MENTAL HEALTH GAP ACTION PROGRAMME (mhGAP) 2nd meeting of the
Transcription
MENTAL HEALTH GAP ACTION PROGRAMME (mhGAP) 2nd meeting of the
MENTAL HEALTH GAP ACTION PROGRAMME (mhGAP) 2nd meeting of the mhGAP Forum ANNEX F Submissions from the participating organizations ADI Submission for mhGAP Geneva, 7 October 2010 64 Great Suffolk Street London SE1 0BL United Kingdom Tel: +44 (0)20 7981 0880 Fax: +44 (0)20 7928 2357 Email: [email protected] Web: www.alz.co.uk Alzheimer’s Disease International (ADI) is the worldwide federation of 73 Alzheimer associations. ADI’s mission is to strengthen and support Alzheimer associations and raise awareness about dementia worldwide, to improve the knowledge of and information on risk factors, and to make dementia a global health priority. Our vision is an improved quality of life for people with dementia and their families throughout the world. ADI has recently commissioned two reports on global dementia, the World Alzheimer Report 2009, with the latest prevalence data and information about the impact of the disease, and the World Alzheimer Report 2010 with the global economic impact of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias. We welcome the priority that is given to dementia in the Mental Health GAP programme. and offer our assistance with its implementation. There are still governments in the world who – wrongly – think that dementia does not occur in their country. This programme gives a unique opportunity to improve the quality of life of people with dementia and their families. It brings together the most effective interventions that can be used from today on. The national Alzheimer associations are well positioned to assist in the implementation of this plan. A list of countries where we have a member association can be found below. ADI can do the following things to promote mhGAP: 1. Publish an article in our newsletter Global Perspective 2. Put an article and all available information on our website, in as many languages as are possible 3. Inform the ADI-members in countries that are prioritised in the programme and recommend working with the local WHO-office and the Health Ministry. 4. Put the mhGAP programme on the agenda of our regional meetings with the Latin American and Asia-Pacific members, both in October 2010. 5. Consider looking for a pilot country for mhGAP to carry out our Global Improvement in Dementia Care (GIDE) project, that we have developed together with the International Psychogeriatric Association. At the moment, Alzheimer Pakistan and the Alzheimer and Related Disorders Society of India have shown interest in this project. We are very interested to hear more about the programme during the World Health Organization meeting on 7 October and to meet with others who are working towards similar goals. Marc Wortmann Executive Director Alzheimer’s Disease International Alzheimer’s Disease International, The International Federation of Alzheimer’s Disease and Related Disorders Societies, Inc. In official relations with the World Health Organization List of members of ADI 2010-2011 Argentina Armenia Aruba Australia Austria Bangladesh Barbados Belgium Bermuda Brazil Bulgaria Canada Chile Chinese Taipei (Taiwan) Colombia Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Dominican Republic Egypt El Salvador Finland France Germany Greece Guatemala Honduras Hong Kong SAR Hungary India Indonesia Iran Ireland Israel Italy Jamaica Japan Korea, Republic of Lebanon Malaysia Malta Mauritius Mexico Netherlands New Zealand Nigeria Pakistan Panama Peru Philippines Poland PR China Puerto Rico Romania Scotland Singapore South Africa Spain Sri Lanka Sweden Switzerland Syria Thailand Trinidad and Tobago Turkey UK USA Uruguay Venezuela Zimbabwe Important publications: World Alzheimer Report 2009 (overview of dementia and global prevalence) World Alzheimer Report 2010 (economic impact of dementia) Http://www.alz.co.uk/worldreport Association for Regional Development and Mental Health (EPAPSY) Est. 1988 EPAPSY is a nongovernmental, non profit organization that has founded and operates 11 community-based mental health services (residential care units, mobile units, day centers). It operates under the supervision of the Greek Ministry of Health, but functions under private law as a public body. It is funded by national funds as well as the E.U.. EPAPSY employs 188 mental health professionals. Scientific Director is professor Stelios Stylianidis, Ass. Prof. of Social Psychiatry at the University of Panteion, vice president of World Association for Psychosocial Rehabilitation, an NGO in official status with WHO. Professor Stylianidis is the national counterpart for mental health to WHO. EPAPSY is governed by 5-member Board of Directors. The aims of the Association are: the implementation of mental health programmes promoting local development and social inclusion, the promotion of the rights of people with mental disorders, their families and other vulnerable or high-risk groups, the provision of know-how, training and applied research for the implementation of mental health and psychosocial rehabilitation services in Greece and abroad, the development of initiatives and innovative working methods in close cooperation with public health and non-health services and other local voluntary organizations and non-profit associations. EPAPSY has implemented 9 projects funded by the EU and conducted three large scale psychiatric surveys. EPAPSY was part of the multi-centered study "Primary Health Care and Psychiatry" run by the “Mario Negri Health Research Institute” (Italy) and the WHO. EPAPSY operates two Mobile Mental Health Units in NE and W Cycladic islands providing psychiatric services for 11 islands with a population of 87000 people. The staff is constituted by 24 professionals (psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, administrative staff, and supervisors). Angelo Barbato, Senior Scientist at the Epidemiology and Social Psychiatry Unit of Mario Negri Institute and Benedetto Saraceno, professor of Social Psychiatry at the University of Geneva, are consultant of EPAPSY for policy, training and research issues. The objectives of the Mobile Mental Health Units are: Mental Health needs assessment of the population of each sector Assessment and management of mental health problems and disorders of children, adolescents and adults through the integration with Primary Health Care System Mental Health Promotion actions (fighting stigma, raising awareness and educating the general population etc) Concerning the collaboration with primary health care services of the islands, 7 islands have a public Health Centre with specialized staff, the others rely mainly on GPs or ‘unskilled’ doctors (“agrotikoi” in Greek) working in local and smaller locations. As stigma is an important barrier to seeking help in the remote and introverted communities of the islands, people generally trust GPs when seeking care. Therefore, GPs are the health professionals that first are in contact with people with mental health problems. Over 50% of patients treated by the Mobile Units are referred by PHC. There are no other mental health services in the eleven islands except the mobile units and one child-psychiatrist in the General Hospital of Syros. Reduction of the huge number of compulsory hospitalizations from the islands can only be achieved in collaboration with PHC professionals. As mental health care in these islands is provided through the PHC system with the supervision of the EPAPSY Mobile Units we consider these areas as suitable for the piloting of the mhGap programme. We intend to do that through: Step 1. Translating the package into Greek. A census group of experts will validate the translation which will be used for the training of Greek professionals (1 month). Step 2. Training of the mental health professionals working for the Mobile Units. Training will last approximately 1 week (in Athens). From this group 5 mental health professionals will be the trainers for the GPs. Step 3. Training of the selected PHC workers in a one-to-one basis at the local health centers (1 month). 4 GPs and 2 pediatricians in Kithnos, Paros, Antiparos and Andros island. Selection criteria: working experience in PHC setting, previous systematic collaboration with the Mobile Units, workplace steadiness, motivation. Step 4. Implementation of the programme by PHC workers with the supervision of mental health professionals of the Mobile Units (3 months) Step 5. Focus group with the participation of academics from the Psychiatric Clinics of Athens, Ioannina, Thrace and the Greek Association of General Practitioners. Final report to WHO with suggestions about mhGAP package. Coordinator: St. Stylianidis, Scientific Director of EPAPSY. Suggestions for further support: Identifying other Greek sites for training and use of the package Promoting the integration of the final package to the official curriculum of training GPs (by the Greek Association of GPs) and the continuous training sessions for GPs and training psychiatrists Relevant Publications Stylianidis S., Pantelidou S., Chondros P. (2007). Unités mobiles de santé mentale dans le Cyclades. L’ Information Psychiatrique 83: 682-688 S. Stylianidis, P. Skapinakis, S. Pantelidou, P. Chondros, A. Avgoustaki, M. Ziakoulis (2010). Prevalence of common psychiatric disorders in an island region. Archives of Hellenic Medicine, 27(4):675–683 Autism Speaks Global Autism Public Health Initiative Autism Speaks is the world’s largest autism science and advocacy organization. Its mission is to fund research into the causes, prevention, treatments and a cure for autism; increase awareness of autism spectrum disorders; and advocate for the needs of individuals with autism and their families. Officially designated a non-governmental organization associated with the United Nations Department of Public Information, the first and only such organization devoted to autism, Autism Speaks is able to reach a global audience in its efforts to promote the dignity, equal rights, social progress and better standards of life for individuals with autism. In 2008, Autism Speaks launched the Global Autism Public Health Initiative (GAPH), an ambitious international advocacy effort designed to help countries around the world: (1) enhance public and professional awareness of autism; (2) facilitate scientific research, including research that informs public health policy; and (3) build capacity for autism services, especially in early detection and intervention. Through GAPH, Autism Speaks has already established or is exploring partnerships with local governments, professionals, and parent advocates in over 20 countries across Central and South America, the Middle East, Eastern and Western Europe, South Asia, Africa, and the Pacific Rim. A major barrier to improving the health and wellbeing of children and families touched by autism around the world is the paucity of expertise and subsequent lack of capacity for autism services and research. Capacity-building is a core component of GAPH development and closing the treatment gap requires development of community-based intervention that is feasible, costeffective, and can be delivered with fidelity by professionals and non-professionals alike. GAPH implements strategies developed in the field of global mental health where experts acknowledge the need for innovative solutions to scaling up services, especially in countries struggling with many public health priorities outside of autism and developmental disabilities. Furthermore, collaboration and partnership are essential for the success of GAPH programs. Autism Speaks aims to serve as a catalyst for meaningful change, but we recognize that committed local and international leadership and support is essential for achieving our goals. Successful partnerships allow us to leverage shared investments, speed development, enhance impact, and facilitate dissemination of program activities and outcomes to communities in need. As the priorities and approaches of GAPH are well aligned with those of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) Mental Health GAP Action Program in reducing the global burden of mental health issues, in April of 2010 Autism Speaks and WHO announced an official partnership. The Autism Speaks-WHO partnership aims to build upon the synergy between the GAPH and mhGAP to have the greatest impact and broadest reach in rapidly delivering meaningful, impactful, and sustainable solutions to families struggling with autism and other mental health disorders around the world. No Health without Mental Health The Shirley Foundation and Autistica welcome the opportunity to contribute to the Mental Health Forum in partnership with the WHO and its other partners. The Shirley Foundation is the leading funder of autism projects in the UK having donated over £40 million to research and service development in the past decade. It continues to fund strategically significant projects including: the mhGAP initiative, a WHO Europe project, Supporting the work of Autistica. Academy of medical Science to do expert report on autism research History of Autism (published by Wiley/Blackwell Autistica is the UKs leading charity funding autism research, in the UK. It seeks to use biomedical research to bring benefits to individuals and families affected by autism. It is dedicated to raising and investing funds to support high quality peer reviewed research focussing on determining the causes and biological basis of autistic spectrum disorders and advancing and evaluating new treatments and evidence based interventions. Autism is one of the most significant but least researched developmental disorders. Autistica has set itself the task of achieving major breakthroughs within 10 years. Its main focus in support of the mhGAP initiative is, and will, be to support capacity building in areas of low to middle income or areas where diagnosis is at a low level. Currently Autistica is in the process of funding and facilitating 12 Saudi fellows to study in the UK and first of 2 of 6 fellows from India. This is part of an initiative to ensure involvement at an international level in research into autism and developmental disorders, ultimately leading to an improvement in services and evidence interventions. It is expected that the Saudi initiative will be widened to include the whole Gulf region over the next years. Support in the future: By supporting capacity building in areas such as these Autistica will enhance knowledge, support evidence based interventions, practice and research thus ensuring an improvement in the quality of life for individuals and families. One of Autisticas mission aims and continuing responsibilities is the dissemination of information on autism and major research initiatives and outcomes. It will continue to promote evidence based intervention as described in the mhGAP reports. Personnel involved in The Shirley Foundation and Autistica will continue to contribute to mhGAP and its aims and objectives Eileen Hopkins – [email protected] Project Manager -The Shirley Foundation Director of International Development - Autistica www.autistica.org.uk CBM – Building an inclusive society CBM is an international Christian development organisation, committed to improving the quality of life of persons with disabilities in the poorest countries of the world. Based on over 100 years of professional expertise, CBM addresses poverty as a cause and a consequence of disability, and works in partnership to create a society for all. CBM’s vision is: “an inclusive world in which all persons with disabilities enjoy their human rights and can achieve