Include mental health treatment in NHIS benefit package by 10th October – Alliance 

By Hannah Awadzi 

Accra, Sept 10, GNA – The Alliance for Mental Health and Development (Alliance), a network of CSOs, NGOs, CBOs, and concerned individuals, has called on the government to include mental health treatment in the NHIS benefit package by World Mental Health Day 10th October 2024.  

This will ensure access to mental health services for all, the Alliance said in a communique issued at the end its annual review and planning meeting and copied to the Ghana News Agency 

The communique said people with mental health conditions and their primary caregivers are generally poorer than the general population with a 95 per cent treatment gap. 

“The requirement that people with mental health conditions are to pay for essential treatment at the point of service delivery, is at best unrealistic, as majority of them are below the poverty line, earning less than the daily minimum wage.  

The Alliance expressed worry that promises by state officials to include mental health services in the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) benefit package is yet to materialise, excluding many from benefiting from necessary care. 

The Alliance also supported the call by the Ghana Federation of Disability Organisations for the Minister of Gender, Children and Social Protection, and the Minister for Local Government and Rural Development to sign and launch the revised the DACF Disability Fund Disbursement and Management Guidelines.  

Earlier, Tuesday morning, selected members of the GFD picketed at the premises of the Ministry of Gender, Children and Social protection, information available to the Ghana News Agency on the signing on the District Assembly Common Fund for persons with Disability is that the Minister of Gender has signed the revised Disability Fund Disbursement and management guidelines. 

The Alliance urged the government to make sustained investments in mental healthcare services and ensure that social safety nets like the Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty programme effectively target and cover the poorest of the poor and vulnerable people, particularly those with mental health and psychosocial disabilities. 

They expressed commitment to collaborating with the government, institutions, and individuals to promote mental health, wellbeing, and human rights for all, especially those with mental health conditions and psychosocial disabilities. 

GNA