{"title":"公共精神卫生工作组:目标和建议行动","authors":"J. Campion, A. Javed","doi":"10.1002/wps.20981","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Mental disorder is reported to account for almost a third of global disease burden as measured by years lived with disability (YLDs). On the other hand, mental wellbeing results in broad positive impacts. Effective public mental health interventions exist to treat mental disorder, prevent associated impacts, prevent mental disorder from arising, and promote mental wellbeing and resilience. However, only a minority of those with mental disorder receive treatment, with far lower coverage in lowand middle-income countries (LMICs). There is even less coverage of interventions to prevent associated impacts of mental disorder, and negligible coverage of interventions to prevent mental disorder, or promote mental well-being and resilience. This implementation gap represents a breach of the right to health, and results in population-scale suffering and associated economic costs. The gap has further widened during the COVID-19 pandemic. The United Nations (UN) Sustainable Developmental Goals have set a target of universal coverage by 2030 which includes treatment and prevention of mental disorder and promotion of mental well-being. The most recent World Health Organization (WHO) Mental Health Atlas highlighted that “global targets can be reached in 2030 only if there is a collective global commitment over the next 10 years across Member States to make massive investments and expanded efforts at the country level relating to mental health policies, laws, programmes and services”. Public mental health involves a population approach to improve coverage, outcomes and coordination of interventions to treat mental disorder, prevent associated impacts, prevent mental disorder from arising, and promote mental well-being and resilience. This aims to support efficient, equitable and sustainable reduction in mental disorder, promotion of population mental well-being, and achievement of the UN Sustainable Developmental Goals target of universal coverage by 2030. The WPA Action Plan 2020-2023 promotes public mental health as a guiding principle. A Working Group on Public Mental Health has been then established, including experts such as J. Allan, F.K. Baingana, J. Campion, Y. Huang, A. Javed, N. Lamb, S. Levin, C. Lund, M. Marmot, S. Saxena, T. Schulze, E. Sorel, H. Tu, P. Udomratn, and M. van Ommeren (observer). The Working Group highlighted that public mental health is not well defined or understood, with some languages having no terms for it. This contributes to lack of action on relevant issues. The Group agreed upon the definition outlined above, which is reported on the Group webpage of the WPA website (www.wpanet.org/publicmental-health) and in a recent publication. The main objective of the Working Group is to improve implementation of public mental health interventions in four ways. The first is to raise awareness, value, acceptance and prioritization of this area in national health policies. The second is to promote national assessments of public mental health unmet need and required actions which can then inform policy development and implementation. The third is to promote public mental health training, including through digital platforms, which can support psychiatrists and other professionals to address the public mental health implementation gap, particularly in LMICs, through identification of required actions by different sectors as well as clarification of a core curriculum, training targets and milestones. Examples of public mental health training are highlighted on the above-mentioned Group webpage. The fourth way is to support development of integrated public mental health approaches to disease management and prevention including through engagement with primary and general health systems. Further objectives include: a) work with interested countries in order to facilitate these approaches with identified funding; b) engagement with other organizations on the public mental health agenda – thus far, these have included the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the UN International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), and the WHO; c) disseminating work relevant to public mental health through publications, presentations and training, also delivered online; d) supporting a public mental health approach in other areas of the WPA Action Plan 2020-2023, including child, adolescent and youth mental health, the management of comorbidities, and partnership with other organizations. Publications already produced by the Working Group include an editorial on the field as a whole, articles dealing with the public mental health approach to the COVID-19 pandemic, and papers about required actions to address public mental health implementation failure. Members of the Working Group have given and will give presentations at World Congresses of Psychiatry in 2021 and 2022, and will present in a public mental health symposium at the 2022 International Congress of the UK Royal College of Psychiatrists. In order to achieve consensus on required actions to address the public mental health implementation gap, the members of the Working Group were invited to contribute to a health policy article, which recommends the following six actions: a) making the public mental health case through assessment of unmet need, estimation of impact and associated economic benefits from improved coverage, as well as collabo7. Karim Z, Javed A, Azeem MW. Pak J Med Sci 2022; 38:320-2. 