Investing for population mental health in low and middle income countries-where and why?

IF 3.1 2区 医学 Q2 PSYCHIATRY International Journal of Mental Health Systems Pub Date : 2022-08-11 DOI:10.1186/s13033-022-00547-6
Melvyn Freeman
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Abstract

Background: Policy makers intent on improving population mental health are required to make fundamental decisions on where to invest resources to achieve optimal outcomes. While research on the effectiveness and efficiency of interventions is critical to such choices, including clinical outcomes and return on investment, in the "real world" of policy making other concerns invariably also play a role. Politics, history, community awareness and demands for care, understanding of etiology, severity of condition and local circumstances are all critical. Policy makers should not merely rely on previous allocations, but need to take active decisions regarding the proportion of resources that should be allocated to particular interventions to achieve optimum outcomes. Given that scientific evidence is only one of the reasons informing such decisions, it is necessary to have clear and informed reasons for allocations and for making cases for new mental health investments.

Main body: Investment allocations are unlikely to ever be an exact science. Alternatives therefore need to be rationally weighed up and reasoned decisions made based on this. Using prevalence data and the distribution of mental health resources in South Africa as a backdrop and proxy, investment proposals are made for LMICs with due consideration given to inter alia the social determinants of mental health, the needs and potential benefits of investments in people with severe verses common mental disorder, mental health promotion and disease prevention and to other areas that may impact on population mental health, such as management.

Conclusion: Based on a range of arguments, it is proposed that mental health investments should follow the following approach. A mental health-in-all-policies method must be adopted. There should be no more than a 20% gap in the humane and human rights oriented care, treatment and rehabilitation of people with severe mental disorder. A minimum additional amount of 10% of the amount spent on severe mental disorder should be allocated to treating people with common mental disorder. Screening for mental disabilities should take place within all chronic care services. A minimum of 3% of the budget spent on severe mental disorder should be spent on promotion and prevention programmes. An additional 1% of the allocation for severe mental disorder should be provided for managing/driving the mental health programme.

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投资于中低收入国家的人口心理健康--投资于何处?
背景:意图改善人群心理健康的政策制定者需要做出基本决策,决定在何处投入资源以取得最佳效果。虽然对干预措施的有效性和效率的研究对这种选择至关重要,包括临床结果和投资回报,但在政策制定的 "现实世界 "中,其他方面的考虑也不可避免地发挥着作用。政治、历史、社区意识和护理需求、对病因、病情严重程度和当地情况的了解都至关重要。政策制定者不应仅仅依赖于以往的分配,而是需要就特定干预措施的资源分配比例做出积极决策,以取得最佳效果。鉴于科学依据只是做出此类决定的原因之一,因此有必要为分配资源以及为新的精神 健康投资提供明确而有依据的理由:投资分配不可能是一门精确的科学。因此,需要理性地权衡各种选择,并在此基础上做出合理的决定。本文以南非的患病率数据和精神卫生资源的分配情况为背景和代表,为低收入和中等收入国家提出了投资建议,并适当考虑了精神卫生的社会决定因素、严重或常见精神障碍患者的需求和投资的潜在收益、精神卫生宣传和疾病预防,以及可能影响人口精神卫生的其他领域,如管理等:基于一系列论点,建议精神健康投资应遵循以下方法。必须采用将心理健康纳入所有政策的方法。在对严重精神障碍患者进行人道和以人权为导向的护理、治疗和康复方面,差距不应超过 20%。用于治疗严重精神障碍的资金至少应增加 10%,用于治疗普通精神障碍患者。应在所有慢性病护理服务中对精神障碍患者进行筛查。用于严重精神障碍的预算中至少应有 3%用于宣传和预防计划。严重精神障碍的额外 1%拨款应用于管理/推动精神健康计划。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
2.80%
发文量
52
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊最新文献
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