their full potential”. CBM’s work is founded on the core values of Christianity, Internationalism, Professionalism, Stewardship, respectful and honest Communication and Inclusion. CBM’s goals are: to improve the quality of life of persons with disabilities through health care, education, rehabilitation and livelihood services; to advocate for the inclusion and rights of persons with disabilities in all aspects of development and societal life (mainstreaming); to build capacity in national Partners to provide services for persons with disabilities. In order to achieve this, CBM follows a twin track approach, consisting of: Improving access to healthcare, education, livelihood and social activities and political influence so as to enable and empower persons with disabilities and their families. Overcoming the barriers in society that people with disability face e.g. attitude, physical accessibility, communication, legislation, so that persons with disabilities are included in all aspects of society. Mental health care in Sri Lanka, after the Tsunami Picture: CBM/Lohnes CBM promotes service developments which are accessible to all people, particularly the poorest. Therefore CBM works proactively with its Partners to break down barriers which prevent people accessing services. These barriers include poverty, lack of education, gender, religion, age, social stigma and geographic isolation. CBM prioritises services that improve the lives of children and women, and takes into account environmental issues. Together we can do more… Together with its Partner organisations, CBM reaches over 20 million persons annually. CBM Member Associations support a joint programme of development work with over 60 million Euros annually. Currently, CBM supports more than 900 projects in over 90 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe through 12 Regional Offices. Local and expatriate professionals (nurses, special educators, doctors, physiotherapists, rehabilitation experts and project managers) offer their skills through approximately 750 Partner organisations. CBM emphasises sustainable, community-based approaches which encourage self-reliance and contribute to poverty alleviation and community development. Building local capacity is a priority and CBM invests significantly in personnel development. International Cooperation, Advocacy and networking CBM works with like-minded local and international organisations to build alliances and create global initiatives in order to improve the quality of life of persons with disabilities. CBM is working in cooperation with United Nations (UN) agencies, including the World Health Organization (WHO), NGOs and Disabled Peoples’ Organisations (DPOs) to develop networks and programmes. CBM, the WHO and the International Agency for the Prevention of Blindness (IAPB) were founding members of “VISION 2020: the Right to Sight,” a programme to eliminate avoidable blindness by the year 2020. CBM is a pioneer in Community Based Rehabilitation (CBR), and is involved in the development of the new WHO-ILOUNESCO CBR guidelines (to be launched in October 2010). CBM and Community Mental Health CBM has been involved in Community Mental Health (CMH) work through its partners for many years. Activities in CMH are particularly strong in West Africa and Indonesia. CBM supports both standalone CMH programmes and CMH activities as an integral part of many of the 210 CBM supported CBR programmes worldwide. Awareness raising exercise by community volunteers in Nigeria Picture: CBM In 2009, around 96,000 persons accessed CMH services supported by CBM. CBM has an Advisory Working Group in Community Mental Health, composed of five Mental Health experts who advise and build capacity in CBM Regional Offices and Partners for the implementation of CMH. They also participate in global forums and networks to scale up CMH services worldwide. CBM and mhGAP CBM is proud to be an active participant in mhGAP, having been involved in reviewing the mhGAP materials, and being already actively involved in its implementation. The WHO’s goal of closing the gap between need and services in the area of mental health is shared by CBM. In line with the core value of professionalism, it is important to CBM that the Programme is built on a strong evidence-base. The practical and culturally sensitive nature of the materials lend themselves to use in low-income settings where CBM conducts its work. CBM will support its partners in collaborating with mhGAP as part of the process of scaling up quality services and ensuring that rights of people with psychosocial disabilities are promoted. This collaboration is already active in some countries of Africa and Asia. Joint NGO/Government/local partner programmes are using mhGAP as a platform to build services, and training curriculums are increasingly using mhGAP materials as resources. CBM is strongly committed to working with the WHO to ensure that mental health care is available to those who need it, so that together we can build an inclusive society. CBM www.cbm.org [email protected] Nibelungenstr. 124, 64625 Bensheim, Germany The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is a government agency that promotes prevention and public health. CDC’s Internet web site is located at www.cdc.gov. CDC Vis io n fo r th e 2 1s t Ce ntu ry “Health Protection…Health Equity” CDC Mis s io n Collaborating to create the expertise, information, and tools that people and communities need to protect their health – through health promotion, prevention of disease, injury and disability, and preparedness for new health threats. CDC seeks to accomplish its mission by working with partners throughout the nation and the world to • monitor health, • detect and investigate health problems, • conduct research to enhance prevention, • develop and advocate sound public health policies, • implement prevention strategies, • promote healthy behaviors, • foster safe and healthful environments, • provide leadership and training. Historically, CDC did not consider mental health as part of its mission, but this has changed over the past decade, and now CDC is engaged in a variety of activities related to mental health.1,2 References: 1. Safran MA. Achieving recognition that mental health is part of the mission of CDC. Psychiatric Services. 2009; 60(11): 1532-1534. 2. Safran MA, Mays RA; Huang LN, McCuan R, Pham PK, Fisher SK, McDuffie KY, Trachtenberg A. Mental Health Disparities. American Journal of Public Health. 2009; 99(11): 1962-1966. The Centre Saint Martin : transferring knowledge from specialized centers to general practice health services The Centre Saint Martin which is part of the Community Psychiatry Service of the Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois (CHUV), is a specialized out-patient clinic situated in down-town Lausanne (Switzerland). The center provides special care for severely affected illicit drug users. Mental and general health assessment, counseling for social problems, supportive follow-up and Methadone substitution treatment are amid its commonly used interventions. The staff is composed of psychiatrists, physicians specialized for internal medicine and infectious diseases, psychologists, psychiatric nurses and social workers. Beside the interdisciplinary approach in assessing, treating and orienting every patient, there are many collaborative ventures with other regional institutions that have to deal with problems associated with the use of illicit substances, e.g. the maternity wards, the prisons, the general psychiatric services, etc. Another particular interest of the Centre Saint Martin is to train general practitioners and other mental health professionals enabling them to treat adequately and efficaciously their patients presenting a comorbidity of substance abuse. The main objective of this policy is to create a common culture of knowledge and network collaboration allowing the majority of drug abusing patients to be treated by non-specialized health care professionals, and only the most severely affected patients to be treated in a specialized treatment setting. Ansgar Rougemont-Bücking ; MD, psychiatrist Centre Saint Martin 7, Rue Saint Martin 1003 Lausanne Switzerland CITTADINANZA ONLUS Cittadinanza is a non-profit organization founded in Rimini (Emilia Romagna-Italy) in 1999, with a clear focus on people who suffer from mental illness and living in poor or disadvantaged countries. Cittadinanza is an Italian word: its translation in English is Citizenship. We chose this name to emphasize that we want to remove, from persons with mental illness, the mask of shame and give them back their identity as ‘citizens’. 1 - Best New Life Shelter, Vellore 2 - Community Mental Health Programme, Thiropurur 3 - Day Care Centre, Smedrevska Palanka, Serbia Practically, we develop and support mental health projects for low income populations. Cittadinanza provides care for adults (like in our project in Thiropurur, India) and for children and adolescents with neuropsychiatric disabilities (as in the projects we implemented in Serbia, Vellore-India and Albania), using a Community approach that includes the involvement of all local stakeholders (families, schools, social services, local authorities etc.) and considering the beneficiaries as active partners of our projects. 4 - Day Care Centre, Berat, Albania CITTADINANZA onlus Via Briolini 48/E · 47921 Rimini (RN) · tel/fax 0541 412091 [email protected] www.cittadinanza.org Cittadinanza’s activities have been always based on two strategic points: I) International Exchange of Experience - We are convinced that exchange of experience in this field, in mental health, is very important. The exchange of experience is not oneway - from rich to poor countries. Poor countries suffer of course from a huge lack of resources, both financial and technical. But this lack sometimes can become an opportunity to develop creative solutions, new ideas, new projects and social cooperation. From which also western countries can benefit. II) Cooperation with WHO – From the beginning we had a strong relationship with the World Health Organization, that helped Cittadinanza with its institutional frame and scientific support. Cittadinanza supported and assisted low and middle income countries, which have already accomplished the WHO-AIMS, in the transition from the analysis to the real implementation of the mental health reforms. Cittadinanza, in collaboration with WHO, has organized two international meetings (2008, 2009) in Rimini, where 36 low and medium income countries met to present and discuss their projects aimed to develop and improve their mental health systems. The countries representatives had also the opportunity to meet International and Italian NGOs, International Health and Development Agencies, Italian Mental Health Services with whom create collaboration and partnerships. Continuing with the tradition of successful collaboration with WHO, Cittadinanza will actively support the implementation of mhGAP, helping to organize a mhGAP follow-up Meeting in 2011 in Rimini. The meeting is designed as an opportunity for the countries to meet again and to reflect about opportunities and constraints of the mhGAP implementation. There will be also the possibility to meet other organizations, NGOs, working on mental health in low and middle income countries. Cittadinanza is also going to contribute to the implementation of the mhGAP in Panama. 5 - International Meeting, Rimini 2009 CITTADINANZA onlus Via Briolini 48/E · 47921 Rimini (RN) · tel/fax 0541 412091 [email protected] www.cittadinanza.org Who we are We are a private, non-profit, grantmaking Swiss foundation, created in Geneva in 1964 upon the initiative of the d’Harcourt family. Our mission was to provide assistance to people in situations of material and moral difficulties, by ensuring the fulfilment of their primary and basic life needs. Lessons learnt from the long-standing practice of financial individual aid encouraged the Foundation Board to redefine our approach to giving. Starting in 2007, we enlarged the scope of our philanthropic activities in favour of those experiencing poverty and harsh living conditions. Our vision Our work is inspired by the following principles: • The human being, in all material and spiritual dimensions, is the main agent of any possible path out of poverty or development process • Poverty and primary life needs can’t be defined only as economic issues: the fulfilment of a variety of immaterial needs, including psychosocial needs, is essential to the promotion of the well-being of the person, also of the poorest one • People living in disadvantaged socio-economic conditions and who are most vulnerable have needs; however, they also have internal resources and potentials which come along with shortcomings • Philanthropic projects to be sustainable should have the capacity to recognize those assets and support people most in need to mobilize their personal and social capital. Mission and Strategy Based on these premises, our Foundation invests in programs aimed at enhancing the human capital of most vulnerable groups, at individual and community level. We specifically sustain and intend to promote pilot interventions which integrate a psycho-social approach and address critical sectors of human development - i.e. health services; education; vocational training and social inclusion; access to income-generating activities. In our current programming we didn’t set geographic priorities. At present, we sustain psychosocial support and mental health projects in Switzerland, Lebanon, Benin and Ivory Coast. In the pursuit of our objectives, we seek productive partnerships with other non profit organisations - NGOs, international bodies, private foundations - which have extended expertise in our areas of interest and that share our main goals. Commitment to WHO mental health Gap Action Program We are committing to WHO mhGAP by providing financial support for the implementation of the pilot project in Ethiopia for the next two years. Being an intervention at the system level, developed in key partnership with Government’s Ministry of Health, we estimate this action to have outstanding potential of sustainability and local ownership. Contacts: Maddalena Occhetta - Program Manager [email protected] Fondation d’Harcourt, 12 rue François-Bonivard – 1201 GENEVA Introduction HealthNet TPO for the mhGAP Forum Introduction HealthNet TPO, an international NGO based in the Netherlands, develops evidence-based interventions to reach better health for all. Our mission is to enhance the ability of communities in fragile states to better manage their own health. We build health systems with communities that are excluded from functioning healthcare by combining international public health expertise with local tradition. One of the core foci concerns mental health and psychosocial wellbeing. With the regards to the ultimate goal of the mhGAP program to scale up care for mental, neurological and substance abuse disorders, HealthNet TPO has a track record in the development and evaluation of low-cost and community-integrated psychosocial and mental health programs. For example, HealthNet TPO has developed and pilot-tested a multi-level care package for children, ready to be replicated to overcome the treatment gap for children with mental health problems. Furthermore, HealthNet TPO has worked on the integration of mental health care into primary health care within complex emergency settings. HealthNet TPO stresses the importance of both operational and academic research in order to reach the set goals. We aim to gain in-depth understanding of local resources, capacities, beliefs and needs through action research, and by monitoring the effect and applying academic research, we build the evidence base to disseminate successful models. Accordingly, HealthNet TPO has lead and participated in multidisciplinary academic research projects and has performed research within service-oriented projects and programs. See below for a selection of publications. Selection of HealthNet TPO related publications since 2007 Jordans, M.J.D., Komproe, I.H., Tol, W.A., Susanty, D., Vallipuram, A., Ntamutumba, P., Lasuba, A.C. & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2010). Practice-driven evaluation of a multi-layered psychosocial care package for children in areas of armed conflict. Community Mental Health Journal, DOI 10.1007/s10597-010-9301-9. Tol, W.A., Komproe, I.K., Jordans, M.J.D., Gross, A., Susanty, D., de Jong, J.T.V.M. (In press). Mediators and Moderators of a Psychosocial Intervention for Children Affected by Political Violence. Journal of Clinical and Consulting Psychology. Jordans, M.J.D., Komproe, I.H., Tol, W.A., Kohrt, B., Luitel, N., Macy, R.D.M. & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2010). Evaluation of a classroom-based psychosocial intervention in conflict-affected Nepal: A cluster randomized controlled trial. