The future of psychiatry

Since the Second World War mental health programmes and psychiatry have made significant advances. Countries, as well as the United Nations, have recognized the magnitude and severity of mental health problems, and numerous national programmes have been launched to deal with them. Technology relatin...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Norman Sartorius
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Eco-Vector 2021-03-01
Series:Consortium Psychiatricum
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.consortium-psy.com/jour/article/viewFile/63/31
id doaj-ffbd7a4a9c9e439f9ecc2ca8b26f8f47
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ffbd7a4a9c9e439f9ecc2ca8b26f8f472021-10-02T17:40:01ZrusEco-VectorConsortium Psychiatricum2712-76722713-29192021-03-01213710.17816/CP6322The future of psychiatryNorman Sartorius0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8708-6289Association for the Improvement of Mental Health Programmes (AMH)Since the Second World War mental health programmes and psychiatry have made significant advances. Countries, as well as the United Nations, have recognized the magnitude and severity of mental health problems, and numerous national programmes have been launched to deal with them. Technology relating to the treatment of mental disorders has advanced and significant progress has been made in terms of knowledge regarding the functioning of the brain. The awareness of the need to protect the human rights of those with mental illness has increased. National and regional programmes against stigma and the consequent discrimination of those with mental illness, have been launched in many countries. Associations bringing together those who have experienced mental illness and their relatives, have come into existence in many countries. While these are great steps forward, more work is necessary to complete these advances. In low- and middle-income countries, the vast majority of people with mental disorders do not receive adequate treatment. Even in highly industrialized countries, a third of people with severe forms of mental illness are not receiving the appropriate therapy. Laws concerning mental health are outdated in many countries. The protection of the human rights of the mentally ill is incomplete and imperfect. The emphasis on economic gain and the digitalization of medicine in recent years has not helped. On occasions, this has even slowed down the development of mental health services, and the provision of mental healthcare. Thus, psychiatry must still deal with the challenges of the past century, while facing new demands and tasks. Among the new tasks for psychiatry are undoubtedly reforms which will allow (i) the provision of appropriate care of people with comorbid mental and physical disorders, (ii) the application of interventions leading to the primary prevention of mental and neurological disorders, and (iii) a radical reform of the education of psychiatrists and other mental health workers, dealing with mental illness. Collaboration with other stakeholders in the field of mental health and medicine, will be of crucial importance in relation to all these tasks.https://www.consortium-psy.com/jour/article/viewFile/63/31future psychiatrypsychiatric educationprevention of mental illnesspromotion of mental healthmental healthparadigms of psychiatry
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Norman Sartorius
spellingShingle Norman Sartorius
The future of psychiatry
Consortium Psychiatricum
future psychiatry
psychiatric education
prevention of mental illness
promotion of mental health
mental health
paradigms of psychiatry
author_facet Norman Sartorius
author_sort Norman Sartorius
title The future of psychiatry
title_short The future of psychiatry
title_full The future of psychiatry
title_fullStr The future of psychiatry
title_full_unstemmed The future of psychiatry
title_sort future of psychiatry
publisher Eco-Vector
series Consortium Psychiatricum
issn 2712-7672
2713-2919
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Since the Second World War mental health programmes and psychiatry have made significant advances. Countries, as well as the United Nations, have recognized the magnitude and severity of mental health problems, and numerous national programmes have been launched to deal with them. Technology relating to the treatment of mental disorders has advanced and significant progress has been made in terms of knowledge regarding the functioning of the brain. The awareness of the need to protect the human rights of those with mental illness has increased. National and regional programmes against stigma and the consequent discrimination of those with mental illness, have been launched in many countries. Associations bringing together those who have experienced mental illness and their relatives, have come into existence in many countries. While these are great steps forward, more work is necessary to complete these advances. In low- and middle-income countries, the vast majority of people with mental disorders do not receive adequate treatment. Even in highly industrialized countries, a third of people with severe forms of mental illness are not receiving the appropriate therapy. Laws concerning mental health are outdated in many countries. The protection of the human rights of the mentally ill is incomplete and imperfect. The emphasis on economic gain and the digitalization of medicine in recent years has not helped. On occasions, this has even slowed down the development of mental health services, and the provision of mental healthcare. Thus, psychiatry must still deal with the challenges of the past century, while facing new demands and tasks. Among the new tasks for psychiatry are undoubtedly reforms which will allow (i) the provision of appropriate care of people with comorbid mental and physical disorders, (ii) the application of interventions leading to the primary prevention of mental and neurological disorders, and (iii) a radical reform of the education of psychiatrists and other mental health workers, dealing with mental illness. Collaboration with other stakeholders in the field of mental health and medicine, will be of crucial importance in relation to all these tasks.
topic future psychiatry
psychiatric education
prevention of mental illness
promotion of mental health
mental health
paradigms of psychiatry
url https://www.consortium-psy.com/jour/article/viewFile/63/31
work_keys_str_mv AT normansartorius thefutureofpsychiatry
AT normansartorius futureofpsychiatry
_version_ 1716850752566067200