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Lessons Learned and Resources Mental Health
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Reintegrating schizophrenic patients back into daily life through education

At Sainte Marguerite Teaching Hospital Rehabilitation Centre in Marseille, France, physicians and mental health workers used a variety of social skills training educational modules for schizophrenic patients and their caregivers. With an $83,000, 18-month grant, the Foundation supported the development of a new module focusing on Social and Personal Fulfillment. It was aimed at helping patients recover a sense of personal competence and hope to help them live normal lives, enabling them to find and then apply solutions to concrete problems they might face in daily living. Ultimately, this should help them gain social competencies, increase their independence and allow them to insert themselves back into life outside their treatment environment.

EUFAMI helps destigmatize mental illness in Europe

Support began in 2003 with a $247,000 grant to a pan-European NGO called EUFAMI, for a program to combat stigma and discrimination in people with severe mental illness and to help their families. Specifically the Foundation funded an advocacy development workshop to train spokespeople -- usually family members and caregivers of those suffering from mental illness -- to bring the message against the stigma and discrimination that surrounds mental illness across Europe, targeting health professionals, the media, policy makers and the general public.

International Medical Corps: Mental Health Program for Women in Afghanistan

Working with the International Medical Corps, the Bristol-Myers Squibb Foundation supported a pilot, 16-month, community-based mental health program for about 200,000 women affected by the traumas of the war in Afghanistan in the Shomali Plain region north of Kabul. The program involved providing training to female health professionals who offered counseling, treatment and educational services for area women. They focused on common mental illnesses including depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. During the pilot approximately 30,000 women received treatment and nearly 14,000 women availed themselves of individual or group counseling sessions. In addition, trainers were trained, new clinics established and a model for other areas was created. Also, resource centers were established to provide training to women in income-generating projects.