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Empowerment through agency in their own well-being

Health Inclusion Prevention
Sierra Leone

Taking care of your mental health means recognizing that you can sometimes be a key to change. In Sierra Leone, HI is helping people in challenging situations strengthen their resilience.

Three women are at the center of the image, each carrying fabric to be used in their trade.

April 2024, Susan's Bay. A group of women who have experienced mental health challenges, participating in the project and taking part in income-generating activities. | © A. A. Koudoh / HI

Helping people meet the challenges of mental health

Civil war, outbreaks of diseases such as Ebola, the consequences of climate change... Sierra Leone regularly faces major crises that have a lasting impact on its population and their mental health. Despite the efforts being made by the local authorities, there is still insufficient support available for people experiencing mental health struggles and psychosocial distress. HI launched its first mental health project in Sierra Leone in 1998 to help people who had limbs amputated or were otherwise injured during the civil war. Today, the work continues through our Touching Minds Raising Dignity (TMRD) project.

Underway in four countries, including Sierra Leone, this project aims to support people suffering from psychological distress in gaining recognition of their rights, coping with their difficulties and bringing about a positive change in how the community views mental health. Umaru Jalloh, who is in charge of income-generating activities for the TMRD project in Sierra Leone, explains:

“Changing people's perception of mental health issues is really important. Combating stigma is vital for the mental well-being of populations. This project's focus on the acceptance of people with psychological difficulties is a crucial step towards improving the mental well-being of people within communities.”

Restoring well-being and dignity through socio-economic activities

The TMRD project is unique in that, in addition to individual and group psychosocial support sessions, it helps participants launch income-generating activities. Because these activities not only increase the resources of their household, they also have a significant impact on the well-being and dignity of people facing mental-health-related obstacles.

Economic activities help change the way people perceive their problems, foster acceptance of others experiencing mental health difficulties and contribute to their overall well-being.

“Before this project, I felt alone and desperate. I was under a lot of stress and felt there was nothing I could do. Now, thanks to psychological support and my business, I feel well in my head. I'm the leader of the group, people respect me and I feel autonomous and optimistic about the future," said Esther, a young woman supported by the TMRD project.

Benefiting the whole community 

Alongside the other members of the team, Community Health Workers play a key role in organizing the income-generating activities.  As pillars of the community, they actively raise people's awareness of mental health issues, so that HI's work is better understood and accepted. For Ibrahim, a community leader: 

"The project has not only strengthened our understanding of mental health, it has also enabled 30 people to create small-scale economic activities. This has reduced their stress and their use of drugs, for example. I can see improvements in their lives and in our community."

In Sierra Leone, the TMRD project has targeted 60 people in the communities of Susan's Bay and Looking Town, including men and women who have experienced a variety of traumatic events, such as fires, the loss of loved ones, economic hardship and unemployment.

"I would like to thank all those who set up this project. Thanks to this project, I am now a driver and one of the most influential people in this community. My darkest days are behind me," says Abdou, who has also participated in HI’s income-generating activities.

The Touching Minds, Raising Dignity program, a long-term project that HI has been implementing since 2014, is now in its second phase. It will be run in Lebanon, Madagascar, Togo and Sierra Leone until December 2024. In all four countries, the TMRD project aims to strengthen community-based prevention and response mechanisms to make mental health a collective responsibility, thereby improving quality of life and well-being, as well as strengthening the capacities of people with mental health struggles or psychosocial distress.
Date published: 08/28/24

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