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 51, 818-826. Jordans, M.J.D., Komproe, I.H., Tol, W.A., & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2009). Screening for psychosocial distress amongst war affected children: Crosscultural construct validity of the CPDS. The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. 50:4: 514-52.3 Tol, W.A., Komproe, I.H., Jordans, M.J. Thapa, S.B., Sharma, B. & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2009). Brief multidisciplinary treatment for torture survivors in Nepal: a naturalistic comparative study. The International Journal of Social Psychiatry, 55,1: 39-56. HealthNet TPO Tolstraat 127, 1074 VJ Amsterdam, The Netherlands Reception +31 (0)20 6200005 +31 (0)20 6201503 www.healthnettpo.org Sonis, J., Gibson, J.L., de Jong, J.T.V.M, Field, N.P., Hean, S., & Komproe, I.H. (2009). Probable Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Disability in Cambodia: Associations with Perceived Justice, Desire for Revenge and Attitudes Toward the Khmer Rouge Trials. JAMA, 302(5):527-536. Laban, C.J., Komproe, I.H., Gernaat, H.P.E., & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2008). The impact of a long asylum procedure on quality of life, disability and physical health in Iraqi asylum seekers in the Netherlands. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 43: 507-515. Kohrt, B.A., Jordans, M.J.D., Tol, W.A., Speckman, R.A., Maharjan, S.M., Worthman,C.M., & Komproe, I.H. (2008). Comparison of Mental Health Between Former Child Soldiers and Children Never Conscripted by Armed Groups in Nepal. JAMA, 300(6):691-702. Tol, W.A., Komproe, I.H., Susanty, D., Jordans, M.J.D., Macy, R.D., & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2008). School-Based Mental Health Intervention for Children Affected by Political Violence in Indonesia: A Cluster Randomized Trial. JAMA ,300(6):655-662. Punamäki, R.L., Salo, J., Komproe, I.H., Qouta, S., El-Masri, M., & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2008). Dispositional and situational coping and mental health among Palestinian political ex-prisoners. .Anxiety, Stress & Coping, 21,4: 337-358. De Wit, M.A.S., Tuinebreijer, W.C., Dekker J., Beekman, A.J.T.F., Gorissen, W.H.M., Schrier, A.C., Penninx, B.W.J.H, Komproe, I.H., & Verhoeff A.P. (2008). Depressieve and anxiety disorders in different ethnic groups: A population based study among native Dutch, and Turkish, Moroccan and Surinamese migrants in Amsterdam. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 43: 905–912. Jordans, M.J.D., Komproe, I.H., Ventevogel, P., Tol, W.A., & de Jong, J.T.V.M.(2008). Development and Validation of the Child Psychosocial Distress Screener in Burundi. American Journal of Orthopsychiatry,78,3: 290-299. Ventevogel, P., de Vries, G.J., Scholte, W.F., Shinwari, N.R., Faiz, H., Nassery, R., & Olff, M. (2007) Properties of the Hopkins Symptom Checklist-25 (HSCL-25) and the Self Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ-20) as screening instruments used in primary care in Afghanistan. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 42: 328–335. Tol, W.A., Komproe, I.H., Thapa, S.B., Jordans, J.D., Sharma, B. & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2007). Disability associated with psychiatric symptoms among torture survivors in rural Nepal. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 195: 463-469. Laban, C.J., Gernaat, H.P.E., Komproe, I.H., & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2007). Prevalence and predictors of health service use among Iraqi asylum seekers in the Netherlands. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 42: 837-844. Araya, M., Chotai, J., Komproe, I.H., & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2007) Gender differences in traumatic life events, coping strategies, perceived social support and socio demographics among post-conflict displaced persons in Ethiopia. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 42: 307-315. Dobricki, M., Komproe, I.H., de Jong, J.T.V.M., & Maercker, A. (2010). Adjustment disorders after severe lifeevents in four post conflict settings. Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology, 45: 39-46. Tol, W.A., Kohrt, B.A., Jordans, M.J.D., Thapa, S.B., Pettigrew, J., Upadhayad, N., & de Jong, J.T.V.M. (2010). Political violence and mental health: A multi-disciplinary review of the literature on Nepal. Social, Science and Medicine, 70, 35-44. HealthNet TPO Tolstraat 127, 1074 VJ Amsterdam, The Netherlands Reception +31 (0)20 6200005 +31 (0)20 6201503 www.healthnettpo.org Institute of Psychiatry, King’s College London Professor Graham Thornicroft, Professor Martin Prince & Professor Martin Knapp Fundamentally transforming the mental health of people in low income countries: dementia and depression population level intervention strategies 1. Translational capacity at King’s Health Partners/King’s College London in Global Mental Health The Health Service and Population Research Department at the Institute of Psychiatry, KCL was awarded the 2009 Queen’s Anniversary Prize for Further and Higher Education, denoting the quality and social impact of our research and teaching. Together with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine we have established the Centre for Global Mental Health. In terms of our global mental health portfolio we have a particular focus upon LAMICs, and at present we have active collaborations with 84 countries worldwide. We also host the Centre for Economics in Mental Health, led by Professor Martin Knapp, to lead and collaborate in cost-effectiveness studies of health related interventions. Our Research Group is a multi-disciplinary team of 120 researchers with backgrounds and skills in anthropology, epidemiology, general practice, health economics, history of medicine, nursing, psychiatry, psychology, people with experience of mental ill health, social work, sociology, statistics and systematic reviews. We are committed to research that understands the implications of mental health problems across the whole spectrum of health, and to identifying better treatments that improve physical and mental wellbeing19. In global terms, very little research about the evidence for effective treatments takes places in low or medium resource settings20. We are contributing to remedying this by making direct contributions to the evidence in studies in such countries, for example in relation to the support needed by carers of people with dementia in Russia21 and India22. Further we are providing support to policy makers in these settings to establish effective health systems for older adults with mental disorders23;24, and to identify barriers to better care25;26. In partnership with WHO and colleagues, including those in Ethiopia, India, South Africa and Uganda, we now wish to launch a major new initiative to: (i) implement the WHO Treatment Guidelines for Dementia and for Depression in these low income countries27, and (2) to assess the patient level outcomes and the organizational level processes consequent upon these implementation programmes. This programme is unique in terms of the strength of its evidence-based foundation and in terms of its ambition to provide affordable and cost-effective care scaled up to the true needs of populations in low income countries. 2.1 Dementia in low and middle income countries Already in 2010, most (58%) of the world’s estimated 35.6 million people with dementia live in low and middle income countries (LAMIC)1. By 2050, numbers will have trebled to 115.4 million, 71% living in LMIC. 2 The 10/66 Dementia Research Group (10/66 DRG - www.alz.co.uk/1066) has been working, since 1998, to inform policy and promote service development in those regions. Evidence collected by our researchers in Latin America, India, China and Nigeria has shown that • culture and education-fair assessment of dementia diagnosis2;3, cognitive function4, disability5 and carer strain6 is feasible • contrary to earlier suggestions, the age-specific prevalence of dementia is similar to that in high income countries (HIC)7;8. Age adjusted, prevalence in most world regions is between 5% and 7% of those aged 60 years and over1 • for older people in LMIC, dementia makes a much larger independent contribution than other chronic diseases to disability9 and dependency10-12 • behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia are as common as in HIC, poorly understood, and independently associated with carer strain13 • carers are typically women, living with the care recipient in extended multigenerational households. Carer strain is as prominent as in HIC, and many carers cutback on work to care or employ paid carers14-16. 2.2 Depression Depression is the leading cause of disease burden in most regions of the world [1]. Somatic presentations are very common, especially tiredness, sleep problems, and aches and pains. Of these, only tiredness is considered a ‘‘core’’ feature in current classifications. Anxiety symptoms often coexist with depressive symptoms, particularly in community or primary care samples. The term ‘‘common mental disorders’’ is used to describe the heterogeneous presentation of anxiety, depressive, and somatic symptoms in these contexts [2]. The World Mental Health Surveys have described the prevalence and help-seeking behaviours of people with depression in a large number of countries [3,4]. The major observations about the epidemiology of depression from these and other studies on depression can be summarized as follows: (1) the constellation of symptoms used to characterize depression can be identified in all cultures; (2) the prevalence rates of depression vary considerably between populations, with rates ranging from about 6% in China to over 20% in the US; (3) the age of onset is most commonly in young adulthood; (4) the disorder often runs a relapsing or chronic course; (5) the disorder is two to three times more common in women, although a few studies, particularly from Africa, have not shown this female excess; (6) social factors, particularly related to economic or social disadvantages such as low education and violence, are major determinants of the risk for depression, and in all countries at least 65% of all such cases receive no effective treatment [5][6,7][8]. Depression has been associated with a range of poor health outcomes, including poor infant growth (in th e case of maternal depression in some countries in South Asia, for example) and worse physical health (for example, cardiovascular, TB or HIV outcomes through poor adherence) [9,10]. 3. Effective interventions at the population level WHO has recently developed a series Treatment Guidelines within its mental health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP), the central focus of the work plan of the Mental Disorders and Substance Abuse Division at the WHO in Geneva 17. The Guidelines Development Group was jointly led by the WHO Departmental Head, Dr Shekhar Saxena and by Professor Graham Thornicroft, and provides recommendations to provide evidence-based care at first and second level facilities by the non-specialist health care providers in low and middle income countries. These recommendations are based upon a series of very thorough systematic reviews of all the relevant literature worldwide and the advice of over 70 experts, largely from low and middle income countries. The Treatment Guidelines provide for the first time ever clear, affordable, evidence-based treatment advice specifically designed for primary care, general health care, and mental health staff in low and middle income settings 18 17. 3 Reference List (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (12) (13) (14) (15) (16) (17) (18) (19) (20) (21) (22) (23) (24) (25) (26) (27) Alzheimer's Disease International. World Alzheimer Report 2009. Prince M.J., Jackson J, editors. 2009. London, Alzheimer's Disease International. Ref Type: Report Prince M, Acosta D, Chiu H, Scazufca M, Varghese M. Dementia diagnosis in developing countries: a cross-cultural validation study. Lancet 2003; 361(9361):909-917. Prince MJ, de Rodriguez JL, Noriega L, Lopez A, Acosta D, Albanese E et al. The 10/66 Dementia Research Group's fully operationalised DSM-IV dementia computerized diagnostic algorithm, compared with the 10/66 dementia algorithm and a clinician diagnosis: a population validation study. BMC Public Health 2008; 8:219. Sosa AL, Albanese E, Prince M, Acosta D, Ferri CP, Guerra M et al. Population normative data for the 10/66 Dementia Research Group cognitive test battery from Latin America, India and China: a cross-sectional survey. BMC Neurol 2009; 9(1):48. Sousa RM, Dewey ME, Acosta D, Jotheeswaran AT, Castro-Costa E, Ferri CP et al. Measuring disability across cultures Ð the psychometric properties of the WHODAS II in older people from seven low- and middle-income countries. The 10/66 Dementia Research Group population-based survey. Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 2010. Prince M. Care arrangements for people with dementia in developing countries. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 2004; 19(2):170-177. Llibre RJ, Valhuerdi A, Sanchez II, Reyna C, Guerra MA, Copeland JR et al. The Prevalence, Correlates and Impact of Dementia in Cuba. A 10/66 Group Population-Based Survey. Neuroepidemiology 2008; 31(4):243-251. Llibre Rodriguez JJ, Ferri CP, Acosta D, Guerra M, Huang Y, Jacob KS et al. Prevalence of dementia in Latin America, India, and China: a population-based cross-sectional survey. Lancet 2008; 372(9637):464-474. Sousa RM, Ferri CP, Acosta D, Albanese E, Guerra M, Huang Y et al. Contribution of chronic diseases to disability in elderly people in countries with low and middle incomes: a 10/66 Dementia Research Group population-based survey. Lancet 2009; 374(9704):1821-1830. Acosta D, Rottbeck R, Rodriguez G, Ferri CP, Prince MJ. The epidemiology of dependency among urban-dwelling older people in the Dominican Republic; a cross-sectional survey. BMC Public Health 2008; 8(1):285. Uwakwe R, Ibeh CC, Modebe AI, Bo E, Ezeama N, Njelita I et al. The Epidemiology of Dependence in Older People in Nigeria: Prevalence, Determinants, Informal Care, and Health Service Utilization. A 10/66 Dementia Research Group Cross-Sectional Survey. J Am Geriatr Soc 2009. Llibre RJ, Valhuerdi A, Sanchez II, Reyna C, Guerra MA, Copeland JR et al. The Prevalence, Correlates and Impact of Dementia in Cuba. A 10/66 Group Population-Based Survey. Neuroepidemiology 2008; 31(4):243-251. Ferri CP, Ames D, Prince M. Behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia in developing countries. Int Psychogeriatr 2004; 16(4):441-459. Choo WY, Low WY, Karina R, Poip PJ, Ebenezer E, Prince MJ. Social support and burden among caregivers of patients with dementia in Malaysia. Asia Pac J Public Health 2003; 15(1):23-29. Dias A, Samuel R, Patel V, Prince M, Parameshwaran R, Krishnamoorthy ES. The impact associated with caring for a person with dementia: a report from the 10/66 Dementia Research Group's Indian network. