Friday, March 19, 2010

Cambodia's dark past clouds minds

A young boy sits next to the body of former Khmer Rouge military chief Ta Mok after it was brought to the northern Cambodian city of Anlong Veng, July 22, 2006. Though only about a third of the 14 million Cambodians alive today lived through the Khmer Rouge, its dark legacy still affects the population at large. (Chor Sokunthea/Reuters)

One of the worst mental health crises in Asia gets precious little attention and money.

March 18, 2010
By Aubrey Belford
Special to GlobalPost


PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Psychiatrist Sotheara Chhim has given more thought than most to the mental burdens carried by Cambodians.

Pointing to a glass of water on his table, he describes how the legacy of decades marred by war, genocide and enduring poverty still help push so many here over the edge.

“I think every Cambodian is like a glass carrying some water, meaning the traumatic past,” he said. “If more water is put in, the glass fills easier than an empty glass.”

In many ways Cambodia appears to have turned a corner from its dark past, with big cities booming and millions of foreign tourists visiting the country every year. A flood of foreign aid has even seen scourges such as HIV/AIDS finally under control and uneven progress made against poverty.

Cambodia, however, labors under the burden of one of Asia’s worst mental health crises, driven by the ghosts of its history and the stresses of living in a rapidly changing but still desperately deprived country. And unlike so many other problems in a country flooded with foreign NGOs and international organizations, the issue gets little outside attention, and precious little money.

Comprehensive figures are thin on the ground, but those that are out there point to a grim situation. A study by the Holland-based Transcultural Psychosocial Organization (TPO) found 35 percent of Cambodians suffer from some kind of psychiatric problem and 45 percent suffer from “psychosocial problems” — a broad term embracing everything from grief to stunted emotional development.

At the same time, the country suffers from a dearth of treatment. Only 1 percent of the government’s health budget goes to mental health and only 0.1 percent of the population access mental health services every year.

Cambodia is home to 14 million people, 5 million of whom are survivors of the 1975-1979 reign of the Khmer Rouge, in which up to 2 million died. For that whole population, there are only about 40 psychiatrists, and only around 10 of them outside of the capital.

The results can be seen in Cambodia’s impoverished villages, where the severely mentally ill are often found tethered and caged in hidden recesses beneath stilt houses.

Kevin Conroy, an American Catholic priest who teaches psychology at the Royal University of Phnom Penh, carries in his cell phone the photo of one such woman, a 45-year-old recently found north of the capital.

“It was the smell of urine, feces, all that stuff. That’s the part you don’t get from the picture, it’s the smell that’s there,” Conroy said.

“It sounds inhumane in some ways to people but, in a way, what other alternatives do the people have for somebody that’s having difficulties, screaming and running around and things like that? There’s not a treatment center for people like that,” he said.

Even when there is treatment, many Cambodians rarely seek it out, opting instead for temples and traditional healers.

“There’s a stigma in Cambodian society. If someone talks to a counselor or goes to a psychologist or psychiatrist, [then people say] ‘Oh he’s crazy, what’s wrong with him?’” said Sathya Pholy, a counselor at the Phnom Penh Counseling Center, a service run mostly by, and for, foreigners.

Apart from stigma there is also the fact that most Cambodians don’t see mental health through the prism of Western science. It’s a factor that cuts both ways, affecting both when and how Cambodians see themselves as sick and the effectiveness of treatments developed to deal with illnesses — from schizophrenia to depression — originally defined in a Western cultural context.

“[Cambodian culture’s conception of mental illness] goes back to animism and Buddhism and Hinduism, where most illnesses come from the unbalance of the wind, the soil, the fire and the water,” Sathya Pholy said.

“Also, if you offended the spirits of the mountains or of the trees, then the spirit will try to get you back, have revenge, make you sick.”

Amid such a grim situation, most of the burden of treatment falls on foreign-funded NGOs. Even the government, which aims to train 10 new psychiatrists every year, freely admits it relies on foreign funding.

The global recession, and the relative obscurity of mental health issues, means much of that money is drying up. Sotheara Chhim, who runs TPO’s local affiliate doing mobile outreach in Cambodia’s villages, said funding cuts from donors including the Dutch government forced him to fire 50 staff members late last year.

“I think mental health gets less attention, gets left behind in Cambodia,” he said with visible exasperation.

“There is no funding, I think, I don’t know why. The government has no funding and not many donors are interested in mental health.

“If I try to get funding from donors to provide mental health services, no one will give it.”

18 comments:

Anonymous said...

How does this photo of this dead mass murder have anything to do with the article? Who wants to see him again?

Anonymous said...

Who care!

Anonymous said...

From a psychiatrist view - they see it as a mental and psychological problem, from a biblical view - I see it as oppression and possession by a demon spirit. The article mention of an insane woman kept in a cage, sound like she is demonically control. No amount of psychiatric treatment will rid of her condition.

I don't want to add insult to injury but the truth is, Cambodia is under a cursed. They can build wats and pagodas to fill up the whole land scape--yet that will not remove the curse. A curse is opposite of a blessing. A true blessing has no sorrow attach to it.

