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Free grandmother and bench therapy model exported to World Cup

Sitting next to a patient with depression on a garden bench in Zimbabwe’s capital Harare, 70-year-old Shery Ziwakayi speaks gently, offering accessible therapy with a warm and reassuring smile.

“You have made the right decision to come to see mbuya”, she tells her client, using the Shona word for “grandmother”.

Free therapy

A Zimbabwean doctor has come up with a novel way of providing desperately needed mental health therapy for his poorer compatriots by using lay health workers, colloquially referred to as “grandmothers”.

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Psychiatry professor Dixon Chibanda’s concept is simple: a park bench where people experiencing common mental disorders sit and receive free therapy.

Chibanda’s Friendship Bench has proved popular and offered much-needed, accessible therapy.

Economic challenges

Decades of economic hardships have taken a mental toll on many Zimbabweans, imposing a burden on underfunded and understaffed psychiatric health services.

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The Friendship Bench has helped bridge a shortage of professional healthcare workers in Zimbabwe – which has only 14 psychiatrists, 150 clinical psychologists and less than 500 psychiatric nurses serving a population of 16 million people.

“We need these alternative innovations to narrow the gap and my idea is to use grandmothers to provide therapy,” said Chibanda.

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Friendship bench therapy model expanding

The benches are spaces “to share stories and through storytelling we can all be healed”.

His therapy model is now being exported to the Fifa World Cup in Qatar, where 32 benches – each representing a team competing in the Fifa tournament – will be set up to cast the spotlight on global mental health. This in partnership with the World Health Organisation (WHO), whose chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus has praised the initiative as “a simple yet powerful vehicle for promoting mental health”.

“It is a reminder of how a simple act of sitting down to talk can make a huge difference to mental health,” Tedros said recently.

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Other countries to have adopted the friendship bench model include Jordan, Kenya, Malawi and the US – where 60 000 people in the Bronx and Harlem areas have accessed the therapy.

Chibanda’s idea of friendship benches germinated after a patient he was treating at a government hospital took her life.

“She didn’t have bus fare to come to the hospital for treatment for the depression,” he said.

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“That was the initial trigger that instantly made me realise that there was need to take mental health from the hospitals into the communities.”

Results

Grandmother Ziwakayi has offered therapy from the benches for the past six years, seeing an average of three clients a day.

“Through talking to us, many have recovered and are leading normal lives again,” said Ziwakayi, who received training in basic counselling skills, mental health literacy and problem solving therapy.

The grandmas are given a stipend for their services, and the operation is financed by Chibanda’s NGO, Friendship Bench.

Choice Jiya, 43, said she owes her life to the service offered on the benches, having considered suicide when her husband lost his job shortly after she gave birth to their twins in 2005.

“Before I went to the bench for therapy, I thought killing myself was a solution,” she said.

She now operates a small business making perfumes and soap.

From just 14 grandmothers in Mbare – Zimbabwe’s oldest and poorest township – at the start in 2006, there are now nearly 1 000 benches and over 1 500 grandmothers in different localities.

They have assisted 160 000 people in the past two years alone.

The fallout from the Covid pandemic has seen a spike in mental health problems and WHO estimates that more than 300 million people across the globe suffer from depression.

Its most recent report “paints a very bleak picture”, showing six out of 10 countries with the highest suicide rates in the world are in Africa, said Chibanda.

For Harare’s health services director Prosper Chonzi, the benches are a “masterstroke”.

“Demand for mental health services is high due to the economic situation.

“This is one of the best interventions. It has made a huge difference in terms of averting suicides,” he said.

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By Agence France Presse
Read more on these topics: mental healthZimbabwe