Abstract:
The general well-being of the human person is the totality of the effective operation of the human brain especially, and the physical health of the person. Without the brain
functioning properly, the entire body may be deemed collapsed as nothing meaningful
may proceed from such individuals. Dr Brock Chisholm, the first Director -General of the
World Health Organization (WHO), who was a psychiatrist and Shepherded the notion
that mental and physical health were intimately linked. He also stated that “without
mental health there can be no true physical health”.1 It is for this purpose that all
individuals, departments, agencies and government must pay intense attention to and seek
to fulfill their duties to ensuring that the right to quality health care of which mental
health care is not exempted is realized.
As indivisible as the right to quality mental health care is, mental health has historically
been neglected in Africa’s health and development policy agenda. Faced with equally
challenging matters, including maternal and child morbidity, malaria, intractable poverty,
leaders in Ghana and international development agencies frequently overlook the
importance of mental health. It is as a result of this conscious shift of attention from
mental health to other matters that we have mental patients of various degrees of mental
health challenges on the streets of Accra, Ghana.
This paper seeks to unfolds:
1. the injustice done people with mental health diseases;
2. the insubstantial investment and contributions from the government of Ghana over
the years in the mental health sector;
3. the inability of international bodies and communities’ and the government of
Ghana’s inability to adequately factor, promote and guarantee the rights of persons
with mental health diseases in the various acts and conventions; and
4. the evasive nature of advocacy in matters regarding mental health in Ghana.
To effectively achieve the purpose of this paper, relevant institutions like the Mental
Health Authority, reports and statistics from the Accra Psychiatric Hospital, Pantang
Hospital, the World Health Organization on Mental Health and Mental Health Care will
be examined. Some published cases, summaries of various interviews from international
and national institutions and individuals will be considered. Legislations like the Mental
Health Act, 2012 (Act 846), International and Regional Instruments will be reviewed for
this purpose.
This paper concludes with the unfolding of the weaknesses in the mental health sector
and how the rights of persons with disabilities (mental health challenge) are considered
among the least in our society and treated with little or no dignity. The statistics will prove that international instruments and norms regulating mental disabilities rights are
somewhat ineffective in our part of the world.