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 2004; 19(2):182-184. 10/66 Dementia Research Group. Care arrangements for people with dementia in developing countries. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 2004; 19(2):170-177. World Health Organization. Scaling up care for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders. http://www who int/mental_health/mhgap_final_english pdf [ 2008 Available from: URL:http://www.who.int/mental_health/mhgap_final_english.pdf Patel V, Thornicroft G. Packages of care for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders in low- and middleincome countries: PLoS Medicine Series. PLoS Med 2009; 6(10):e1000160. Prince M, Patel V, Saxena S, Maj M, Maselko J, Phillips MR et al. No health without mental health. Lancet 2007; 370(9590):859-877. Prince M, Acosta D, Albanese E, Arizaga R, Ferri CP, Guerra M et al. Ageing and dementia in low and middle income countries-Using research to engage with public and policy makers. Int Rev Psychiatry 2008; 20(4):332-343. Gavrilova SI, Ferri CP, Mikhaylova N, Sokolova O, Banerjee S, Prince M. Helping carers to care--the 10/66 dementia research group's randomized control trial of a caregiver intervention in Russia. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry 2009; 24(4):347-354. Dias A, Dewey ME, D'Souza J, Dhume R, Motghare DD, Shaji KS et al. The effectiveness of a home care program for supporting caregivers of persons with dementia in developing countries: a randomised controlled trial from Goa, India. PLoS One 2008; 3(6):e2333. Prince M, Livingston G, Katona C. Mental health care for the elderly in low-income countries: a health systems approach. World Psychiatry 2007; 6(1):5-13. Patel V, Boardman J, Prince M, Bhugra D. Returning the debt: how rich countries can invest in mental health capacity in developing countries. World Psychiatry 2006; 5(2):67-70. Flisher AJ, Lund C, Funk M, Banda M, Bhana A, Doku V et al. Mental health policy development and implementation in four african countries. J Health Psychol 2007; 12(3):505-516. Knapp M, Funk M, Curran C, Prince M, Grigg M, McDaid D. Economic barriers to better mental health practice and policy. Health Policy Plan 2006; 21(3):157-170. Tansella M, Thornicroft G. Implementation science: understanding the translation of evidence into practice. Br J Psychiatry 2009; 195(4):283-285. International Association for Human Values P.O. Box 2091, CH-1211 Geneva 2; Tel. +41 – 22 – 738 28 88; eMail: [email protected] International Non-Governmental Organization (NGO) in special consultative status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) of the United Nations Member of the UN Global Compact Second meeting of the mhGAP FORUM 7 October 2010 – WHO Geneva The International Association for Human Values (IAHV) IAHV is an international humanitarian and educational Non-Governmental Organization committed to promote resurgence of Human Values in all aspects of life across the globe. The Association partners with governments, educational institutions, other NGOs, corporations, businesses and individual, to develop and promote programmes of personal development to encourage the practice of Human Values in everyday life. IAHV along with its sister organization, Art of Living Foundation, has one of the largest volunteer based networks in the world. It has reached over 20 million people in over 140 countries from all walks of life with a wide range of social, economic, cultural and educational activities. The organization works in special consultative status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) of the United Nations, participating in a variety of committees and activities, related to health and conflict resolution. IAHV is known for its low overheads and strong organizational capacity. This is because of the large inspired volunteer base. IAHV Programmes The key to IAHV`s success is the effective programmes of self development and stress elimination that have been implemented world over regardless of race, culture or religion. These programmes are directed at communities and taught in the primary care setting by certified instructors. The practices are natural, do not carry any side-effects, are easily accepted and integrated into one’s life and compliment any existent medical regimens. They are cost-effective and can be taught to people from all walks of life, including children and vulnerable adults. Scientific research on these practices have shown them to be very effective in relation to mental health issues, both in apparently healthy as well in clinically ill people. These are briefly reviewed below. Contribution of IAHV to the mhGAP 1. Depression Sudarshan Kriya and accompanying practices (SK&P), core programme implemented by IAHV, have been studied in open and randomized trials, both in healthy populations and in populations with psychopathology. This research, published in international peer-reviewed journals, suggest that SK&P reduces depression, anxiety, and stress, and that increases well-being, optimism, and mental focus. For example, SK&P was shown to have a success rate of 68-73%, in treating clinical depression, regardless of severity. Substantial relief was experienced in three weeks, and by one month, patients were considered to be in remission. At three months, the patients remained asymptomatic and stable. These effects may be mediated, at leas in part, by beneficial effects on the endocrine system, the antioxidant system, and the nervous system, based on other research findings. 1 2. Mental health and trauma reliefTORY OF THE KONFLICT It is common knowledge that post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), is a major pathology linked to wars or other man-made or natural disasters. By breaking down the delicate balance of the nervous system, it can completely disable a person from normal functioning in society. IAHV programmes have been offered in the war-torn and disaster areas of the world for many years, including Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan, Kashmir, and Pakistan, natural disasters of Hurricane Katrina, 2004 South Asian tsunami, earthquakes in Orissa, Gujarat, Bam, and the terrorist attacks of 9/11, Madrid, and Mumbai. A recently published study on the South Asian tsunami documented that IAHV programmes significantly help reduce PTSD symptoms. 3. Mental disorders in children and young adults An age group in which mental disorders are most rapidly increasing is our children. This is giving rise to unprecedented use of medication in children as early as few years of age. The result of increased mental problems in youth is easy to see in the form of violence in schools. For this reason, IAHV has a major focus with specially designed programmes for children an young adults with very encouraging results from around the world where mental stability, physical wellbeing, sociability and Human Values are supported. Recent scientific research indicate that this programme helps to eliminate depression, mental disorders, fear, anxiety, and other negative emotions, as well as help curb substance abuse. 4. Suicide One extreme end of mental disorder is suicide which is on the rise in EU countries. This has been an issue directly addressed by IAHV. Among the farmers of the Indian states of Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Maharashtra, more than 1,920 people have committed suicide between January 2001 and August 2006. IAHV spearheaded a special programme in villages of this region and as a result the suicide rate was reduced dramatically. Special programs were carried out for village youth to inspire them to become a part of the solution. In the 308 villages where IAHV has worked so far, there has not been a single reported instance of suicide after implementation of our programmes. Encouraged by the results, the Government of Maharashtra has requested to take up the work in all affected districts. This work can be applied to EU countries as well. Possible collaboration of IAHV with mhGAP participants The issue at hand is so large that collaborative efforts are required for any meaningful success to curb the tremendous mental health problems today. IAHV is ready for such collaborative efforts by making available by making available its programmes and the large volunteer base to effectively prevent mental health problems in all communities. These programmes are costeffective, easy to implement, and sustainable, and as such can be easily combined with other efforts in this regard. Invitation to form partnerships We therefore formally invite international organizations, national or local governments, NGOs, academic institutions and other entities dedicated to achieving the goals of mhGAP to collaborate with IAHV to - develop pilot programmes to assess the efficacy of IAHV modalities for mbGAP goals, - help educate and support people attending existing mental health services, - facilitate further research on natural evidence based modalities and other interventions. For further information please contact Werner Peter Luedemann [email protected], Tel +49 -7804-973.911, Bad Antogast 1, D-77728 Oppenau, Germany 2 IASSID is an international and interdisciplinary non-governmental organization that seeks to promote the development and exchange of knowledge about intellectual disabilities. Founded in 1964, IASSID is the first and only world-wide group of scientists focusing on intellectual disability. The association organises a rolling programme of World and Regional Congresses, specialist meetings and training events. IASSID is in official relations with the World Health Organization. We are committed, as part of our work plan with WHO, to supporting the implementation of the mental health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP). We have undertaken reviews for WHO of the evidence in support of interventions for children with intellectual disability and advised on the content of the mhGAP Intervention Guide in relation to intellectual disability. To further support the implementation of mhGAP, IASSID may be in a position to: Help build local research capacity by supporting the development or evaluation of mhGAP activities (e.g., the development of screening tools to identify children with intellectual disability, the evaluation of the impact of community based rehabilitation [CBR] and family support interventions); co-ordinate and/or provide training to health professionals and other relevant groups to support the implementation of mhGAP interventions. To discuss the possible involvement of IASSID please contact Professor Eric Emerson [email protected] http://www.iassid.org ILAE/IBE/WHO Global Campaign Against Epilepsy “Epilepsy – Out of the Shadows” Secretariat: Stichting Epilepsie Instellingen Nederlands P.O. Box 540, 2130 AM Hoofddorp, The Netherlands Tel.: + 31 23 558 8412, e-mail: [email protected] INTRODUCTION The International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE) The ILAE is the world's preeminent association of physicians and other health professionals working towards a world where no persons' life is limited by Epilepsy. ILAE's mission is to ensure that health professionals, patients and their care providers, governments, and the public world-wide have the educational and research resources that are essential in understanding, diagnosing and treating persons with epilepsy. The International Bureau for Epilepsy (IBE) IBE is an organisation of laypersons and professionals interested in the medical and non-medical aspects of epilepsy. IBE’s goal is to improve the quality of life of all persons with epilepsy and those who care for them. The ILAE/IBE/WHO Global Campaign Against Epilepsy (GCAE) In 1997 the WHO, ILAE and IBE joined forces to raise epilepsy to a level of awareness that had not been achieved ever before. This partnership is the ILAE/IBE/WHO Global Campaign Against Epilepsy with as its mission statement: To improve the acceptability, treatment, services and prevention of epilepsy worldwide. The objectives of the Campaign are: To increase public and professional awareness of epilepsy as a universal and treatable brain disorder To raise epilepsy to a new plane of acceptability in the public domain. To promote public and professional education about epilepsy. To identify the needs of people with epilepsy at national and regional levels. To encourage governments and departments of health, to address the needs of people with epilepsy including awareness, education, diagnosis, treatment, care, services and prevention. i The ultimate goal of the Campaign is to close the treatment gap in epilepsy . To date over 90 countries have developed activities under the Campaign! mhGAP Closing the GAP between what is urgently needed and what is currently available to reduce the burden of mental, neurological, and substance use disorders worldwide Activities under the Campaign are listed below showing to what expected mhGAP results they will contribute to. Meeting GCAE and WHO Leadership 2009: From left to right: Tarun Dua (WHO), Mike Glynn (IBE President), Ala Alwan (ADG WHO), Hanneke M. de Boer (GCAE), Emilio Perucca, Benedetto Saraceno (WHO), Solomon Moshé (ILAE President) International League against Epilepsy International Bureau for Epilepsy 1 World Health Organization ACTIVITIES Regional Conferences and Declarations Regional Conferences: Aims: Raise awareness for epilepsy and the Campaign Develop and adopt Regional Declarations on Epilepsy Regional Declarations Aims: - advocacy tool - instrument for dialogue with governments, healthcare providers, etc. Results: Conferenes took place in all 6 WHO Regions resulting in Regional Declarations in all WHO Regions . Discussions on Latin Ametican Declaration, Santiago de Chile mhGAP Greater investment in care for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders Regional Reports on Epilepsy Reports on the implementation of the GCAE, including data, collected through questionnaires Aims: - advocacy tool - instrument for dialogue with governments, healthcare providers, etc. Contents: - basic knowledge on epilepsy - basic facts epidemiological burden Results: Regional reports have been published in all WHO Regions mhGAP Greater investment in care for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders Assessment of Country Resources on Epilepsy Project as part of WHO Atlas project. Objectives Collect, compile and disseminate information on epilepsy resources Analyse globally + regionally epilepsy resources data Provide baseline for monitoring purposes over time Drive global and regional epilepsy programmes Make the world more aware of deficiency of epilepsy resources Provide impetus on international efforts to enhance resources Aim: Map needs and resources for epilepsy worldwide. Goal: Develop Atlas on Country Resources Result: Information collected from 160 countries covering 97,5% of the world population mhGAP Greater investment in care for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders Demonstration Projects General Objectives • Reduce treatment gap and social and physical burden • Educate health personnel • Dispel stigma • Prevention Ultimate goal: Development of a variety of successful models of epilepsy control that will be integrated into the health care systems of the participating countries and regions and, finally, applied on a global level. Training of healthcare providers within Demonstration Project Brazil 2 Results: Projects completed: Projects ongoing: Porject initiated: Projects under investifgation: Brazil, China, Senegal Zimbabwe Georgia Honduras Cameroon Ghana, India Awareness raising in China as part of the Demonstration Project mhGAP 1. A comprehensive and result-oriented programme for mental health implemented in targeted countries. 