The Caribbean island nation of Grenada is taking tangible steps to upgrade its mental health care system, starting with a targeted skills development program for frontline support staff at the country’s only psychiatric treatment facility.
Ten orderlies currently working at St. George’s-based Mt Gay Psychiatric Hospital will begin a specialized Caribbean Vocational Qualification (CVQ) Level 2 training course by the end of May, Mental Health Minister Delma Thomas confirmed during this week’s sitting of Grenada’s Lower House of Parliament. Thomas framed the six-month initiative as a dual investment: it will both improve the quality of care for at-risk, vulnerable mental health patients across the country, and raise the professional competencies of frontline workers who interact with these patients daily.
Managed by local training provider La Boucan Training Centre and greenlit by Grenada’s Ministry of Mental Health, Wellness and Religious Affairs, the full program carries an estimated price tag of EC$81,600. In addition to funding the training itself, Grenada’s Cabinet has approved an additional EC$42,000 allocated to stipends for participating trainees, a measure designed to reduce financial barriers and help all participants complete the program successfully.
“This initiative represents an important investment in human resource development and the improvement of care services for some of the most vulnerable members of our society,” Thomas told parliament.
The training program forms just one part of the government’s broader, long-term overhaul of the national mental health sector. Over the coming weeks, officials will launch a series of external stakeholder consultations to gather input on two landmark policy documents: a new National Mental Health Policy and a dedicated Suicide Prevention Policy. The first consultation session is scheduled to open Tuesday, June 2 at the Deluxe Cinema in Grenville, located in the parish of St Andrew. The sessions are being held in partnership with a technical advisor from the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the UN regional health agency for the Americas.
According to Thomas, the multi-stakeholder consultations will bring together mental health providers, civil society groups, public health officials and community partners to advance a national conversation centered on three key goals: expanding access to quality mental health services, strengthening evidence-based suicide prevention strategies, and boosting public awareness of mental health challenges across Grenada. Beyond improving service delivery, Thomas noted that the new policy framework is intended to advance the government’s commitment to ending the social stigma that often prevents people living with mental health conditions from seeking and accessing the care they need, and building a far more inclusive, supportive national community for all those affected.