8. Imran N, Haider II, Mustafa AB et al. Middle East Curr Psychiatry 2021;28:45. 9. Arora R, Mukherjee SD. J Cancer Educ 2021;36: 435-7. 10. Hankir A, Tom A, Ibrahim H et al. Psychiatr Danub 2020;32:135-8. 11. Ibrahim H, Tom A, Youssef A et al. 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However, only a minority of those with mental disorder receive treatment, with far lower coverage in lowand middle-income countries (LMICs). There is even less coverage of interventions to prevent associated impacts of mental disorder, and negligible coverage of interventions to prevent mental disorder, or promote mental well-being and resilience. This implementation gap represents a breach of the right to health, and results in population-scale suffering and associated economic costs. The gap has further widened during the COVID-19 pandemic. The United Nations (UN) Sustainable Developmental Goals have set a target of universal coverage by 2030 which includes treatment and prevention of mental disorder and promotion of mental well-being. The most recent World Health Organization (WHO) Mental Health Atlas highlighted that “global targets can be reached in 2030 only if there is a collective global commitment over the next 10 years across Member States to make massive investments and expanded efforts at the country level relating to mental health policies, laws, programmes and services”. Public mental health involves a population approach to improve coverage, outcomes and coordination of interventions to treat mental disorder, prevent associated impacts, prevent mental disorder from arising, and promote mental well-being and resilience. This aims to support efficient, equitable and sustainable reduction in mental disorder, promotion of population mental well-being, and achievement of the UN Sustainable Developmental Goals target of universal coverage by 2030. The WPA Action Plan 2020-2023 promotes public mental health as a guiding principle. A Working Group on Public Mental Health has been then established, including experts such as J. Allan, F.K. Baingana, J. Campion, Y. Huang, A. Javed, N. Lamb, S. Levin, C. Lund, M. Marmot, S. Saxena, T. Schulze, E. Sorel, H. Tu, P. Udomratn, and M. van Ommeren (observer). The Working Group highlighted that public mental health is not well defined or understood, with some languages having no terms for it. This contributes to lack of action on relevant issues. The Group agreed upon the definition outlined above, which is reported on the Group webpage of the WPA website (www.wpanet.org/publicmental-health) and in a recent publication. The main objective of the Working Group is to improve implementation of public mental health interventions in four ways. The first is to raise awareness, value, acceptance and prioritization of this area in national health policies. The second is to promote national assessments of public mental health unmet need and required actions which can then inform policy development and implementation. The third is to promote public mental health training, including through digital platforms, which can support psychiatrists and other professionals to address the public mental health implementation gap, particularly in LMICs, through identification of required actions by different sectors as well as clarification of a core curriculum, training targets and milestones. Examples of public mental health training are highlighted on the above-mentioned Group webpage. The fourth way is to support development of integrated public mental health approaches to disease management and prevention including through engagement with primary and general health systems. Further objectives include: a) work with interested countries in order to facilitate these approaches with identified funding; b) engagement with other organizations on the public mental health agenda – thus far, these have included the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the UN International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), and the WHO; c) disseminating work relevant to public mental health through publications, presentations and training, also delivered online; d) supporting a public mental health approach in other areas of the WPA Action Plan 