2. Increase in the proportion of primary health facilities that have trained health professionals for diagnosis and treatment of mental, neurological, and substance use disorders. 3. Greater coverage with essential interventions for people with mental, neurological, and substance use disorders. Project on stigma Aims: Immediate: to explore nature of stigma in China and Vietnam to DEVELOP possible intervention studies Aims longer term: to initiate stigma reduction interventions Results: - Comprehensive literature reviews focussing on: • Theory and concept of stigma • Empirical studies of epilepsy stigma • Empirical studies of epilepsy and QoL Photo: CREST Principal Investigators • Developed/developing countries from: UK, Nehterlands, China - Ethnographic studies in China and Vietnam to Switzerland, USA, Vietnam explore prevailing beliefs about and attitudes to epilepsy Mh GAP: Enhanced implementation of human rights standards in care facilities for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders. Project on the burden of epilepsy The Global Burden of Disease, Injuries, and Risk Factors Study (GBD) (1990) provides a complete systematic assessment of the data on all diseases and injuries. Within a new GBD project, comprehensive estimates of the burden of epilepsy, its disabling sequelae and its role as a risk factor for other diseases and injuries will be developed. Specific aims: 1. To generate comprehensive estimates of the burden of disease due to idiopathic epilepsy 2. To generate comprehensive estimates of the burden of disease due to epilepsy 3. To generate comprehensive estimates of the mortality and burden of disease due to epilepsy. The Global Campaign Against Epilepsy is contributing to the above process. mhGAP Greater investment in care for mental, neurological, and substance usedisorders. Development of guidelines on the treatment of epilepsy in children and adolescents Guidelines for the treatment of epilepsy in childhood and adolescence are being drawn up in collaboration with the WHO Department of Child and Adolescent Health and Development. Result: An algorithm was developed for diagnosis and treatment of neonatal seizures especially in resource limited settings, aiming at clinicians in developing countries.and published in Epilepsia. mhGAP 1. Increase in the proportion of primary health facilities that have trained health professionals for diagnosis and treatment of mental, neurological, and substance use disorders. 3 2. Greater coverage with essential interventions for people with mental, neurological, and substance use disorders. Project on legislation Collect information on existing legislation and regulations related to epilepsy in the areas of civil rights, education, employment, residential and community services, and provision of appropriate health care, from countries all over the world, in order to review the comprehensiveness and adequacy of these legal measures in promoting and protecting the civil and human rights of people with epilepsy. Result: Mh GAP: Enhanced implementation of human rights standards in care facilities for mental, neurological, and substance use disorders. Global Campaign Taskforce Global Campaign Taskforce The newly elected presidents of ILAE and IBE, Nico Moshé and Mike Glynn respectively, decided that because the success of the Global Campaign is of paramount importance to both IBE and ILAE, they will lead the effort together, with Tarun Dua (representing WHO), thus forming the Campaign Secretariat with Hanneke de Boer the Campaign Coordinator. The Presidents set up a Global Campaign Taskforce to help and achieve this goal. The Taskforce members are representatives of their respective regions, and, most importantly, are people who are willing to “work”. Each member of the Taskforce was asked to appoint a young person from their respective countries to assist them with the work involved. Thus the Taskforce would also create an in-built mechanism for capacity building. Regional Involvement in GCAE activities ILAE Stakeholders EURO IBE Stakeholders EURO ILAE/IBE Stakeholders EMRO Regional Stakeholders meetings were organised in 3 regions this year (AMRO, EMRO and EURO with the participation of the WHO Regional Advisors for Mental Health in order to discuss it seemed to me a good idea to discuss future Campaign activities in the respective Regions. mhGAP Greater coverage with essential interventions for people with metal, neurological and substance abuse disorders. i The difference between the number of people with active epilepsy and the number whose seizures are being appropriately treated in a given population at a given point in time, expressed as a percentage. 4 INTERNATIONAL MEDICAL CORPS: MENTAL HEALTH PROGRAMMING Overview The impact of mental illness on many of the world’s nations, coupled with an alarming shortfall in accessible treatment options, led International Medical Corps to make sustainable, accessible mental health care a cornerstone of our relief and development programming. We have developed our capacity to address both the immediate psychosocial needs of communities struck by disaster and help those with pre-existing mental health disorders. With this emphasis on mental health care in emergency and transition settings, our teams have broken new ground, conducting evidence-based research on depression rates among women in Darfur and designing innovative pilot studies in northern Uganda that combine emergency feeding with enhancing mother-child interaction and improving maternal mood. We have implemented mental health and psychosocial programs in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East, as well as in the United States after Hurricane Katrina and in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake. International Medical Corps relies on a two-fold strategy for the delivery of mental health care: • Maximize the use of existing government health care infrastructure, while building positive relationships with community leaders who can be valuable allies as well as important guides through the local culture; • Strengthen local capacity through training and mentoring professional staff and by promoting the creation of facilities that support care of the mentally ill, all with the ultimate goal of creating self-sustaining care. Aside from being cost-effective, offering services through existing primary health care centers at the community level is an accessible, non-stigmatizing way to offer local populations assistance for mental disorders without overtly singling out those who require subsequent treatment. A key aspect of our strategy is to train local health professionals to recognize and treat the signs of mental disorders as part of mainstream, community level primary health care and to work at the grassroots level to change attitudes towards the mentally ill. This is done in partnership with local governments in order to strengthen national capacity. International Medical Corps and mhGAP International Medical Corps has been involved in the development of the mhGAP program, particularly the essential mental health package curriculum to improve service delivery. We are committed to supporting the use of the curriculum and look forward to its final release. We believe that the curriculum fills a gap in international mental health training; upon launch, we stand ready to begin applying it in our current programs, most specifically using the tool when integrating primary health care and mental health in the Middle East, Haiti, and Chad. As International Medical Corps has expertise in the area of mental health during and after emergencies, we anticipate working with mhGAP to ensure the relevance of this program to humanitarian settings. In emergency and recovery contexts, we work in partnership with governments and their health systems, to whom we will introduce the mhGAP curriculum and provide support for its implementation to ensure the sustainability of this program after the humanitarian crisis has stabilized. International Medical Corps will integrate the objectives of the mhGAP program into our own advocacy efforts surrounding mental health. We aim to draw more attention to the need to address mental health in low-resource settings, particularly in areas experiencing or recovering from humanitarian crises. Focusing attention on our ability to close the gap between the needs and what is currently available for mental health services will highlight to stakeholders, including donors and operational agencies, that the international community has the tools available to improve care for individuals with mental, neurological, and substance abuse disorders. HEALTHY MIGRANTS FOR HEALTHY COMMUNITIES The Migration Health Division (MHD) has the institutional responsibility to oversee, support and coordinate the Organization’s provision of migration health services globally. These services aim to meet the needs of Member States in managing health-related aspects of migration, and to promote evidence-based policies and holistic integrated preventive and curative health programs which are beneficial, accessible, and equitable for vulnerable migrants and mobile populations. Recognizing that health serves as a catalyst for fostering positive migration outcomes, and in response to the 61st World Health Assembly Resolution on the Health of Migrants, MHD seeks to advance understanding and responses that contribute to migrants’ improved status of physical, mental and social well being, and enable them to contribute to the social and economic development of their home communities and host societies. The Mental Health, Psychosocial Response and InterCultural Communication Section (PRC), acting within MHD is responsible for addressing mental health and psychosocial issues of migrants. Its programmatic role is to support other IOM Departments, programs and field missions to better serve migrant, host, displaced, mobile and crisis-affected populations, including former combatants through (a) identifying, analyzing and responding to psychosocial and cultural integration needs of target populations in a variety of educational, sanitary, and community settings, (b) promoting availability and accessibility of psychosocial and mental health services for target populations, (c) promoting access to culturally competent mental health care for target populations, (d) providing ad-hoc designed and integrated mental health, psychosocial, and cultural integrative responses to crisis affected populations and migrants in particularly vulnerable situations, including unaccompanied minors, trafficked persons, stranded migrants, demobilized soldiers and within IOM's Assisted Voluntary Return (AVR) programs, and (e) mainstreaming psychosocial approaches within IOM’s core programs and activities. IOM. 2010. Nairobi (Kenya). Psychosocial Programme. IOM has been active in mental health and psychosocial programs, starting in 1999, in Albania, Cambodia, Colombia, Congo, Georgia, Haiti, Iraq, Italy, Kenya, Kosovo, Jordan, Lebanon, Liberia, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Palestine, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Syria, Turkey, United Kingdom, Ukraine. IOM additionally provides medical assessments, including mental health to up to 300,000 migrants and refugees to be resettled per year. IOM intends to utilize the Mhgap tools and protocols within the capacity building components at the primary health care level of IOM emergency activities, and within the training of IOM medical and psychosocial staff of both emergency operations and migrant medical assessments. IOM- An intergovernmental organization with 460 field locations, IOM is from 1951 committed to the principle that humane and orderly migration benefits migrants and society. It counts 127 Members and 94 observers including 17 States and 77 global and regional IGOs and NGOs. For further information, please contact:Guglielmo Schininà, [email protected] INTERNATIONAL UNION OF PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE UNION INTERNATIONALE DE PSYCHOLOGIE SCIENTIFIQUE FOUNDED / FONDÉE EN 1951 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE COMITÉ EXÉCUTIF President/Président Rainer K. Silbereisen University of Jena Past President/ Président sortant Bruce Overmier University of Minnesota Vice President/VicePrésident Kan Zhang Chinese Academy of Sciences Secretary-General/ Secrétaire général Pierre L.-J. Ritchie Université d’Ottawa Treasurer/Trésorier Michel Sabourin Université de Montréal Deputy Secretary-General/ Secrétaire Générale adjointe Ann Watts Entabeni Hospital MEMBERS Helio Carpintero Un. Complutense de Madrid Peter Frensch Humboldt University Laura Hernandez-Guzman Uni. Nacional Autónoma de México James Georgas University of Athens Maria Larsson Stockholm University Pamela Maras University of Greenwich Janak Pandey University of Allahabad Gonca Soygut Hacettepe University Barbara Tversky Columbia University Executive Officer Nick Hammond IUPsyS Secretariat Mission The mission of the Union is the development, representation and advancement of psychology as a basic and applied science nationally, regionally, and internationally. Basic Facts about the International Union of Psychological Science • IUPsyS serves as the global organization for psychology and psychological organizations. It is a member of two major science organizations, the International Council for Science and the International Social Science Council. • Within the United Nations family, IUPsyS has official relations with the World Health Organization (WHO) and special consultative status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). Through its other affiliations, it also realtes to UNESCO and UNICEF. • IUPsyS is an organization of organizations – its members are national psychology associations or national psychology federations: 73 National Members, representing over 500,000 psychologists, on all continents. • IUPsyS is governed by its Assembly (100+ Delegates from National Members); by its Executive Committee (16 members presently from 13 countries); and its Officers (6 from 5 countries). • IUPsyS was founded officially in 1951, but did exist before that year as the International Psychology Committee ; as such, it sponsored the very first International Congress of Psychology in Paris,in 1889. • IUPsyS today addresses the full breadth of psychology as a profession and a science • The Union’s priorities are set by its Strategic Plan which is established every four years. In addition, to Strategic Planning, there are only two Standing Committees refelcting their central importance to the sustained priorities of IUPsyS: Capacity-building and Communications & Publications. • The 2008-12 SP identifies two areas for dedicated strategic planning activities. The first occurred in 2009 to address the Union’s publications and communications programme. The second will take place in 2011 to address capacity-building. Capacity-building In the current SP, several activities operate under the scope of Capacity-building. A prime example is the Advanced Research Training Seminars (ARTS),a historic flagship activity of the Union and the longest continuously running capacity-building activity. __________________________________________________________________________ Member of the International Social Science Council and of the International Council for Science In consultative status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) of the United Nations In formal associate relations with UNESCO In official relations with the World Health Organization (WHO) INTERNATIONAL UNION OF PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE UNION INTERNATIONALE DE PSYCHOLOGIE SCIENTIFIQUE FOUNDED / FONDÉE EN 1951 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE COMITÉ EXÉCUTIF President/Président Rainer K. Silbereisen University of Jena Past President/ Président sortant Bruce Overmier University of Minnesota Vice President/VicePrésident Kan Zhang Chinese Academy of Sciences Secretary-General/ Secrétaire général Pierre L.