Mental Health in Tonga
According to the World Health Organization (WHO), as of 2022, one in every eight people globally suffers from mental health disorders and diseases. However, the effects are seen disproportionately, as developing countries face higher rates and poorer treatment options than more developed countries. A look into Tonga highlights this.
Causes
Mental health challenges that people in Tonga face mainly stem from difficulties or trauma, even from natural disasters. Tonga’s Prime Minister Hu’akavemeiliku Siaosi Sovaleni, in 2022, tells of the trauma people faced during the aftermath of the volcano and tsunami attacks on their motherland. Disasters have resulted in destroyed homes and infrastructure, leading to a significant toll on mental health.
Another major cause is substance usage and abuse. The Guardian, in 2022, talks about the drug crisis in Tonga, where between 20% to 70% of hospital admissions are because of drug usage and abuse. It further says that drugs have now become a major contributing factor to the onset of mental illnesses and the frequent relapse of individuals with chronic psychiatric disorders like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
Stigma
There is a great stigma around receiving mental health treatment in Tonga, a major reason why many who suffer from mental health conditions choose to keep the illness to themselves and don’t seek help. That’s because of Tongan traditional views of being possessed by spirits or cursed if one has a mental illness. Moreover, Tongan culture has a larger role in this in that family image is very important. Ali Latsu, in a Medium article, explains that Tongans rarely embrace an individualistic mindset, if at all. For Tongan parents, hearing their child confess to mental illness can feel like a veiled criticism of their parenting.
Services
Tonga lacks the extent of resources needed to support the growing population of people who are increasingly struggling with mental health challenges. Besides that, instead of resources increasing and progressing, they are decreasing and regressing. The Mental Health Atlas in 2020 found that the number of mental health workers per 100,000 population decreased from 21.62 in 2017 to 17.23 in 2020. Similarly, the number of community mental-based mental health services per 100,000 decreased from 5.67 in 2014 to just 3.83 in 2020. This downward trend is alarming.
Efforts
In 2022, the University of Auckland announced a groundbreaking partnership. This partnership involves researchers from the university, Te Poutoko Ora a Kiwa I Center for Pacific and Global Health and the Tonga Ministry of Health. The New Zealand Ministry of Health Polynesian Health Corridors supports it. The partnership aims to provide essential population-level insights into mental health and mental health services in Tonga. This information will offer much-needed insight and information to improve the mental health resources available in Tonga.
Furthermore, in March 2024, Tonga’s Minister for Mental Health, Matt Doocey, announced the launch of a new initiative to implement mental health and addiction peer support services in hospital emergency departments. The initiative aims to improve outcomes for individuals seeking crisis help while enabling clinical staff to concentrate on clinical work.
– Shreyan Singha
Shreyan is based in Coral Springs, FL, USA and focuses on Global Health for The Borgen Project.
Photo: Wikimedia Commons
