35%

Ghana's mentally ill trapped between prayer and care
Ghana's mentally ill trapped between prayer and care / Photo: Nipah Dennis - AFP

Ghana's mentally ill trapped between prayer and care

On a recent Friday morning, worshippers made their way in droves into the Achimota Forest, a stretch of green in Ghana's capital that doubles as an unlikely sanctuary for the desperate.

Text size:

From the outside, the park and adjacent Accra Zoo appeared calm as branches swayed gently with the dry breeze. Inside, voices rose in tongues as worshippers prayed, some collapsing to the ground as if seized by unseen forces.

At one clearing sits a woman in her early thirties, dishevelled, her eyes fixed on nothing.

Her family says she became "mentally disturbed" a month ago. They've brought her to Prophet Elisha Ankrah of The World for Christ Church, convinced her suffering is spiritual.

"What the doctors cannot cure, God can," Ankrah, draped in white, told AFP. "Many of them come here after the hospitals have failed. Through prayer and fasting, they are restored."

Across Ghana, scenes like this have become more common -- sometimes with dire consequences.

Depression and anxiety have surged in the wake of Covid-19 in Ghana and Africa as a whole, according to the World Health Organization.

In Ghana, just over 80 psychiatrists serve a population exceeding 35 million people, according to the Mental Health Authority (MHA), a government agency under the Ministry of Health.

Access to clinical care is thin outside major cities. And even as the MHA says more than 21 percent of Ghanaians are living with mild to severe mental disorders, only two percent of the national health budget is allocated to mental healthcare.

Families often turn instead to forest "prayer camps" and spiritual healers, driven by beliefs that mental illness is rooted in curses, witchcraft or possession.

- Spirits versus medicine -

About an hour-and-a-half away, at the Mt. Horeb Prayer Camp in Mamfe, in Ghana's Eastern Region, worshipper Kingsley Adjei is unflinching: "You don't treat spirits with tablets. You break them with prayer."

Meanwhile, at the Pure Power Prayer Camp, in Adeiso, attendant Augustina Twumasi argued that faith-based centres help keep Ghana's weak health system together.

"If not for prayer camps, the hospitals would collapse under the numbers," she told AFP. "We are helping the state."

Many camps operate in cramped, poorly ventilated buildings.

Patients often crouch on bare concrete floors. Some are malnourished. Others bear scars from restraints.

Despite Ghana's 2017 ban on shackling people with psychosocial disabilities, the practice has not ended, according to Human Rights Watch. In 2023, the group helped secure the release of more than 30 chained patients in Ghana's Eastern Region alone.

"They still chain patients but hide them when NGOs or journalists are visiting," a security source at one of the camps told AFP.

At the country's flagship medical facility, the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, psychiatrist Abigail Harding said faith shapes how many Ghanaians interpret mental illness.

But "chaining", forced fasting and isolation "can traumatise patients further and delay effective treatment, and in some cases lead to death", she told AFP.

University of Ghana clinical psychologist Emmanuel Asampong said the solution is not to throw out faith healers altogether, who remain trusted among much of the population.

"We need to bring them on board, just as we did with traditional birth attendants," he said. "If they see danger signs, they can refer patients to hospitals."

- Faith, fear and chaining -

In Ghana, family members, police officers or concerned citizens can apply to a court for involuntary treatment when someone poses a danger to themselves or others.

But "people don't know the law, so they don't use it," said Lady-Ann Essuman, an attorney and mental-health advocate.

Meanwhile, the MHA says it has begun engaging faith leaders through training and outreach programmes.

"Religion is deeply part of who we are," says psychiatrist Josephine Stiles Darko, the authority's deputy head of communications. "We can't take spirituality away, but we must ensure that any help given is humane and aligned with the law."

But deep mistrust of hospitals and the hope of instant miracles keep drawing thousands into forests and compounds across the country.

Stigma remains a key barrier to treatment: a 2022 Afrobarometer survey revealed 60 percent of Ghanaians believe mental health conditions are caused by witchcraft or curses.

As the sun climbed over Achimota Forest, the prayers rose louder. The woman brought to Prophet Ankrah did not move. Beside her, her sister squeezed her hand and murmured that healing will come -- if not today, then after more fasting.

strs/nro/sn/jhb/cc

Q.Fiala--TPP