Before closing on May 26, the World Health Organization’s Sixty-fifth World Health Assembly
adopted a new resolution calling on the 194 member states to
improve conditions for mentally ill persons in their countries.
“Member States acknowledged the need for a comprehensive,
coordinated response to addressing mental disorders from health and social
sectors at the country level,” said the resolution. “[T]his includes approaches
such as programs to reduce stigma and discrimination, reintegration of patients
into workplace and society, support for care providers and families, and
investment in mental health from the [national] health budget.”
The statement also supports community-based care close to
patients' homes; the need for school-based suicide prevention programs; and
better understanding of how substance abuse and domestic violence contribute to
and worsen mental health disorders.
The resolution’s passage came several months after a group of
U.S. psychiatrists prompted the WHO to rethink its exclusion of mental health
from a list of noncommunicable diseases, as reported here in Psychiatric News.
(Image: WHO/Pierre Albouy)
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