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Journal Article

Citation

Saxena S. Psychiatr. Serv. 2020; 71(9): 969-970.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, American Psychiatric Association)

DOI

10.1176/appi.ps.202000162

PMID

32867611

Abstract

The burden of mental disorders is high around the globe. Service coverage for these disorders is low not only in low- and middle-income countries but also in high-income countries (1). Therefore, availability, access, location, and quality of mental health services are important issues to discuss. In her Global Mental Health Reforms column in this issue, Perera (2) asks a relevant question but provides precious little data to illuminate the discussion in a substantial way.

Perera bases her argument on an analysis that compared outpatient and day treatment facilities with inpatient bed capacity in 15 countries. The data are far from recent, derived from the World Health Organization (WHO) Mental Health Atlas from the year 2011, even though 2017 data were available. It is unclear why the analysis covered only 15 high-income countries given that the atlas provides data on nearly all countries in the world and represents all income groups. The article does not disaggregate the inpatient facilities into mental hospitals and inpatient units in general hospitals. It does not analyze other variables, such as average size of or duration of stay in inpatient facilities, nor does it account for the longitudinal trajectory of change in the number of inpatient beds in the selected countries. In the absence of these essential data, hardly any inference can be made with the question being asked.

WHO depicts mental health services for the public as a pyramid (3), where the base consists of self-care and informal community care (needed in the largest amount), the middle part represents mental health care offered in primary health care, and the tip represents specialist outpatient and inpatient care (needed in smaller amount). This model also conforms to efficient utilization of available resources--self-care and informal care cost the least, primary care costs more, and specialist mental health care costs the most. Within specialist care, outpatient care of course costs much less than inpatient care, and the latter should be used only when other forms of care are not feasible to provide or are not effective. In many low- and middle-income countries, a large majority of human and financial resources are "locked into" the inpatient care provided by large psychiatric hospitals. The question of how much inpatient care is needed should be answered with consideration of all other forms of mental health care--not only outpatient care--and of efficient use of resources.

Historically, inpatient beds have been concentrated in psychiatric hospitals and have been used largely for custodial...


Language: en

Keywords

Mental health systems/hospitals; Service delivery systems

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