-J. Ritchie Université d’Ottawa Treasurer/Trésorier Michel Sabourin Université de Montréal Deputy Secretary-General/ Secrétaire Générale adjointe Ann Watts Entabeni Hospital MEMBERS Helio Carpintero Un. Complutense de Madrid Peter Frensch Humboldt University Laura Hernandez-Guzman Uni. Nacional Autónoma de México James Georgas University of Athens Maria Larsson Stockholm University Pamela Maras University of Greenwich Janak Pandey University of Allahabad Gonca Soygut Hacettepe University Barbara Tversky Columbia University Executive Officer Nick Hammond IUPsyS Secretariat www.iupsys.net The Global Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGap) and The International Union of Psychological Science (IUPsyS) WHO approved Official Relations with IUPsyS in 2002 and periodically renewed based on a series of Work Plans. In its work with WHO and other international organizations, IUPsyS has determined that it is better to focus on a small number of collaborative activities that are mutual priorities of both. The Union concluded that this approach offers greater possibility of making a value-added contribution compared to peripheral contributions to a larger number of activities. The Global Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGap) is emerging as a flagship activity for WHO in the domain of mental health. IUPsyS supports the WHO objective to pursue a significant scaling-up of activities related to this programme. Preliminary discussions have been held on the contribution IUPsyS can make to this endeavour. There is an agreement in principle that this will be a prominent component of the current Work Plan. The specific focus for IUPsyS work on mhGap will be determined partly by the outcome of the Union’s trategic planning for capacitybuilding. One focus under consideration is the development of evidence-based intervention packages for priority conditions. In particular, IUPsyS would collaborate with WHO on the relevant psychological and psychosocial evidence base pertinent to the capacity-building priority in the three targeted mhGap priorities (Health Systems, Human Rights, Health Delivery). Initially, the area of Health Delivery will likely be the IUPsyS primary focus. The initial task will be one or more scoping documents that will identify pertinent knowledge and knowledge transfer potential in primary care as well as adaptations from tertiary and secondary care to primary care. Careful attention will be given to culturally mediated attenuations and adaptations that may be required to enable the effectiveness of primary care. At a later stage, it is anticipated that guidelines will be developed according to the criteria established by WHO for the adoption of guidelines. The Union recognizes the magnitude of the challenge involved in meeting the goals of mhGap. This will require a significant concentration of diverse resources. IUPsyS will strive to use its internal resources to leverage other resources in order to meet the challenge in those areas where its contribution can bring a clear value-added dimension to the mhGap programme. __________________________________________________________________________ Member of the International Social Science Council and of the International Council for Science In consultative status with the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) of the United Nations In formal associate relations with UNESCO In official relations with the World Health Organization (WHO) Association of Aichi Psychiatric Hospitals Japanese Association of Psychiatric Hospitals Dr Toshihiko Funahashi, M.D., Ph.D. -President, Association of Aichi Psychiatric Hospitals -Chair of Training Program Committee, Japanese Association of Psychiatric Hospitals -Chief Occupational Psychiatrist for TOYOTA http://www.jindai.or.jp/ http://www.lucent-stress.com/ http://www.lucent-mental.com/ Dr Susumu Matsuzaki, M.D. -Former President, Association of Aichi Psychiatric Hospitals -Former Board Member, Japanese Association of Psychiatric Hospitals http://www.matsuzaki.or.jp/index.php http://www.ginza.jp/g-med/ http://www.ginza-ms.com/ Association of Aichi Psychiatric Hospitals (ASK) Association of Aichi Psychiatric Hospitals(ASK) was founded in 1950 (The year 2010 marks the 60th year); -to promote the mental health of people in Aichi Prefecture, -to provide appropriate medical and welfare services to people with mental disorders, -to protect human rights, -to help social reintegration. As of September 1st, 2010, the total number of ASK member hospitals is 41, with 11892 psychiatric beds, accounting for 82.0% of all psychiatric hospitals, and 94.1% of the total psychiatric beds in Aichi Prefecture. http://aiseikyo.or.jp/message/index.html (Japanese) ASK holds "Mental Health Event" for advocacy in the week of World Suicide Prevention Day (September 10th) annually. Japanese Association of Psychiatric Hospitals (JAPH) Japanese Association of Psychiatric Hospitals (JAPH) was founded in 1949; -to promote the mental health in Japan, -to provide appropriate medical and welfare services to people with mental disorder, -to protect human rights, -to help social reintegration. As of April 1st, 2009, the total number of JAPH member hospitals is 1,213, with 294,972 psychiatric beds, accounting for 72.8% of all psychiatric hospitals and 84.1% of the total psychiatric beds in Japan. (These figures indicate that mental health care is primarily provided by private hospitals in Japan.) http://www.nisseikyo.or.jp/ (Japanese) Our Contribution to WHO in 2010 -20,000 USD (Association of Aichi Psychiatric Hospitals) for implementation of mhGAP focusing on Suicide Prevention -100,000USD (Japanese Association of Psychiatric Hospitals.) for implementation of mhGAP in countries The reason why we support WHO and Our Expectation Psychiatric care in Japan has been carried out with adequate consideration for the human rights of individual patients, utilizing the limited healthcare resources efficiently. But we intend to further advance psychiatric care in collaboration with WHO and WHO experts. And Mental Disorder is now one of the diseases with the highest disease burden. In this regard, implementing mhGAP is very important. That is the reason why we decided to support WHO. Though implementing in developing countries is very challenging, it is essential that WHO steadily implement mhGAP, tailored to the specific circumstances in individual countries. And we hope WHO would utilize Japanese expertise and successful experience in implementing mhGAP. ASK published this booklet in order to explain major mental disorders with a strong wish to promote early detection and early th treatment, commemorating the 60 Anniversary. During these years, mental health legislation in Japan has been being revised for better protection of people with mental disorder. And there have been significant improvements in the treatment of mental disorders; effective medicines with less side effects, and new therapy and counselling, together with new theories for treatment. But, prejudice still exists and many people are hesitating to go to mental clinic. We hope English version would be helpful in mhGAP activity in countries. JOHNS HOPKINS U N I V E R S I T Y Bloomberg School of Public Health Department of International Health 615 N. Wolfe Street, Room E8132 Baltimore MD 21205-2179 410-502-5364 / FAX 410-614-1419 Health Systems Program The Applied Mental Health Research (AMHR) Group is comprised of faculty members at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health from the Center for Refugee and Disaster Response and the Departments of International Health and Mental Health. AMHR focuses on cross cultural mental health assessments, intervention design, adaptation, and implementation, and program monitoring and impact evaluations. Our primary role is to provide technical assistance to MH service providers including governments and nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) assisting populations in low- and middle-income countries. AMHR has a particular interest in provision of services in disaster affected and otherwise unstable or fragile environments. Since 1999 AMHR has operated by building local interest and capacity in the conduct of science-based mental health needs assessments, using this information to inform program Design, adapting interventions for local Implementation, Monitoring the quality of interventions and Evaluating their impact , using a single structured process (collectively referred to as DIME). Capacity building is done through an apprenticeship model including collaboration and direct training on activities that constitute the DIME process. The process itself consists of a combination of qualitative and quantitative research methods and planning and design tools specifically adapted for field use using minimal resources by nonresearchers. Our intent is to integrate this process into service programs, both to inform those programs while also advancing the field of global mental health. We believe that this is necessary given that most mental health and psychosocial interventions still have little or no data supporting their use in non-Western contexts. Local data on the impact/effectiveness of interventions is particularly lacking for the most disadvantaged populations. The primary faculty of AMHR come from diverse backgrounds including humanitarian response, medicine, public health, psychiatric epidemiology and clinical psychology. Together these give AMHR a unique and well-rounded approach to international mental health. Primary faculty and their contacts are: [email protected] • Laura Murray, Ph.D. • Paul Bolton, MBBS [email protected] [email protected] • Judith Bass, Ph.D. • William Weiss, DrPH. [email protected] • Courtland Robinson, Ph.D. [email protected] • Stephanie Skavenski, MSW, MPH [email protected] • • • • • • • • • • • • AMHR website: http://www.jhsph.edu/refugee/response_service/AMHR/ AMHR’s experience and expertise can contribute now and in the future to mhGAP in multiple ways including: Processes to implement, monitor, and evaluate the success of mhGAP. Ability to feed real-time empirical data into mhGAP efforts. These may include needs and prevalence studies, feasibility studies, controlled trials, implementation and integration of services, training and supervision processes, and validation of MH assessment tools Understanding and ongoing study of the implementation of MH interventions by local organizations and local staff with little to no MH backgrounds. Experience with building sustainable personnel structures with both counselors and local supervisors. Deep knowledge of the evidence-based treatments for the range of MH problems. Comprehension of human resources needed for training, and ongoing fidelity to intervention models. Appreciation of additional supports needed to keep newly trained counselors healthy themselves and protected from vicarious trauma. Specialty in children and adolescents, which among MH populations is the least addressed and has the fewest services. Access to ongoing studies of implementation and integration of MH programs. Productive partnerships with funders and stakeholders interested in MH issues. Long-term relationships and partnerships with organizations and low-resource country governments interested in integrating MH. Selected relevant publications: • • • • • • • Bolton P, Bass J, Murray LK, Lee K, Weiss W, & McDonnell SM. Expanding the Scope of Humanitarian program evaluation. Prehospital & Disaster Medicine. 2007: 22 (5): 390-395. Bolton P, Bass J, Betancourt T, Speelman L, Onyango G, Clougherty KF, Neugebauer R, Murray LK, & Verdeli H. Interventions for Depression Symptoms among Adolescent survivors of war and displacement in Northern Uganda: A randomized controlled trial. JAMA. 2007: 298 (5): 519 – 527. Murray LK, Cohen JA, Mannarino A. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy in Refugee Youth for Symptoms of Trauma. Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America. 2008: 17(3): 585-604. Murray, LK, Haworth A, Semrau K, Aldrovandi GM, Singh M, Sinkala M, Thea DM, & Bolton P. Violence and abuse among HIV-Infected Women and their children in Zambia: A Qualitative Study. Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, August, 2006, 194 (8) Bolton P, Bass J, Neugebauer R, Clougherty K, Verdeli H, Ndogoni L, Wickramaratne P, Weissman M. ‘Results of a Clinical Trial of a Group Intervention for Depression in Rural Uganda.’ JAMA. 2003;289:3117-3124. Bolton P, Tang A. ‘An alternative approach to cross-cultural function assessment.’ Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2002;37(11):537-543. Bolton P. ‘Cross-cultural validity and reliability testing of a standard psychiatric assessment instrument without a gold standard.’ J Nerv Ment Dis. 2001;189(4):238-42. Centre for Disability and Development, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine Co-ordinator: Dr Hannah Kuper The Centre for Disability and Development at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine (LSHTM) was launched in June, 2010. The aim of the Centre is to establish LSHTM as an international centre with expertise and competence in disability research and teaching in the context of public health and development. The Centre includes a range of researchers, with broad skills and knowledge in the field of disability. The remit of the Centre is to address major gaps in our knowledge about disability, including data on prevalence of conditions and impact and effectiveness of interventions. In this way, the Centre can make a contribution towards the achievement of the aims of mhGAP. The Centre for Disability and Development is collaborating with colleagues from the Centre for Global Mental Health at LSHTM and with programme stakeholders, in particular CBM. Web address: www.lshtm.ac.uk DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & HUMAN SERVICES Public Health Service National Institutes of Health National Institute of Mental Health 6001 Executive Boulevard Bethesda, Maryland 20892 September 27, 2010 The National Institute of Mental Health (USA) is one of the 27 institutes and centers that constitute the National Institutes of Health, the nation’s medical research agency and the largest source of funding for medical research in the world. Each Institute has a specific research agenda, and the NIMH is the lead Federal agency for research on mental and behavioral disorders. NIMH envisions a world in which mental illnesses are prevented and cured. The mission of NIMH is to transform the understanding and treatment of mental illnesses through basic and clinical research, paving the way for prevention, recovery, and cure. To fulfill its mission, the Institute: • Conducts research on mental disorders and the underlying basic science of brain and behavior, • Supports research on these topics at research settings throughout the United States and the world, • Collects, analyzes, and disseminates information on the causes, occurrence, and treatment of mental illnesses. • Supports the training of more than 1,000 scientists each year to carry out basic and clinical mental health research. • Communicates with scientists, patients, the news media, and primary care and mental health professionals about mental illnesses, the brain, behavior, and opportunities and research advances in these areas. The Institute’s overarching Strategic Objectives are to 1) promote discovery in the brain and behavioral sciences to fuel research on the causes of mental disorders; 2) chart mental illness trajectories to determine when, where, and how to intervene; 3) develop new and better interventions that incorporate the diverse needs and circumstances of people with mental illness; and 4) strengthen the public health impact of NIMH-supported research. The work of the Institute is carried out by the 7 offices that form the Office of the NIMH Director and the 7 research Divisions that oversee extramural and intramural research activities. The NIMH Office for Research on Disparities and Global Mental Health (ORDGMH) coordinates the Institute’s efforts to reduce mental health disparities both within and outside of the United States. The office’s combined focus on local and global mental health disparities reflects an understanding of how the rapid movements of populations, global economic relationships, and communication technologies have created more permeable borders and new forms of interconnectedness among nations and people. These trends both require and enable researchers to address the variations in incidence, prevalence, and course of mental disorders and access to care across diverse populations using a global perspective. ORDGMH oversees research on global mental health, health disparities, and women’s mental health. The office works in close collaboration with NIMH’s Office of Rural Mental Health Research to address the mental health needs of people living in rural areas. The activities of the WHO Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP) activities align with the mission of NIMH and the activities of ORDGMH. NIMH will support the establishment and maintenance of an mhGAP electronic reference library that will facilitate access to 1) the best clinical and non-clinical information on evidence-based interventions for MNS disorders, 2) best practices relevant to mental health and social care for treatment decision-makers in varied care settings, and 3) a reference library on scaling up successful intervention in low- and middle-income countries. NIMH will also support the development of normative tools to assist implementation of mhGAP in countries. These tools will include an adaptation guide, training materials for different cadres of health planners and nonspecialist care providers, and monitoring and evaluation tools for planning and implementation of the program. Selected Recent Publications of the NIMH and the National Advisory Council for Mental Health: National Institute of Mental Health Strategic Plan http://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/strategic-planning-reports/index.shtml From Discovery to Cure: Accelerating the Development of New and Personalized Interventions for Mental Illnesses http://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/advisory-boards-and groups/namhc/reports/fromdiscoverytocure.pdf s Visit the NIMH Web site at http://www.nimh.nih.gov. Working together to make health for all a reality Promoting Equity, Justice and Rights in Health Care The NGO Forum for Health grew out of the annual meeting of NGOs which had attended the International Conference on Primary Health Care, Alma Ata, in 1978. The Mission of the Geneva-based Forum is to contribute to making health for all a reality by advocating for protection and realization of the right to health; by promoting equity and justice in access to health for all persons at all stages of their life; and by promoting and encouraging healthy life choices. The Forum gives special priority to the right to health of the poor and socially excluded. Objectives • To help to ensure that health be given higher priority, by governments, the UN and NGOs, through raising awareness, encouraging research, and building alliances, • To promote a holistic and integrated approach to public health recognizing the economic, social and spiritual dimensions of mental and physical health, • To promote gender equity in all health policies and programmes, for the benefit of health users and health providers. Activities are based on needs identified by member organizations and include: Advocacy and independent public information through the organization of symposia and panels, for example ‘Achieving the Millennium Development Goals through Primary Health Care: what does it mean in practice?’; ‘How to make inputs into the meetings of the WHO’; • Information-sharing and exchange of experience and good practices; • Mutual support of member organizations in their campaigning and lobbying; • Network-building; • Issue-based working groups, most recently the Mental Health and Psychosocial Working Group (MHPSWG) • Areas of particular concern and focus are health rights; primary health care; child health and survival; mental health; sexual and reproductive health; HIV/AIDS; needs and conditions of health workers; gender issues in health; achieving the MDGs; and relations with the WHO. The Forum has 25 member organisations. President: Alan Leather, Honorary Chair: Ann Lindsay Contact the Forum Coordinator, Gabriella Sozanski, for further information Email: [email protected] Check out our website: www.ngo-forum-health.ch ________________________________________________________________ NGO Forum for Health c/o International Aids Society Ch. de l’Avanchet 33 CH - 1216 Cointrin Tel: +41 76 338 22 29 [email protected] www.ngo-forum-health.ch Working together to make health for all a reality Promoting Equity, Justice and Rights in Health Care Mental health in most countries is at best neglected and at worst the subject of outright stigmatization and discrimination. In an effort to promote the rights of those affected and their access to quality services, the NGO Forum for Health established a Mental Health and Psychosocial Working Group. Chairperson of the Working Group is Ann Lindsay. The primary mission of the Group is the promotion of mental health and psychosocial well-being through: • a higher priority for mental health and significantly improved care services; • greater public consciousness of mental health issues; • reduced stigmatization of mental disorders; • promoting the right of all individuals to receive support for optimal functioning, both physically and mentally. Aims and objectives • To increase understanding and raise awareness of MH and PS support as a priority issue; • To promote the integration of MH and PS support in primary health care; • To ensure linkages between mental health issues and related concerns, including vulnerable populations, human rights, gender equality, poverty, violence, the environment, and peacebuilding. Activities contributing to the implementation of the mental health GAP action plan At the Geneva Health Forum 2010: Towards Global Access to Health, a special session was organized by the Working Group on Regional Challenges for Achieving Global MH • The MHPSWG is currently conducting a study on the activities of international NGOs involved in the MH and PS field in order to facilitate greater cooperation among organizations and to identify gaps in care as well as good practices. The first results of the study, a web-based survey on 44 INGOs form a good basis for further research. The next stage will be the establishment of a network of partners to promote knowledge-sharing and influence change. • The NGO Forum for Health will commemorate World Mental Health Day 2010 by arranging a Symposium at the Geneva international Conference Centre, 8 October (9:00-13:00) addressing the theme ‘Mental Health: the missing dimension to the MDGs – special implications for women and children’. See attached flyer. • Areas for further collaboration Promoting respect for human rights and basic standards in MH and PS care; Encouraging and participating in productive partnerships among NGOs and with international organisations, with a view to reducing the burden of MH; Strengthening the NGO network involved in MH and PS support; Using the network effectively to ensure that information reaches segments of population with MH disorders, in low- and middle-income countries; Building broader, more global cooperation among NGOs and with international organisations. Contact Working Group coordinator Stefan Germann at [email protected] ________________________________________________________________ NGO Forum for Health c/o International Aids Society Ch. de l’Avanchet 33 CH - 1216 Cointrin Tel: +41 76 338 22 29 [email protected] www.ngo-forum-health.ch DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOLOGY STELLENBOSCH UNIVERSITY, STELLENBOSCH, SOUTH AFRICA Selected staff members: Prof Mark Tomlinson, Prof Leslie Swartz, Prof Ashraf Kagee, Prof Tony Naidoo, Prof Lou-Marie Kruger The Department of Psychology has a broad portfolio of research interests but with a particular interest in maternal and child mental health. There are a number of randomized controlled trials investigating the improvement of the early mother-infant relationship, community based trials aimed at preventing mother to child transmission of HIV and reducing neonatal deaths; and others aimed at reducing alcohol use, improving maternal mental health, in the antenatal and postnatal period. The department also has an interest in focussing on the health system challenges of scaling up mental health services for women and children. Research has also focussed on foundational conceptual issues in mental health, with particular emphasis on cultural issues, linguistic diversity, and political factors as they affect mental health in Africa. There has been an interest in the application of mental health knowledge and skills in non-traditional populations and settings, with explorations of the role of community-based approaches in service provision and development projects. Mental health questions have been conceptualised more broadly within studies interrogating the role of socioeconomic factors and social exclusion on mental health, taking into account gender, race and other divisions of power. A particularly salient issue in the African context is the impact of trauma and violence on mental health, and this has been extensively explored both conceptually and empirically. Comorbidity with physical illness (notably, HIV/AIDS) has also been explored, and mental health issues have been placed in the broader rubric of health psychology. We have studied issues of social exclusion and human rights as they affect disabled people in general, and mental health issues are intimately involved with disability issues. In Africa in particular, many conditions, including epilepsy and some sensory impairments are considered under the mental health rubric, and as part of the province of mental health work. Selected recent publications Kagee, A., & Martin, L. (2010). Symptoms of depression and anxiety among a sample of South African patients living with HIV. AIDS Care, 22, 159-165. Lund, C., Breen, A., Flisher, A. J., Kakuma, R., Corrigall, J., Joska, J. A., Swartz, L., & Patel, V. (2010). Poverty and common mental disorders in low and middle income countries: A systematic review. Social Science & Medicine, 71, 517528. Chisholm, D., Flisher, A., Lund, C., Patel, V., Saxena, S., Thornicroft, G., & Tomlinson, M. (2007). Scale up services for mental disorders: A call for action. Lancet, 370, 1241-1252. Cooper, P. J., Tomlinson, M., Swartz, L., Landman, M., Molteno, C., Stein, A., McPherson, K., & Murray, L. (2009). Improving the quality of the mother-infant relationship and infant attachment in a socio-economically deprived community in a South African context: a randomised controlled trial. BMJ, 338:b974. doi:10.1136/bmj.b974. Swartz, L. (2008). Globalisation and mental health: Changing views of culture andsociety. Global Social Policy, 8, 304-308. Tomlinson, M., Rudan, I., Saxena, S., Swartz, L., Tsai, A. C., & Patel, V. (2009). Setting priorities for global mental health research. Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 87(6), 438-446. Tomlinson, M., Solomon, W., Singh, Y., Doherty, T., Chopra, M., Ijumba, P., Tsai, A.C., & Jackson, D. (2009). The use of mobile phones as a data collection tool in South Africa: A report from a household survey. BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making, 9:51. doi:10.1186/1472-6947-9-51 Tomlinson, M., Stein, D.J., Williams, D., Grimsrud, A., & Myer, L. (2009). The Epidemiology of Major Depression in South Africa: Results from the SASH Study. South African Medical Journal, 99, 368-373. Stichting Epilepsie Instellingen Nederland (SEIN) – Epilepsy Institute in the Netherlands INTRODUCTION SEIN - The Epilepsy Institute in the Netherlands strives to improve the quality of life of people with epilepsy globally. It provides multi-disciplinary care to people with complex forms of epilepsy. SEIN provides its services in two clinical facilities in Heemstede and Zwolle (total 160 beds), ten outpatient clinics providing care to about 11,000 patients a year, and also provides long stay sheltered residential accommodation (Heemstede, Cruquius and Zwolle) for over 400 people with epilepsy and complex needs. SEIN’s main catchment area is the northern, eastern and western part of the Netherlands although patients may come from any part of the country. Core functions Diagnostics and treatment (out-patient and in-patient) Long-stay ( central and de-centralised) Research (clinical and basic) Public and professional education Special education SEIN was designated a WHO Collaborating Centre for Research, Training and Treatment in Epilepsy in 2004 ACTIVITIES WITHIN THE FRAMEWORK AS A WHO COLLABORATING CENTRE 1. Providing comprehensive epilepsy care. The Netherlands have a population of 16.000.000 of whom an estimated 120.000 have epilepsy. SEIN has: • 510 beds at three sites – 100 short/medium stay – 410 long stay • 1.300 employees • 1.300 admissions (per annum) • 50 patients for neurosurgery (per annum) Number of people with epilepsy in The Netherlands 17% 17% 66% Seizure-free with medication Refractory epilepsy Good QoL Refractory epilepsy In Need of Care SEIN was founded in 1882 by a wealthy lady, Lady Teding van Berkhout Lady Teding Van Berkhout Founder Purchase Estate Meer en Bosch 1884 Opening Hospital Queen Emma 1934 Location Heemstaete Zwolle 1999 New buildings Cruquishoeve 2010 mhGAP Greater coverage with essential interventions for people with mental and neurological disorders 2. Develop special education and fellowship programmes for young researchers from developing countries. SEIN organises annual 2-week pilot courses in clinical epileptology for young doctors with a general interest in neurology and more specifically in epilepsy from resource-poor countries in order to pass on much needed knowledge and expertise in comprehensive epilepsy care. Furthermore SEIN offers fellowships to young researchers from resource-poor countries mhGAP Increase in the proportion of primary health facilities that have trained health professionals for diagnosis and treatment of mental and neurological disorders 3. Collaborate with other institutions in the area of health care. SEIN has entered into a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) for research on two projects in 1 collaboration with the CAAE (China Association Against Epilepsy) involving two more WHO Collaborating Centres (WHO-CC) in China (Beijing Neurosurgical Institute and Fudan University Hospital in Shanghai). These two projects are funded by the Ministry of Health of China and SEIN. Project partners in other countries include the Division of Public Health, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom (WHO-CC); Division of Neurosciences of UCL, (WHO-CC); and the School Of Public Health, University of Texas, United States of America. Signing MoU: left to right: Jean Willem Barzilay, Shichuo Li mhGAP A comprehensive and result-oriented programme for mental health and neurological disorders implemented in targeted countries 4. In collaboration with the WHO/HQ & the WHO Regional Office for Europe will develop finalise and publish a regional report on epilepsy. