Admittedly, Experiencing Depression And Hallucination, Ashanty Undergoes Psychological Care To Construction

JAKARTA - Ashanty openly admits that she is struggling with mental health problems triggered by continuous stress.

His condition was serious enough that it made him difficult to sleep, had hallucinations, and had to undergo a series of intensive care, including treatment at a psychiatrist until he was examined.

He revealed that he is currently at a mental low.

"Yes, I'm slowing down, maybe the doctor said maybe I'm still at the stage, what stage is it? Yes, the stage is still lacking, I'm still depressed," said Ashanty in the South Jakarta area, Tuesday, August 5.

This condition makes him have to rely on prescription drugs to sleep well. His struggle was not kidding. Ashanty even had an alarming symptom.

"So I was like 2 weeks ago I was beaten because I couldn't sleep, the hallucinations were strange," he explained.

In addition, he has also undergone a more in-depth medical examination. "Eh, yesterday I had a sleep study, I also stayed a day to check his psyche."

Even so, the doctor gave him a calming diagnosis. This is not a serious mental disorder, but a body response to extraordinary pressure.

"Only my psychiatrist said, 'You're okay, you're really because the stress is too much, it's too much for you to feel, so you're like that, that's it," explained Ashanty.