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Addressing Mental Health in Togo

Mental Health in TogoThe West African country of Togo is located on the Gulf of Guinea, filled with beautiful white sand beaches and lush forests. The country’s geography is met with a population of 9,304,337 and increasing. The population growth rate of the country is 2.4%. In the year 2050, Togo expects to maintain a population of 15,584,778. The rapidly growing population is detrimental to a country amid a mental health crisis. More than half of the population lives off of $1.90 in U.S. currency a day and identifies with having mental health struggles from depression due to the absence of socioeconomic security.

The lack of economic growth in rural areas in Togo results 58.8% residing in poverty. Living below the poverty benchmark leaves many Togolese in a determinantal state. The absence of socioeconomic security prevents access to public health care, specifically mental health evaluation. Togo has only five licensed psychiatrists per 8 million people making mental health care in Togo challenging to access. Psychological help is a last resort for many Togolese as personal methods have not remedied one’s struggles. The West African region has the most significant suicide rates in the world; data concludes that 79% of the world’s suicides occur in developing countries.

Meeting Mental Health in the Middle 

Mental disorders affect young women in Africa the most. About 85% of 66 million young women have limited access to mental health treatment. The Bluemind Foundation is a nonprofit organization persistently working to defy the statistical outcomes of mental health in Africa. In 2023, the foundation funded the certification of 150 women in therapeutic training sessions. Heal by Hair is Bluemind’s signature three-day training program for French-speaking African hairdressers, which equips them with the skills to identify mental disorders and actively listen to their clients. In Lomé, the capital of Togo, Tele da Silveira is joining the fight one hairstyling session at a time.

Ms. Silveira is one of the 150 women certified by The Bluemind Foundation. Her salon has become a space of praise and peace for many of her clients. Mental health in Togo is frequently de-prioritized by the government. Ms. Silveira struggles with depression herself and is hoping for a more significant governmental push for mental health awareness and accessible care for all. Togo is not the only country that lacks public health support for mental illness; Madagascar, South Africa and Nigeria fall deeper into the statistics every day. “African countries have an average of 1 therapist per 500,000 inhabitants.” The Bluemind Foundation is determined to change the data. By 2035, Bluemind strives to have 1,000 certified hairdressers in more than 20 cities, caring for 2 million women. 

Taking Action for Togo 

Along with The Bluemind Foundation, The Humanity and Inclusion non-governmental organization (HI) strives to make mental health support in Togo accessible to all. The organization is pushing for mental health campaigns to be in schools. HI trains professionals in multiple education sectors in psychological support and boosts awareness within the community. Mental health is taboo throughout many African countries. Mental health in Togo is surrounded by stigma due to the lack of knowledge on mental illness as a whole.

HI’s mental health initiative is recent but promising. The Humanity and Inclusion organization works primarily on disability representation in education settings in developing countries. The organization’s tricycle movement in Togo, which gifted disabled students tricycles, was a success. Many Togolese see promise in the HI mental health effort due to the success of their disability efforts. Bluemind Foundation and Humanity and Inclusion empower the local communities to take a stand for their health by giving them the tools needed to help themselves and others. In March 2024, the Africa CDC established a new Mental Health Leadership Programme. The program plans to strengthen the public health workforce and establish mental health awareness and research as a priority. Regardless of access to public health care, the Togolese and Africans continue to bring awareness and support to each other.

Looking Ahead 

Mental health may be a taboo in many African countries. However, Togo is taking a stand for itself. Mental health in Togo will not change because of public health care access but because of the voices of the people. A hair salon chair to the shoulder of a helpful friend is how awareness is spreading, and the astigmatism is breaking. The work of the Bluemind Foundation, Humanity Inclusion and other organizations is just the beginning of mental health awareness for Togo and Africa.

– Mackenzie Inman

Mackenzie is based in Washington D.C., USA and focuses on Good News and Technology for The Borgen Project.

Photo: Pixabay