The New Reform Benefiting Mental Health in Panama
The COVID-19 pandemic impacted mental health in Panama and quality of life in 2020. There has been a global spike in psychiatric illnesses and overall quality of life since the pandemic. This event has increased the number of laws worldwide for health care and improved living, especially for citizens with no health care, public health care or, in some places, universal health care.
Mental health in Panama took a toll after COVID-19 and the 2020 pandemic; according to a poll of 480 adults living in Panama, 65.2% agreed the pandemic affected them and 62.9% agreed that mental health declined. In the same poll, 80.8% of participants were women and 37.3% checked off as unemployed. In 2021, the OECD published that the poverty rate jumped 3% in 2020 from 14.6% to 17.8%, and extreme poverty dropped 0.2%.
A Law for the People
The new law 364 in Panama from Feb. 4, 2023, established the human right to mental health assistance nationally. This legislation means Panama recognizes mental health as a human right for every person, with no discrimination against medical backgrounds or income. In this new law, there are 15 articles.
According to Article 1, “insurance companies may not discriminate against people who have mental health conditions when they are contracting a life or health insurance policy.” Article 2 states that “Private health centers providing care for people with mental, behavioral or neurodevelopment disorders may not refuse medical/psychological assistance to a person experiencing a mental health crisis.”
These two articles within the legislation could prove vital in the goals to provide national mental health assistance. Since public health care systems do not cover mental health in Panama, many would have needed private health care even to get coverage to attend a facility. Though citizens still do not get coverage through the new law, it allows private facilities in Panama to treat residents with little to no health care coverage. It also allows citizens with mental health disorders or other medical problems to acquire insurance more easily.
The Right Mindset
The legislation passed aims to promote awareness of mental health in Panama and encourage the public to seek help. A couple of essential objectives; “to guarantee access to quality services for mental health care services, reduce suicide rates and reduce the stigma surrounding mental health,” according to Icaza, González-Ruiz & Alemán. These objectives are essential to the goals set out in this new law. Panama also plans to create an educational program for all schools, private or public. That promotes mental well-being, prevention of mental decline, and signs to be aware of when dealing with someone who has a mental health condition.
Determination to Do Good
Panama rose, determined to do good for the citizens. When this legislation passed in February 2023, the executive branch had six months to regulate it and there has been no report of it since. The plan is to battle mental health in Panama and insurance issues for the citizens so everyone, regardless of income or history, has an equal chance of acquiring better health.
– Liam E. McGrenaghan
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