Malaysia moves to tackle rising mental health crisis among children, teens

Malaysia is working on an action plan to tackle an emerging mental-health crisis among the country’s children and teenagers, Health Minister Dr Zaliha Mustafa said.

The National Centre of Excellence for Mental Health has been tasked with drawing up the plan to combat “a rising trend in mental health issues among our younger generation … both children and teenagers,” she said on Sunday in a speech marking National Mental Health Day.

“As per our statistics, there are some 424,000 children who are facing mental health problems. That is a huge number.”

We need early intervention to ensure that our children will not deteriorate to a more serious state

Malaysian Health Minister Dr Zaliha Mustafa

Last year’s National Health and Morbidity Survey showed that one in four Malaysian teenagers had experienced depression, one in eight had suicidal thoughts and one in 10 had attempted suicide, Zaliha said.

“We need early intervention to ensure that our children will not deteriorate to a more serious state when it comes to mental health,” she said.

The health ministry is working with the education ministry and other government agencies to combat the problem through early detection and intervention, Zaliha said, further pointing to her ministry’s Mentari outreach programme that focuses on reintegrating people with mental health issues into society.

How the pandemic brought Asian children to breaking point

At Sunday’s event, the minister also launched a training module aimed at teaching more healthcare personnel how to handle mental health cases. The Mental Health Psychosocial Support during a Crisis or Disaster Module was developed after the Covid-19 pandemic had exposed constraints on mental-health professionals and at least one MHPSS team had now been created for every district clinic and hospital, she said.

Zaliha further highlighted a suicide-prevention module that had been developed to train emergency and government workers, including firefighters and police officers, on how to deal with such cases.

She also introduced the MyMinda feature on the government’s MySejahtera application – developed during the pandemic to help manage Covid outbreaks – that offers access to mental-health screening services, education resources and a helpline.

The ministry’s “Mental Health Belongs To All, Stop The Stigma” campaign was also launched at the event to improve literacy on mental-health issues and prevent stigma and discrimination against sufferers.

If you have suicidal thoughts or know someone who is experiencing them, help is available. In Hong Kong, dial +852 2896 0000 for The Samaritans or +852 2382 0000 for Suicide Prevention Services. In the US, call or text 988 or chat at 988lifeline.org for the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. For a list of other nations’ helplines, see this page.
This article was first published by The Star

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