Mental health is still not openly discussed in many societies and there is great deal of stigma attached to that. In most parts of the African continent, people’s attitudes towards mental illness are still strongly influenced by traditional beliefs (Sankoh et. al., 2018) or mental health is simply not given enough importance. This causes delays in seeking appropriate care for mental health problems causing conditions to worsen.
In her opinion piece, Venoranda Rebecca Kuboka says that adolescent girls and young women find it difficult to seek help when they experience traumatic situations (Venoranda K., 2020). Culture narratives suggest brushing horrifying experience off and move on. As a matter of fact, girls suffer in silence of fear, shame, stigma and victimisation associated with their experiences. She underlines that as Kenya commited to end FGM by 2022, there is need to focus on providing psychosocial support to FGM survivors which is currently unavailable.
African survivors of FGM advocated for mental health services as they are one of their biggest need and urged governments and charities to provide support for dealing with long-term trauma (Peyton N., 2019). “We don’t have mental health services for survivors of FGM — that is a big thing that is missing in Africa”, Virginia Lekumoisa, a survivor from Kenya. Their point of view is that if more survivors received mental health support they would be strong enough to add their voice, speak up and help end the practice.
Therapeutic approaches presented above come from the work of European psychotherapists because there is a complete lack of resources for excised women above all in Africa. Nevertheless, Helen Smith et Karin Stein (Smith H. & Stein K., 2017) present in a 2017 article the example of support services in Somaliland ensured by midwives concerned by FGM and thus more able to understand women’s experiences and share their own ones. If they observe that women develop coping mechanisms such as the use of religion, religious activities, confidence to friends, many women do not seek help. Poverty, lack of access to services for technical or financial reasons, by fear or shame to speak out urge them to hide their problems.
Furthermore, the mere development of mental health services in Africa is very poor and does not ensure an adequate support for people suffering psychological disorders as stated in The Lancet for instance (Gberie L., 2017; Sankoh O., 2018). Indeed, the budget allocated to mental health is weak, hardly reaching 1% against 6 to 12% in Europe and North America, and the structures as well as practitioners are rare, mainly in cities, hard to reach for most of the population. Psychiatry still suffer important prejudices and is always today associated with madness. Psychiatric trouble perceived as supernatural are supposed to be cured by traditional or spiritual medicine.