Jemima Heinonen from the Global Clinic gave a presentation
about the paperless healthcare they provide. Global Clinic is run by
volunteers, who provide both health and dental care.
Global Clinic is open to everyone, regardless of person's
nationality or theirmigration status. Help is given for free, anonymously and
in strict confidence.The audience were interested to know the reasons why patients
in generalgravitate to the clinic. Audience also wanted Heinonen to explain to
them why only about 3% of the patients were seeking help due to psychiatric
reasons. According to Heinonen, there are plenty of reasons why patients
seeking for psychiatric help cover such a small percentage of the whole patient
base. One of the reasons is the fact that in many countries and cultures mental
health disorders are a taboo and such problems are not talked about openly.
Also, currently Finland does not have a institution or a hospital for these
patients. The Global Clinic is looking for cooperation partner which the Clinic
could consult in need. An other problem is the language barrier. The clinic is
run by volunteers and so is the interpretation. The majority of the patients at
the moment are from Romania and Bulgaria. Heinonen says that even though they
do often recognise the patients with psychiatric needs or problems,
the treatment of those patients os difficult and it has limits.
The Global Clinic accepts donations from individuals and
corporations, but do not receive grants from the state. The clinic has a
patient registry, even though it is very primitive and on a slow computer. The
patients are not asked about their ethnic background, only the very essentials;
e.g, age, gender, diagnosis. The most touching and interesting lecturer of the
weekend was Päivi Rissanen. Rissanen has done her doctoral thesis on how the
patient him/herself experiences psychiatric illness and the treatment of it.
Rissanen told that she herself was 40 times in a psychiatric hospital for
treatment. She herself was first diagnosed with a borderline personality
disorder andschizophrenia. Later, this diagnosis was discarded and Rissanen was
given a new diagnoses: dissociative disorder.
Rissanen explained how no one wanted to be her personal
nurse, because she was considered so difficult for treatment. Eventually she
got a new personal nurse, who had not previously taken care of her. Rissanen
shared that her rehabilitation started when this new nurse asked her
"Päivi, do you want to spend the rest of your life in a hospital?"
Rissanen told that her motivation to get better awakened when she felt that her
new nurse appreciated her. Rissanen told that finally she was given a change to
tell herself how she wanted to be treated and rehabilitated.
Who am I?
My name is and I am Seija Kautto psychiatric nurse. I work
in the closed ward that takes care of diseased psychosis patients. The majority
of patients also have a substance abuse problem.
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