šŠšžš§š²šš :How haircuts are helping men recover at a Kenyan mental health hospital

At Kenya’s largest mental health referral hospital, male patients encounter a different kind of therapy: a personal grooming session provided by two visiting barbers.Ā 

As their equipment is unpacked, excitement spreads.Patients eagerly take turns sitting in the barber’s chair, looking forward to a haircut.Healthcare workers say personal grooming is an important aspect of recovery, as one sign of mental illness can be a loss of interest in personal hygiene and self-care.Kenya has limited data on the prevalence of mental illness.

AccordingĀ toĀ theĀ government’sĀ 2015Ā MentalĀ HealthĀ Policy,Ā anĀ estimatedĀ 25Ā percentĀ ofĀ outpatientsĀ andĀ 40Ā percentĀ ofĀ inpatientsĀ inĀ allĀ healthĀ facilitiesĀ experienceĀ mentalĀ healthĀ conditions.MentalĀ healthĀ expertsĀ sayĀ depressionĀ andĀ anxietyĀ areĀ amongĀ theĀ mostĀ commonĀ conditions,Ā whileĀ substanceĀ useĀ disordersĀ remainĀ aĀ majorĀ challenge,Ā particularlyĀ amongĀ men.FrancisĀ Kabugua,Ā aĀ nursingĀ officerĀ atĀ MathariĀ NationalĀ TeachingĀ andĀ ReferralĀ HospitalĀ inĀ Nairobi,Ā isĀ encouragingĀ menĀ toĀ speakĀ openlyĀ aboutĀ theirĀ strugglesĀ insteadĀ ofĀ turningĀ toĀ alcoholĀ andĀ otherĀ substancesĀ inĀ anĀ attemptĀ toĀ cope.Ā 

ā€œAmong the things that you may see a person with depressive disorders is segregating themselves or separating themselves from the members of the family. They start also not providing for the family,ā€ he said.Patients queue for lunch at the largest mental health referral hospital, Mathari in Nairobi, Kenya, Tuesday, June 30, 2026.

PatientsĀ queueĀ forĀ lunchĀ atĀ theĀ largestĀ mentalĀ healthĀ referralĀ hospital,Ā MathariĀ inĀ Nairobi,Ā Kenya,Ā Tuesday,Ā JuneĀ 30,Ā 2026.Ā AndrewĀ Kasuku/CopyrightĀ 2026Ā TheĀ AP.Ā AllĀ rightsĀ reserved

Sheila Lugaliki founded Uniquely Gifted, a community-based organisation that offers the free grooming services. She said her own experience as a patient in a psychiatric ward inspired her to establish the monthly initiative.

She said she hopes the act of providing haircuts restores dignity, boosts confidence and reminds patients that they are valued as opposed to them feeling ā€œneglected.”ā€œYou find someone has been admitted for six months and yet no one has groomed their hair. How they look really does not reflect how they are feeling,ā€ she said.Psychiatric nurse Titus Enko agreed, saying that personal grooming enhances patients’ self esteem and contributes to their overall recovery and well-being.

 

ā€œMore often we only think about medication, psychotherapy, and we tend to overlook the otherpart, which is the personal grooming. Many times, someone neglects themselves and they start not taking a shower or they don’t dress well. And personal grooming is an indication that someone is either doing good or they’re not doing okay,ā€ he said.As the barbers trimmed patients’ beards, one man summed up the experience in a single word. He said he felt ā€œalive.

©  Eastafricanreport.com

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