My name is Eric Kowshoh Yenchi, I was born on 08/31/1980 in Cameroon central Africa, I grew up in a small village in the North West region of Cameroon known as Babungo. Growing up in Cameroon, life was very tough, especially when it came to health care .There was just 1 health center in my village which was staffed with 1 nurse and a medical doctor who visited once every two months. This meant people who were very sick and could not wait till the arrival of the medical doctor had to drive for about 5 hours to the closest hospital in the town of Kumbo to get health care. This meant that many people who made the journey died due to bad roads, and sometimes the long waits that it took to see a medical doctor at the hospital. The poor state of the health sector in my native country cost the lives of many of my family members, resulting in my resolve to become a medical professional so I could one day change the situation and help my community. With this in mind when I arrived the United …States in 2006, I decided to study nursing. After graduating with my BSN in 2010, I decided to start my nursing career in a long term care facility taking care of geriatric patients with various illnesses confined to a nursing home. In January 2011, I visited my native country Cameroon for the first time, volunteered at the only clinic that was in my village. This time around they had more staff (4 nurses, and 1 medical doctor), which made my experience less tedious than I had anticipated. However, during this visit, I noticed that many of the people that were coming into the clinic with a mental illness were being turned away to traditional healers as the clinic did not have any experience dealing with mental illness. With my observation, I decided to do a little research about mental health in Cameroon .What I found was not only shocking but was also very scary. I found out there were only two government hospitals in the country providing mental health services to 22 million people. Cameroon has 0.03 psychiatrists per 100, 000 of the population, and 0.2 psychiatric nurses per 100,000 of the population (psychology in Africa, 2013).Initiatives by private organizations in recent years have seen the creation of Mental Health hospital in Kumbo and BIMEHC, a mental health clinic in my village of Babungo. With the acute shortage of these facilities and personnel, my focus changed. I realized there was not only a need for personnel but leadership to transform the mental health sector and sensitize the population about mental illness, as many attribute mental illness to witchcraft and spiritual curses. With this in mind, in 2011 I became a psychiatric nurse, enrolled and earned an MSN in Nursing Leadership in 2013.In 2015 I went to Cameroon, this time around I volunteered at Babungo Integrated Mental Health Care (BIMEHC) as a psychiatric nurse. During this service the main problem was the lack of a qualified practitioner for mental health. There was 1 psychiatrist coming from the capital every 6 months to meet with patients and prescribe medications for them. This acute shortage of mental health practitioners, has led me to believe that I can make a difference in the lives of those suffering from a mental illness by becoming a Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner. Since becoming a psychiatric nurse , I have had various positions in the Mental health filed , from Charge nurse to , supervisor , and to Director of various mental health clinics in the Washington DC area .In November 2019 I passed my Boards to become a Psychiatric Mental Health Nurse Practitioner and I am loving every minute of it .My short term goal is to continue providing services to those in need in and around my community , while my long term goal will be to someday own my own practice.
Dr. Eric Kowshoh Yenchi
Dr. Eric Kowshoh Yenchi
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Medical School
- 2019
University of Cincinnati
Thriveworks Counseling & Psychiatry DC
529 14th St NW Suite 1170
Washington
DC
20045
USA
+18557262714
- Mental Health Counseling
- Clinical Social Work
- Family Therapy
- Child Therapy
- Individual Therapy
- Medication management
- Counseling
- Neuroanalysis
- Accepts Medicare
- Cigna
- First Health Network
- Tricare East
- Aetna
- BCBS
- Compsych
- Blue Cross Blue Shield
- United Healthcare
- Medicare
- Relationship Issues
- Sleep Disorders
- Anorexia Nervosa
- Self Esteem
- Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD)
- Grief
- Autism
- Bereavement and grief
- Spiritual Issues
- Parent-Child Problems
- Chronic Mental Health Issues
- Mental Illness
- Depressive Disorders
- Postpartum Depression
- Infertility
- Pregnancy-related Mood Disorders
- Chronic Stress
- Bulimia Nervosa
- Life Transitions
- LGBT Issues
- Premature Ejaculation
- Anxiety Phobic Disorders
- Chronic Pain
- Body Dysmorphic Disorder
- Spirituality
- Eating Disorders
- Psychiatric disorders in pregnancy and postpartum
- ADD/ADHD
- Relationship challenges
- Depression
- Anxiety
- Anxiety Dissociative and Somatoform Disorders
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