Lebanon’s Crisis Pushes Mental Health Services to the Limit

Lifeline operators work at Embrace mental health center in Beirut, Lebanon September 10, 2021. Picture taken September 10, 2021. (Reuters)
Lifeline operators work at Embrace mental health center in Beirut, Lebanon September 10, 2021. Picture taken September 10, 2021. (Reuters)
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Lebanon’s Crisis Pushes Mental Health Services to the Limit

Lifeline operators work at Embrace mental health center in Beirut, Lebanon September 10, 2021. Picture taken September 10, 2021. (Reuters)
Lifeline operators work at Embrace mental health center in Beirut, Lebanon September 10, 2021. Picture taken September 10, 2021. (Reuters)

Lebanese psychologist Bernard Sousse started offering online therapy sessions when patients said surging fuel prices meant they could no longer drive in to see him - but then the power cuts began.

Five minutes into one recent virtual session, the back-up generator in Sousse’s building sputtered out, plunging him into darkness and cutting off his patient in mid flow.

Lebanon’s economic collapse, COVID-19 and a huge explosion in Beirut last year have taken a heavy toll on people’s mental health - piling pressure on support services that are struggling to operate normally due to the country’s multiple woes.

“You have to wait for the electricity to come back on, and in the meantime make up for it with a few WhatsApp messages to finish off the idea,” Sousse said.

“It’s extremely disruptive and makes sessions less effective at a time of dire need.”

Many Lebanese are struggling with depression and burnout, but for many people therapy is out of reach as their incomes shrink, Sousse told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The Lebanese lira has lost more than 90% of its value against the US dollar and inflation has ramped up prices across the board, with a therapy session now three times as expensive in local currency.

Besides the acute fuel shortages and regular power cuts, most psychiatric medications - from antidepressants to treatments for bipolar disorder - have been unavailable in pharmacies since March.

Distressed callers
Mental health providers have adapted as best they can, turning to technology or renewable energy sources.

When diesel shortages forced Lebanon’s only suicide helpline to limit its hours, operators secured funds for solar panels to make sure sudden blackouts would not cut off distressed callers, said Rabih Chammai, head of the National Mental Health Program, a state-sponsored body.

“We’re also rolling out an app called Step by Step - it’s a guided self-help program to help people with depression - which is timely with the coronavirus, the lack of fuel and the economic crisis,” Chammai said.

Instagram pages including @medonations and @medsforlebanon coordinate efforts to bring unavailable medications into Lebanon, and regularly feature requests for antidepressants and drugs used to treat anxiety.

New initiatives offering free or inexpensive online therapy sessions have popped up as more established NGOs struggle to meet the increase in demand.

Be Brave Beirut, a grassroots organization set up after the August 2020 explosion, offers free therapy with certified psychologists, as well as more informal sessions with a growing network of emotional support volunteers around the world.

They can be reached on LinkedIn or Instagram, sessions take place on WhatsApp - sometimes even by texting - and trainers hold online webinars to coach volunteers in psychological first aid and other methods.

Co-founder Bana Itani said the informal structure meant volunteers and beneficiaries could adapt to power cuts - “but if there’s an internet blackout, yes, of course we’d be in serious trouble”, she said.

Some parts of Lebanon have dealt with intermittent internet outages because transmission towers lack the fuel to operate, the country’s state internet provider Ogero has said.

Start-ups and stop-gaps
Another community initiative, Lebanon For You, said it was inundated with requests for free therapy sessions.

“People used to contact us just through direct messages. Now a lot of people contact me via WhatsApp, even at 11 pm, needing therapy sessions. They call, they use LinkedIn, Facebook - we didn’t see that kind of outreach before,” said co-founder Ghida Allam.

But as needs mushroom, capacities are shrinking: at least 13 of their network’s 40 psychologists have emigrated and others have taken time off to deal with their own burnout.

