730 research outputs found
Le statut de la désinstitutionnalisation en Grande-Bretagne
Pour expliquer le statut actuel de la désinstitutionnalisation1 et du développement des soins communautaires, on examine dans quelle mesure ces soins peuvent ou pourraient assumer les fonctions de l'asile. Ces fonctions incluent celles qui sont manifestes ou explicites, et celles qui sont latentes ou non intentionnelles mais implicites (Bachrach, 1976). La pertinence toujours actuelle de ces deux types de fonctions exerce une influence importante sur le processus de fermeture des asiles et sur le développement des soins communautaires. Il s'ensuit des délais dans les fermetures d'asiles et une transinstitutionnalisation, ou transfert de certains patients depuis l'asile vers d'autres institutions, ce qui, en concentrant les dépenses dans les hôpitaux, étouffe le développement des soins communautaires.The aim of this article is to explain the current status of deinstitutionalisation and of community care development by studying the extent to which community care can or should take over the functions of the asylum. These functions include those that are manifest, or explicit, and those that are latent, or unintended but implicit (Bachrach 1976). The continuing relevance of both sets of functions is argued to be exerting a powerful influence on the processes of asylum closure and community care development. The results include delayed asylum closures and transinstitutionnalisation, the shift of some patients from asylums to other institutions, which stifle the development of community care by concentrating spending in hospitals
Packages of care for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders in low- and middle-income countries: PLoS Medicine Series.
In a Perspective article, Vikram Patel and Graham Thornicroft introduce a new series in PLoS Medicine on mental health disorders in low- and middle-income countries that reviews the evidence for packages of care for ADHD, alcohol misuse disorders, dementia, depression, epilepsy, and schizophrenia
The course and outcome of depression in different cultures: 10-year follow-up of the WHO Collaborative Study on the Assessment of Depressive Disorders
The World Health Organization's study on depressive disorders in different cultures began in 1972. Cohorts of depressed patients were identified in Basle, Montreal, Nagasaki, Teheran and Tokyo. The patients were assessed using standardized measures of social and clinical functioning. Ten-year follow-up data on clinical course, service contact, suicidal acts and social function outcomes were available for 439 (79%) patients. Over one-third (36%) were re-admitted at least once in the follow-up period, half of whom (18%) had very poor clinical outcome. Twenty-four per cent suffered severe social impairment for over half the follow-up period, and over one-fifth (21%) showed no full remissions. The best clinical course (one or two reasonably short episodes of depression with complete remission between episodes) was experienced twice as frequently in patients with a diagnosis of endogenous (65%) as in those diagnosed as suffering from psychogenic depression (29%). Among all patients, a fifth (22%) had at least one episode lasting for more than 1 year, and 10% had an episode lasting over 2 years during follow-up. Death by suicide occurred in 11% of patients, with a further 14% making unsuccessful suicide attempt
Health system strengthening for mental health in low- and middle-income countries: introduction to the Emerald programme
This paper gives an overview of the Emerald (Emerging mental health systems in low- and middle-income countries) programme and introduces the subsequent seven papers in this BJPsych Open thematic series. The aims of the Emerald research programme were to improve mental health outcomes in six low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), namely Ethiopia, India, Nepal, Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda, by building capacity and by generating evidence to enhance health system strengthening in these six countries. The longer-term aim is to improve mental healthcare, and so contribute to a reduction in the large treatment gap that exists for mental disorders. This series includes papers describing the following components of the Emerald programme: (a) capacity building; (b) mental health financing; (c) integrated care (d) mental health information systems; and (e) knowledge transfer. We also include a cross-cutting paper with recommendations from the Emerald programme as a whole. The inclusion of clear mental-health-related targets and indicators within the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals now intensifies the need for strong evidence about both how to provide effective treatments, and how to deliver these treatments within robust health systems
Health system strengthening for mental health in low- and middle-income countries: introduction to the Emerald programme
This paper gives an overview of the Emerald (Emerging mental health systems in low- and middle-income countries) programme and introduces the subsequent seven papers in this BJPsych Open thematic series. The aims of the Emerald research programme were to improve mental health outcomes in six low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), namely Ethiopia, India, Nepal, Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda, by building capacity and by generating evidence to enhance health system strengthening in these six countries. The longer-term aim is to improve mental healthcare, and so contribute to a reduction in the large treatment gap that exists for mental disorders. This series includes papers describing the following components of the Emerald programme: (a) capacity building; (b) mental health financing; (c) integrated care (d) mental health information systems; and (e) knowledge transfer. We also include a cross-cutting paper with recommendations from the Emerald programme as a whole. The inclusion of clear mental-health-related targets and indicators within the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals now intensifies the need for strong evidence about both how to provide effective treatments, and how to deliver these treatments within robust health systems
Components of a modern mental health service: a pragmatic balance of community and hospital care
BackgroundThere is controversy about whether mental health services should be provided in community or hospital settings. There is no worldwide consensus on which mental health service models are appropriate in low-, medium- and high-resource areas.AimsTo provide an evidence base for this debate, and present a stepped care model.MethodCochrane systematic reviews and other reviews were summarised.ResultsThe evidence supports a balanced approach, including both community and hospital services. Areas with low levels of resources may focus on improving primary care, with specialist back-up. Areas with medium resources may additionally provide out-patient clinics, community mental health teams (CMHTs), acute in-patient care, community residential care and forms of employment and occupation. High-resource areas may provide all the above, together with more specialised services such as specialised out-patient clinics and CMHTs, assertive community treatment teams, early intervention teams, alternatives to acute in-patient care, alternative types of community residential care and alternative occupation and rehabilitation.ConclusionsBoth community and hospital services are necessary in all areas regardless of their level of resources, according to the additive and sequential stepped care model described here
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