2020-2023, including child, adolescent and youth mental health, the management of comorbidities, and partnership with other organizations. Publications already produced by the Working Group include an editorial on the field as a whole, articles dealing with the public mental health approach to the COVID-19 pandemic, and papers about required actions to address public mental health implementation failure. Members of the Working Group have given and will give presentations at World Congresses of Psychiatry in 2021 and 2022, and will present in a public mental health symposium at the 2022 International Congress of the UK Royal College of Psychiatrists. In order to achieve consensus on required actions to address the public mental health implementation gap, the members of the Working Group were invited to contribute to a health policy article, which recommends the following six actions: a) making the public mental health case through assessment of unmet need, estimation of impact and associated economic benefits from improved coverage, as well as collabo7. Karim Z, Javed A, Azeem MW. Pak J Med Sci 2022; 38:320-2. 8. Imran N, Haider II, Mustafa AB et al. Middle East Curr Psychiatry 2021;28:45. 9. Arora R, Mukherjee SD. J Cancer Educ 2021;36: 435-7. 10. Hankir A, Tom A, Ibrahim H et al. Psychiatr Danub 2020;32:135-8. 11. Ibrahim H, Tom A, Youssef A et al. 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引用次数: 5
摘要
据报道,以残疾生活年数(YLDs)衡量,精神障碍几乎占全球疾病负担的三分之一。另一方面,心理健康会产生广泛的积极影响。目前存在有效的公共精神卫生干预措施,以治疗精神障碍,预防相关影响,预防精神障碍的产生,并促进精神健康和复原力。然而,只有少数精神障碍患者得到治疗,低收入和中等收入国家的覆盖率要低得多。预防精神障碍相关影响的干预措施覆盖面更少,而预防精神障碍或促进精神健康和复原力的干预措施覆盖面则可以忽略不计。这一执行差距是对健康权的侵犯,并造成全民痛苦和相关的经济代价。在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,这一差距进一步扩大。联合国可持续发展目标设定了到2030年实现全民覆盖的目标,其中包括治疗和预防精神障碍以及促进精神健康。世界卫生组织(世卫组织)最新的《精神卫生地图集》强调,"只有会员国在今后10年作出全球集体承诺,在国家一级就精神卫生政策、法律、规划和服务进行大规模投资并扩大努力,才能在2030年实现全球目标"。公共精神卫生涉及一种人口方法,以改善治疗精神障碍的干预措施的覆盖面、结果和协调,预防相关影响,预防精神障碍的产生,并促进精神健康和复原力。其目的是支持有效、公平和可持续地减少精神障碍,促进人口精神健康,并实现联合国可持续发展目标中到2030年实现全民覆盖的具体目标。《2020-2023年行动计划》将促进公共精神卫生作为一项指导原则。随后成立了一个公共精神卫生工作组,成员包括J. Allan、F.K. Baingana、J. Campion、Y. Huang、A. Javed、N. Lamb、S. Levin、C. Lund、M. Marmot、S. Saxena、T. Schulze、E. Sorel、H. Tu、P. Udomratn和M. van Ommeren(观察员)等专家。工作组强调指出,公众心理健康没有得到很好的定义或理解,有些语言没有这方面的术语。这导致在有关问题上缺乏行动。该集团同意上述定义,该定义已在世界环境署网站(www.wpanet.org/publicmental-health)的集团网页和最近的一份出版物中公布。工作组的主要目标是通过四种方式改进公共精神卫生干预措施的实施。首先是在国家卫生政策中提高对这一领域的认识、重视、接受和优先次序。第二是促进国家对公共精神卫生未满足需求和所需行动的评估,然后为政策制定和执行提供信息。第三是促进公共精神卫生培训,包括通过数字平台,通过确定不同部门需要采取的行动以及澄清核心课程、培训目标和里程碑,支持精神科医生和其他专业人员解决公共精神卫生实施方面的差距,特别是在中低收入国家。公共心理健康培训的例子在上述小组网页上有重点介绍。第四,支持制定综合公共精神卫生方法,包括通过与初级卫生系统和一般卫生系统合作,进行疾病管理和预防。进一步的目标包括:a)与感兴趣的国家合作,以确定的资金促进这些方法;(b)在公共精神卫生议程上与其他组织合作——迄今为止,这些组织包括经济合作与发展组织(经合组织)、联合国国际儿童紧急基金会(儿童基金会)和世卫组织;(C)通过出版物、演讲和培训(也在网上提供)传播与公共精神卫生有关的工作;(d)支持在《2020-2023年世界行动计划》的其他领域采取公共精神卫生办法,包括儿童、青少年和青年精神卫生、合并症管理以及与其他组织建立伙伴关系。工作组已经出版的出版物包括一篇关于整个领域的社论,涉及2019冠状病毒病大流行的公共精神卫生方法的文章,以及关于解决公共精神卫生实施失败所需行动的论文。工作组成员已经并将在2021年和2022年世界精神病学大会上发言,并将在英国皇家精神科医学院2022年国际大会的公共精神卫生专题讨论会上发言。 为了就解决公共精神卫生执行差距所需采取的行动达成共识,工作组成员被邀请撰写一篇卫生政策文章,其中建议采取以下六项行动:a)通过评估未满足的需求、估计扩大覆盖面带来的影响和相关经济效益,以及开展合作,来说明公共精神卫生的必要性7。Karim Z, Javed A, Azeem MW。[J]中华医学杂志2022;38:320-2。8. Imran N, Haider II, Mustafa AB等。中东当代精神病学2021;28:45。9. Arora R, Mukherjee SD。[J]中华医学杂志,2011;31(2):357 - 357。10. 汉基尔A,汤姆A,易卜拉欣H等。中华精神病杂志2020;32:135-8。11. Ibrahim H, Tom A, Youssef A等。中华精神病学杂志[J]; 2009; 33(2): 391 - 391。
WPA Working Group on Public Mental Health: objectives and recommended actions
Mental disorder is reported to account for almost a third of global disease burden as measured by years lived with disability (YLDs). On the other hand, mental wellbeing results in broad positive impacts. Effective public mental health interventions exist to treat mental disorder, prevent associated impacts, prevent mental disorder from arising, and promote mental wellbeing and resilience. However, only a minority of those with mental disorder receive treatment, with far lower coverage in lowand middle-income countries (LMICs). There is even less coverage of interventions to prevent associated impacts of mental disorder, and negligible coverage of interventions to prevent mental disorder, or promote mental well-being and resilience. This implementation gap represents a breach of the right to health, and results in population-scale suffering and associated economic costs. The gap has further widened during the COVID-19 pandemic. The United Nations (UN) Sustainable Developmental Goals have set a target of universal coverage by 2030 which includes treatment and prevention of mental disorder and promotion of mental well-being. The most recent World Health Organization (WHO) Mental Health Atlas highlighted that “global targets can be reached in 2030 only if there is a collective global commitment over the next 10 years across Member States to make massive investments and expanded efforts at the country level relating to mental health