Stakeholder engagement
He said the MHA had engaged the managers of prayer camps since the promulgation of the Mental Health Act, 2012 but they had refused to heed the calls to release the mentally challenged persons in the camps.
He said the authority was preparing itself to accommodate the patients to be released from the prayer camps, explaining that after their release, the mental hospitals should have the capacity to accommodate them.
He said the release of the 16 mentally challenged people was the beginning of a nationwide exercise and called for cooperation from the managers of prayer camps.
Dr Osei said the exercise would be structured to ensure that the psychiatric hospitals were able to admit those who would be released from prayer camps to take care of them.
He explained that any prayer camp that refused to release its mentally challenged people could be dragged to court to punish the managers of the camps and the relatives of the patients who sent them to the camps.
The ordeal
Some of the patients who interacted with the team said they defecated and ate at the same place where they were chained.
Others said they were left at the mercy of the weather and bites from insects and other dangerous animals.
The patients were taken to the Ankaful Psychiatric Hospital for proper mental care.
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Source: Graphic Online