Galactorrhoea is non-lactational milk production and it may or may not be associated with prolactinemia1. It causes embarrassment and distress to a schizophrenic patient, especially, if the patient is male. One study in Germany reported that incidence and prevalence of galactorrhoea in schizophrenia are 14% and 19%, respectively2. Although galactorrhoea is not rare in schizophrenic patients, managing and understanding the a etiology can be problematic. In psychiatric patients, antipsychotics can be a cause but other causes need to be ruled out. Galactorrhoea also needs to be differentiated from pathologic nipple discharge which can be due to breast tumours. Usually, galactorrhoea is bilateral, multiductal, and milky, but discharge can be yellow, green or brown3. This case report describes a 32-year old patient with schizophrenia who visited a government psychiatric hospital in Kota Kinabalu, Sabah, Malaysia. This report highlights the clinical challenges to determine the aetiology of galactorrhoea and to manage it in schizophrenics. It raises the following clinical questions: Why a psychiatric patient develops galactorrhoea? How a schizophrenic patient presents with galactorrhoea? What hormonal imbalances are associated with this psychiatric disorder? How should a doctor handle a schizophrenic patient complaining of galactorrhoea? What is the danger of having galactorrhoea in a male?
Slum children are at risk for serious mental health problems because of their economic and social
environments. Little is known about their mental health. This cross sectional study was carried out to
know the extent of mental health problems among slum-dweller children in Dhaka city, Bangladesh. One
hundred and twenty students of four different primary schools were selected. In the first stage of the study,
socio-demographic data as well as information about mental health problems were collected through
socio-demographic questionnaire and validated Bengali version of Rutter B2 scale respectively, from the
teachers of the schools. In the second stage, all the students were assessed again personally by the both
authors with the help of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders- fourth edition (DSMIV).
High prevalence of mental health problems was found among slum children (70.8%). Emotional,
conduct and undifferentiated disorders were detected in 14.17%, 45.83% and 10.83%, respectively.
Conduct disorder was 3.23 times more prevalent in the children than was emotional disorder. It was more
prevalent in boys than in girls (57.90% vs 34.90%). Significant relationships were found among gender
and emotional disorder (p < 0.030), father’s employment status and undifferentiated disorder (p < 0.010),
substance abuse by father and child’s emotional disorder(p