policies, laws, programmes and services”. Public mental health involves a population approach to improve coverage, outcomes and coordination of interventions to treat mental disorder, prevent associated impacts, prevent mental disorder from arising, and promote mental well-being and resilience. This aims to support efficient, equitable and sustainable reduction in mental disorder, promotion of population mental well-being, and achievement of the UN Sustainable Developmental Goals target of universal coverage by 2030. The WPA Action Plan 2020-2023 promotes public mental health as a guiding principle. A Working Group on Public Mental Health has been then established, including experts such as J. Allan, F.K. Baingana, J. Campion, Y. Huang, A. Javed, N. Lamb, S. Levin, C. Lund, M. Marmot, S. Saxena, T. Schulze, E. Sorel, H. Tu, P. Udomratn, and M. van Ommeren (observer). The Working Group highlighted that public mental health is not well defined or understood, with some languages having no terms for it. This contributes to lack of action on relevant issues. The Group agreed upon the definition outlined above, which is reported on the Group webpage of the WPA website (www.wpanet.org/publicmental-health) and in a recent publication. The main objective of the Working Group is to improve implementation of public mental health interventions in four ways. The first is to raise awareness, value, acceptance and prioritization of this area in national health policies. The second is to promote national assessments of public mental health unmet need and required actions which can then inform policy development and implementation. The third is to promote public mental health training, including through digital platforms, which can support psychiatrists and other professionals to address the public mental health implementation gap, particularly in LMICs, through identification of required actions by different sectors as well as clarification of a core curriculum, training targets and milestones. Examples of public mental health training are highlighted on the above-mentioned Group webpage. The fourth way is to support development of integrated public mental health approaches to disease management and prevention including through engagement with primary and general health systems. Further objectives include: a) work with interested countries in order to facilitate these approaches with identified funding; b) engagement with other organizations on the public mental health agenda – thus far, these have included the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the UN International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), and the WHO; c) disseminating work relevant to public mental health through publications, presentations and training, also delivered online; d) supporting a public mental health approach in other areas of the WPA Action Plan 2020-2023, including child, adolescent and youth mental health, the management of comorbidities, and partnership with other organizations. Publications already produced by the Working Group include an editorial on the field as a whole, articles dealing with the public mental health approach to the COVID-19 pandemic, and papers about required actions to address public mental health implementation failure. Members of the Working Group have given and will give presentations at World Congresses of Psychiatry in 2021 and 2022, and will present in a public mental health symposium at the 2022 International Congress of the UK Royal College of Psychiatrists. In order to achieve consensus on required actions to address the public mental health implementation gap, the members of the Working Group were invited to contribute to a health policy article, which recommends the following six actions: a) making the public mental health case through assessment of unmet need, estimation of impact and associated economic benefits from improved coverage, as well as collabo7. Karim Z, Javed A, Azeem MW. Pak J Med Sci 2022; 38:320-2. 8. Imran N, Haider II, Mustafa AB et al. Middle East Curr Psychiatry 2021;28:45. 9. Arora R, Mukherjee SD. J Cancer Educ 2021;36: 435-7. 10. Hankir A, Tom A, Ibrahim H et al. Psychiatr Danub 2020;32:135-8. 11. Ibrahim H, Tom A, Youssef A et al. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2020;59:S20.
期刊介绍:
World Psychiatry is the official journal of the World Psychiatric Association. It is published in three issues per year.
The journal is sent free of charge to psychiatrists whose names and addresses are provided by WPA member societies and sections.
World Psychiatry is also freely accessible on Wiley Online Library and PubMed Central.
The main aim of World Psychiatry is to disseminate information on significant clinical, service, and research developments in the mental health field.
The journal aims to use a language that can be understood by the majority of mental health professionals worldwide.