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Introduction
Training in Community Mental Health and Human Rights
Activities
Philosophy of Training
The Training and Education Department
seeks to create a corps of community-oriented mental health
professionals, competent in using the mental health and
human rights approach for deployment throughout the field of
mental health care services in both the state and
non-governmental sectors. It also seeks to establish an
efficient Regional Institute of Community Mental Health and
Human Rights, providing training for Palestine and the
Middle East through furthering the Department's cooperation
with international universities (including universities in
the Middle East and North Africa).
When GCMHP was established in
1990, the primary staff recognized the absence of training
institutes in Gaza that could adequately prepare mental
health professionals. In an effort to span this gap, the
Programme embarked on an ambitious training program,
attracting teachers from prestigious educational
institutions around the world, who provided in-house
training to the GCMHP staff so that they could offer quality
services to the Palestinian population. Since then, the
capacity of the Palestinian staff to conduct its own
culturally sensitive training has increased. Provisions have
also been made to upgrade the educational level of staff,
with the Postgraduate Diploma in Community Mental Health and
Human Rights MA and Ph.D. and through participation in
international conferences, workshops, and seminars.
The Training and Education Department had
increasingly been called upon to train other Palestinian
health care providers in various mental health skills. One
of the early training activities offered by the GCMHP was a
three-month course in Community Mental Health Nursing to
health workers in the public sector. Twelve nurses attended
the course and were subsequently employed by both the
Ministries of Health and by non-governmental organizations.
In 1994, a one-year course in community mental health was
offered to twelve social workers, psychologists, nurses, and
doctors, all of whom were employed in different governmental
and non-governmental organizations. These promising results
encouraged the Training Department to organize another
course in community mental health for nurses and other
health professionals. On completion of the course, the
Palestinian Ministry of Education employed all the students
as mental health professionals in health institutions and as
school counselors. Their success convinced us of the need to
introduce a Post-Graduate Diploma in Community Mental Health
and Human Rights for mental health workers in a variety of
professional backgrounds, in order to address more
systematically the staggering lack of psychiatric training
in Palestine.
GCMHP began to offer its two-year
Post-Graduate Diploma in Community Mental Health and Human
Rights in 1997, accredited by the Islamic University and
the Palestinian Ministry of Higher Education. Currently,
senior staff from seven overseas universities provides the
teaching for the ten modules offered, working jointly with
local trainers and representing the disciplines of
Anthropology and Psychology and the domains of Community
Mental Health, Education, Psychiatry, Social Work, and
Nursing. The initial project will run for four years, after
which GCMHP expects to be able to provide all the teaching
from among its own staff, while still maintaining its
international links to ensure that specialists in the field
of mental health and human rights will regularly be in
residence. The long-term aim is to establish an Arab
Institute for Community Mental Health that will serve as a
focal point of learning and training in the Middle East in
the fields of mental health and human rights.
All GCMHP training is designed to ensure
that candidates have adequate knowledge of state of the art
theories, principles, and treatment and prevention
strategies used in addressing mental health concerns. The
training is based on a spirit of active participation and
self-learning by the candidates themselves. GCMHP courses
are unique in their multi-disciplinary approach.
Early in 1996, a series of courses in
mental health and human rights was conducted with the police
force and intelligence service. These courses aimed at
raising awareness among the police of the bio-psycho-social
consequences of torture and human rights violations. They
also aimed at providing the candidates with communication
skills and peaceful problem-solving skills.
The National Mental Health Plan of
Palestine emphasizes the need to de-institutionalize mental
health services and introduce community-based care through
the establishment of six Community Health Centers in the
West Bank and five in the Gaza Strip. According to this
plan, each center would consist of one psychiatrist, two
social workers, two mental health nurses, two psychologists,
and an occupational therapist. The proposal highlights the
need for an adequate number of professionals trained in the
field of community mental health, an aim that GCMHP hopes to
serve.
Long-Term Objectives
As noted, the long-term aim is to move
toward the foundation of an Arab Institute of Community
Mental Health and Human Rights that will attract
international students and researchers. The institute will
be staffed by qualified professionals from the community. In
order to prepare local trainers for this mission, the
Programme will organize distance-learning educational
opportunities for Ph.D. and Masters degrees in the area of
mental health, enabling Palestinian trainers to achieve
international academic requirements and replace the
international teaching staff. At the same time, GCMHP would
continue to rely on its international links for supervision
of research and external evaluation of student performance.
Most recently,
GCMHP has signed a contract with the Medical School of Suez
Canal University "Egypt", which has accredited the Diploma
in Community Mental Health as part of its Master's degree in
Psychiatry. This will permit doctors who hold a GCMHP
Diploma to earn such a degree after completing courses in
psychiatry and neurology and writing a thesis. Such study
will be conducted though distance learning. The same
Arrangements have been applied with Flinders University of
South Australia, Australia and the Islamic University-Gaza.
Flinders University accredits the diploma as 2/3 of Master
degree in disability studies.
We have also established higher education
links with Oxford University and North Hampton Community
Trust, United Kingdom, supported by the British Council.
Post-Graduate Diploma
in Community Mental Health and Human Rights
What is Post-Graduate Diploma in
GCMHP (.pdf) |