Only Jesus can set them free from the power of the curse and not a psychologist or mental experts.
Cambodian people are superstitious this open doors for the evil spirits to enter and take possession of their minds. A curse can be passed down from generation to generation until the curse is broken. Buddhism is a false religion, Satan use it to curse the people by false hope. Understand, when you worship Buddha, you worship Satan. Satan is an angel of light--only its a false light. Jesus is the true light that came down from heaven to lighten every man's path to heaven.

You are not your own god. It's obvious by the product of your beliefs. Cambodia is in such an upheavel state of mind and distress
it will require a deliver to bring justice for all. Jesus came to set the captives free!

Anonymous said...

6.29AM, YOU ARE FUCKING SATAN JEHOWAH WITNESS TYPE. MAY SATAN JESUS POSSESS YOU. JESUS WAS RETARDED. YOU FOOL BELIEVING BELIEVE IN RETARDED IODIOT JESUS. THAT'S WHY THE ROMAN HANGED HIM.

Anonymous said...

6:29 AM
Please, do not take advantage of our moments of weakness and distress to impose your religion on others.
This is simply EVIL.

Anonymous said...

That is the biggest problem in this world when one religion claim that other belevers are going to hell.
6:29 AM, you are a hypecrit. I know the bible. You just open a certain page of the bible to fit you need only. If you read the hole bible you will find alots of confusions in there.
One thing for sure that Buddhist region never comment on other religion but Christian does. Buddhist region never go around and recruit any one, it has to come from the heart.

Anonymous said...

correction: whole

Anonymous said...

It is not evil, it's the truth. You rather that a person die instead of being helped? People will look to human sources for help except the true source from whence cometh our help, our help cometh from the LORD, maker of heaven and earth.

Jesus was not a retarded character, it's you and others who are retarded.
Your sin is causing you to see Jesus as being retarded. He died to shed his blood for the forgiveness of sin. Without the blood there is no forgiveness of sin. People are willing to wallow in their sins instead of crying out for deliverance.

The Romans has no power to hang Jesus on the stake for he willing offered up himself to be made sin for us that we may live. Remember, he was resurrected on the third day.

" 16 For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. 17 For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved."

Satan is in control of the Khmer people and God wants us to be saved from the evil one. Jesus came to save, Satan came to destroy.

Anonymous said...

The biggest problem in the world is that people don't know the true and living God. So they invent their own religions. Buddhism is self invention, not God inspired. The Bible is the touch stone of false religions.

Anonymous said...

I wish I was an hypocrite, but I'm afraid you are in error concerning your understanding of the bible. I had always love the word of God and I have given my time to study and know the certainty of the word of truth. The word of God is living and powerful than any two-edged sword!

Anonymous said...

Amen, Khmer in Long Beach used to be Buddha believer even myself now Christ Jesus Lord is my savior. Take a look around here there are more Khmer churches than Khmer
temples. Read bible every you will get to know better.

Anonymous said...

Satan Jesus couldn't even help himself from the cross, he died in pain screaming for his mother's help. But no, no ne could help a nidiot who falsely thought he was the son of god, but it turned out he was the son of whore.

Anonymous said...

I hope all Cambodian understand one thing, Do you thing those Christian, who come the froreign country, care about if you are going to haven or not ????
The bible never said that the more you convert people to be a christian the more god love you. If it is not the case it has to be some thing else. It is simple, it is just the bussiness, they can't keep giving you stuff. As right now, yes they can effort to give you stuff but they will collect from you later, what they called "Offering". If you don't give they will open the page in the bible which said that you have to give the church 10% of your income.
Do you know why Christians are not afraid to do bad thing ? Because they beleive that God will forgive them. It doesn't matter how bad you are, you are still going to Haven, Do you know the KR leader ? he became a Christian.

Anonymous said...

Jesus wanted to rule Israel as king, not worshipped as god. but people elevated him falsely to god status after its dead. And it has stuck like that. one thing Jesus was good at was BULLSHIT.

Anonymous said...

Just look at Northern Ireland, the land of the believers, they still kill each others every day (The Protestan and Catholic). What do you think of that ????? Both side claim that God on their side. Do you think both side are going to haven ????? Are you serious ???? they both use the same bible, really !!!

Anonymous said...

fucking Jesus mother fucking get lost I don't believe or give a dame about its. I fucking swore at those stupid Khmer people that believe in Jesus came around and knock on my door to get lose or get da fuckin out of my face too.

Anonymous said...

Jesus at the time was no different from David Coresh.

Anonymous said...

People of all ages are suffering from mental depression and Psychological problems because Hun Sen and CPP have made daily life in Cambodia a living hell for all of them. Imagine, having to work hard just to be able to put a little food on the table...and that is if you can find work. The rest of the people are have been evicted from their home are homeless and hunting for their next meal from their local garbage
dump!
Please, none of that "believe in Jesus and you will be saved"
Religion has nothing to do with people who are living in poverty and trying to survive each day!
Poverty is man-made...and in this case by the corrupted ruling party!