Thomas Adeoye Lambo
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Thomas Adeoye Lambo (March 29, 1923-March 13, 2004) was a Nigerian scholar, administrator and psychiatrist. He is credited as the first western trained psychiatrist in Nigeria and Africa. Between 1971-1988, he worked at the World Health Organization, becoming the agency's deputy director general.
[edit] Biography
Adeoye Lambo was born in Abeokuta, Ogun State. He attended the famous Baptist Boys High School, Abeokuta from 1935-1940. He then proceeded to the University of Birmingham, where he studied medicine. To further his studies and become specialized, in 1952, he enrolled at the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London. Adeoye Lambo in due time became famous for his work in ethno-psychiatry and psychiatric epidemiology.
In 1954, after studying and working as a surgeon in Britain, Dr Lambo returned to Nigeria where he was soon made the specialist in charge at the newly built Aro psychiatric hospital, Abeokuta. By then, Nigeria was under going a transition towards political independence which had hastened a culture of innovation and change instead of retardation. Prior to the independence movement, the Federal Government had tried to replicate the European system of creating asylums in the cities for lunatics and mentally ill individuals who were becoming a social nuisance in the streets of many urban areas. The need to put the social anomalous individuals under control, sometimes care and confinement was initiated and a few asylums including one at Yaba where built. However, the institutionalization of mental health was viewed with suspicion by many Nigerians and many still depended on native medicines and herbalists for care. Adeoye Lambo sensing a ground for development, used the opportunity of an independent regional government to start his own out-patient treatment services, the Aro village, pioneering the use of modern curative techniques with traditional religion and native medicines. Adeoye, while at Aro, sought the help of farmers near the asylum to take some of the patients as laborers, while they simultaneously undergo medical treatment, the patients will also pay for any extra services such as housing. He traveled around the country and brought in a few traditional healers from different parts of Nigeria as healers. His style helped relieve public mistrust of mental health hospitals and brought to public discourse the care and treatment of mentally ill citizens. He is credited as providing a platform for re-integrating mentally ill patients into a normal setting and environment and shedding a little bit of the stigma associated with mentally ill individuals.
[edit] References
- Vanguard, Renowned Psychiatrist, March 16, 2004
- Jonathan Sadowsky, Imperial Bedlam: Institutions of Madness in Colonial Southwest Nigeria. University of California Press, 1999 ISBN 0520216172
[edit] External links
- Obituary in Psychiatric Bulletin (2004) 28: 469
- Obituary, This Day online
- In memoriam, TWAS Newsletter Vol.17 No.1, 2005 accessed at [1] April 11, 2007