Chammai said such initiatives would only be a stop-gap for as long as the underlying causes of Lebanon’s mental health crisis persist.

“If you have a broken sidewalk and people are breaking their legs all the time by walking on it, do you ask whether you should treat people or fix the sidewalk? No, you do both,” he said.

For the country’s worn-down mental health carers, however, the focus is day-to-day survival, said Pia Zeinoun, vice president of Embrace, which runs the suicide helpline and a mental health center.

“We worked for years to remove barriers to treatment: the barrier of stigma by raising awareness - the barrier of money by giving free services, the barrier of distance by going online,” Zeinoun said.

“But the barriers of the nation just keep piling up - onto the people and onto us.”



With Hospitals Full in Lebanon, Family Flees to Give Birth in Iraq

Lubana Ismail, a displaced Lebanese woman who fled from her home in Tyre due to Israeli bombardments in Southern Lebanon, holds her newborn baby girl, Zahraa, to whom she gave birth in Iraq, as she sits with her family at a hotel in Najaf, Iraq, October 7, 2024. (Reuters)
Lubana Ismail, a displaced Lebanese woman who fled from her home in Tyre due to Israeli bombardments in Southern Lebanon, holds her newborn baby girl, Zahraa, to whom she gave birth in Iraq, as she sits with her family at a hotel in Najaf, Iraq, October 7, 2024. (Reuters)
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With Hospitals Full in Lebanon, Family Flees to Give Birth in Iraq

Lubana Ismail, a displaced Lebanese woman who fled from her home in Tyre due to Israeli bombardments in Southern Lebanon, holds her newborn baby girl, Zahraa, to whom she gave birth in Iraq, as she sits with her family at a hotel in Najaf, Iraq, October 7, 2024. (Reuters)
Lubana Ismail, a displaced Lebanese woman who fled from her home in Tyre due to Israeli bombardments in Southern Lebanon, holds her newborn baby girl, Zahraa, to whom she gave birth in Iraq, as she sits with her family at a hotel in Najaf, Iraq, October 7, 2024. (Reuters)

Lubana Ismail had just fled her village in southern Lebanon with her husband and two children when she went into labor. She had swollen veins in her uterus and needed immediate medical supervision to give birth safely.

They searched for a hospital in Beirut or Sidon that would admit her, but all were full of the dead and wounded.

"No hospital accepted me. We were turned away everywhere until my father suggested we go to Iraq," she recounted.

So they boarded a flight and flew to Najaf. It was there, in a former war zone 1,000 km (600 miles) from home, that Lubana finally gave birth to baby Zahraa, healthy and safe.

The proud father, Fouad Youssef, recounted the perils of their evacuation.

"At first, we went to Tyre, but a strike hit directly next to us. We decided to go to Beirut, thinking it would be safer, but even on the way, a strike hit near us,” he said.

"During our two days of displacement, I tried to get my wife into a hospital because her labor was difficult. But due to the high number of injuries and martyrs, there were no vacancies."

More than a million Lebanese have fled their homes since Israel intensified its airstrikes and launched a ground campaign in southern Lebanon against the Hezbollah movement which has been striking Israel in solidarity with the Palestinians.

Imran Riza, UN humanitarian coordinator, said the pace of displacement since Sept. 23 had exceeded worst case scenarios, and too much damage was being done to civilian infrastructure.

Najaf is accustomed to handling the emergency medical needs of foreigners, and Iraqis have endured almost two decades of war at home. But receiving refugees from Lebanon is unexpected. Iraq's interior ministry says around 5,700 Lebanese have arrived so far.

Lubana and Fouad are grateful to have found a safe place to bring their family and give birth to their daughter. But they have no idea what will come next.

"We are afraid the war will go on for a long time. What will happen to our children? We were preparing them for school, but now there is no education. Are we going to stay here? Are we leaving? Are we going back to our country?" pondered Youssef, watching news of the destruction in Lebanon on his mobile screen.