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the two international epilepsy organisations, the International Bureau for Epilepsy (IBE) and the International League Against Epilepsy (ILAE), announced the publication of a report into epilepsy in Europe, which concludes that many aspects of epilepsy care are seriously under-resourced. The Fostering epilepsy care in Europe report has been developed as part of the IBE/ILAE/WHO Global Campaign Against Epilepsy (GCAE). The report addresses the current challenges faced in epilepsy care and offers recommendations to tackle them, as well as providing a panoramic view of the present epilepsy situation across the continent. The report was written by many European experts in the field and was edited and published in close collaboration with WHO HQ, the WHO Regional Office for Europe and SEIN. mhGAP Greater investment in care for mental and neurological disorders 5. Assist in carrying out the project on Epilepsy and Legislation A questionnaire was developed for collection of data on existing legislation and regulations related to epilepsy in the areas of civil rights, education, employment, residential and community services, and provision of appropriate health care from countries all over the world, in order to review the comprehensiveness and adequacy of these legal measures in promoting and protecting the civil and human rights of people with epilepsy. Participants Legislation workshop Marseille A document “Basic principles for Epilepsy Legislation and Guidance Instrument for developing, adopting and implementing epilepsy legislation” was developed for publication. mhGAP Enhanced implementation of human rights standards (in care facilities) for mental and neurological disorders 6. Organise a regional conference on epilepsy as a public health issue. Such a conference is under preparation involving all principal investigators of the demonstration projects, ILAE/IBE and WHO leadership, SEIN representatives and other collaborators in the GCAE mhGAP Greater investment in care for mental and neurological disorders 7. Assist in the carrying out a demonstration project in epilepsy in the Eastern European Region. The Demonstration Project, aiming at reducing the treatment gap will be completed by the end of 2010. At the request of WHO SEIN has taken the lead in this project. The continuation of the collaboration with the present partners in Georgia is a logical next step in order to ascertain sustainability of improving epilepsy care in Georgia. mhGAP Increase in the proportion of primary health facilities that have trained professionals for diagnosis and treatment of mental and neurological disorders 2 Department of Psychiatry The Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (UAM) is a public university offering graduate and postgraduate degrees in a wide variety of programmes at its 63 departments and eight research institutes. Although founded barely four decades ago, it has already achieved an outstanding international reputation for its high-quality teaching and investigation. It recognized as one of the best Spanish universities in both national and international rankings. The UAM has a well-established tradition in the area of cooperation with other universities from the rest of Spain and abroad, being one of the Spanish universities with the highest rates of student mobility in international programmes, including 170 bilateral agreements with universities outside of Europe. International teaching and research activities at the Department of Psychiatry Faculty members of the UAM Department of Psychiatry are currently participating in mental health training programmes for health care providers in several developing countries. For the last 10 years the Department has had an international PhD Programme the University of Carabobo in Venezuela. The Department also has an established collaboration for postgraduate training in mental health with the University of Health Sciences in Phnom Penh, and for a children’s crisis support programme in Battambang, Cambodia. Moreover, through the Banco Santander Endowed Chair, the Department has an ongoing collaboration with UNAM University in Mexico City for research and training in mental health The UAM Department of Psychiatry is also involved in international projects funded by the European Commission, including: - Psycho-social Aspects Relevant to Brain Disorders in Europe: PARADISE (http://paradiseproject.eu); - Collaborative Research on Ageing in Europe: COURAGE in Europe (www.courageineurope.eu); - Multidisciplinary Research Network on Health and Disability in Europe: MURINET (www.murinet.eu). The Department plays a leading role in the International Mental Health Research Network, and launched the Madrid Declaration, aimed at promoting a coordinated European-wide effort in mental health research (http://www.cibersam.es/MadridDeclaration.), which was subscribed by representatives from seven nationally-funded mental health research networks, as well as leaders of ongoing EU-funded mental health projects. Collaboration with the World Health Organization The UAM Department of Psychiatry has a long history of cooperation with the WHO’s Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, and has been involved in a number of WHO initiatives, including the Choosing Interventions that are Cost-Effective (WHO-CHOICE) programme. This project has generated cost-effectiveness data in 14 epidemiological sub-regions of the world for key health interventions able to reduce leading contributors to disease burden. In addition, the Head of the Department, Prof. J.L. Ayuso-Mateos is currently a member of the Essential package for mental, neurological and substance use disorders Guideline Development Group and of the International Advisory Group for the revision of the ICD 10. The UAM Department of Psychiatry is one of the four institutions participating in the project Scaling up services for mental, neurological and substance use (MNS) disorders within WHO mental health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP), funded recently by the EuropeAid program of the European Comission. In this project, led by the WHO’s Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, the UAM collaborates with the Health Ministries of Ethiopia and Nigeria. The main objectives of this project are to expand service coverage for mental and neurological disorders in pilot areas of these two countries under the WHO mhGAP programme. It also includes capacitybuilding for health planners/programme managers and health care providers to develop and implement care and services for people with MNS disorders. Relevant Publications: • Arana A, Wentworth C, Ayuso-Mateos JL, Arellano F.Suicide-Related Events in Patients Treated with Antiepileptic Drugs. New England Journal of Medicine 2010; 363:542-551 • Nuevo R, Chatterji S, Verdes E, Naidoo N, Arango C, Ayuso-Mateos JL. The Continuum of Psychotic Symptoms in the General Population: A Cross-national Study. Schizophr Bull. 2010 Sep 13. [Epub ahead of print] • Ayuso-Mateos JL, Nuevo R, Verdes E, Naidoo N, Chatterji S. From depressive symptoms to depressive disorders: the relevance of thresholds. British Journal of Psychiatry 2010 May;196(5):365-71. • Chisholm D, Gureje O, Saldivia S, Villalon CM, Wickremasinghe R, Mendis N, Ayuso-Mateos JL, Saxena S . Schizophrenia treatment in the developing world: an interregional and multinational cost-effectiveness analysis. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 2008; 86, 542-551 Address: Departamento de Psiquiatría Facultad de Medicina Universidad Autónoma de Madrid C/ Arzobispo Morcillo 4 28029 Madrid, Spain www.uam.es www.trastornosafectivos.com www.pmhp.za.org Introduction Maternal mental illnesses, particularly depression and anxiety, are endemic in low-income 1 and informal settings globally . The prevalence of antenatal depression is nearly three times higher than in developed countries2, with levels as high as 41% in rural areas3. During the perinatal period, mental illness renders women particularly vulnerable: decreasing access to 4 5 antenatal care , placing women at increased risk of HIV infection , associated with infant mortality, and a significant risk factor for loss of developmental potential in children6. Globally, there is a call for mental health care to be integrated into routine primary care7. However, such services are almost non-existent in the maternal care environment in developing countries. Although there is an enormous treatment gap for primary-level mental illness, high antenatal care uptake in South Africa (92%)8, provides a unique opportunity for the development of integrated services. The Perinatal Mental Health Project (PMHP) operates an integrated mental health service in the public sector: at a maternity hospital as well as at community-based, midwife-run obstetric units in low resource settings. The PMHP is located within the Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health at the University of Cape Town. As a partner to the Mental Health and Poverty a b Project (MHaPP), and subsequently to the Centre for Public Mental Health (CPMH), the PMHP collaborates with international partners in global mental health. Activities The PMHP operates in four main areas, in line with the mhGAP programme core strategies9: a) The integrated PMHP service delivery model provides free screening, counselling and psychiatric services at the same site at which women receive maternal care. b) The PMHP provides interactive training on maternal mental health (MMH) to a range of health workers and service providers through novel, accessible, evidence- based methods and materials. This approach recognises the challenges of an overburdened health care cadre in low-resource settings, offering an adaptable programme that enhances skills and empowers health care workers at all levels. The PMHP training enables a task-shifting approach, which facilitates the integration of mental health services using existing staff and resources. c) Collaborating with UCT, WHO and international research consortia, the PMHP is positioned in the academic field, contributing iterative, practical, evidence-based knowledge. The PMHP is in the final preparation phase of developing and validating a screening tool for maternal mental disorders in low-resource settings. The SA DoH has suggested that this screening tool may be used nationally as the initial step towards scaling-up MMH services. d) The PMHP has advocated for increased awareness of maternal mental disorders, bringing MMH forward on the public health agenda. The Project has achieved this through targeted campaigns involving the media, use of the Project’s own short film, website and engagement with government. The Project contributed components on MMH, gender and HIV to the draft of the new National Mental Health Policy for South Africa. a http://workhorse.pry.uct.ac.za:8080/MHAPP b The CPMH is a joint initiative by the Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health UCT and the Department of Psychology at Stellenbosch. It is an independent, inter-disciplinary academic research and teaching centre for public mental health promotion and service development in Africa. Contact Dr Simone Honikman Tel +27 (0)21 689 8390 Email [email protected] Address: Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape Town; Building B, 46 Sawkins Road; Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa, 7700 Contribution that PMHP is making or can make to mhGAP: The PMHP has made specific contributions to the WHO and World Federation for Mental Health, Mental Health Promotion Case Studies publication in 200410. The PMHP participated in a WHO meeting on MMH and Child Health and Development in Low and Middle Income Countries, in 2008, and contributed to the subsequent report11. Focusing on the needs of vulnerable women by developing an integrated service, the PMHP model makes use of existing resources to develop a sustainable, evidence-based intervention in resource-constrained settings. For example, the PMHP has facilitated the development and integration of MMH into health services provided by village health workers at a low-resource, rural NGO in South Africa. The PMHP collaborated with the NGO to train its cadre of health workers in MMH and basic counselling skills. The PMHP facilitated a strategic planning session to develop a pragmatic, sustainable intervention suitable for the setting; and to help the NGO establish partnerships and links to utilise existing resources in the community. The PMHP continues to provide technical support in an advisory capacity. Collaboration with PMHP on the implementation of mhGAP: This experience makes the PMHP a strategically placed partner for implementation of mhGAP. The PMHP would envision assisting in the following (through collaboration with other experts in the field): 1. Technical advice 4. Systems development for monitoring and evaluation 2. Program design (for services and training) 5. Training (development of training materials and conducting training for trainers and for health workers) 3. Service protocol development 6. Document development (training manuals, service development manuals, best-practice guidelines) References 1 Saxena, S., Thornicroft, G., Knapp, M., & Whiteford, H. (2007). Resources for mental health: scarcity, inequity, and inefficiency. The Lancet, 370, 878-889. 2 Tomlinson, M., Grimsrud, A. T., Stein, D. J., Williams, D. R. & Myer, L. (2009). The epidemiology of major depression in South Africa: Results from the South African Stress and Health study. South African Medical Journal, 99, 368-373 3 Rochat, T., Richter, L.M., Doll, H.A., Buthelezi, N.P., Tomkins, A., & Stein, A. (2006). Depression Among Pregnant Rural South African Women Undergoing HIV Testing. Journal of the American Medical Association, 295(12), 1376-1378. 4 World Health Organisation (2009). Mental health aspects of women’s reproductive health: A global review of the literature. WHO Press. 5 Cook, J.A., Grey, D., Burke, J., Cohen, M. H., Gurtman, A. C., Richardson, J. L., et al. (2004). Depressive symptoms and AIDS-related mortality among a multisite cohort of HIV positive women. American Journal of Public Health, 94, 1133–1140. 6 Engle, W., Tomashek, K., William, C.,(2007). “Late-Preterm” Infants: A Population at Risk. Pediatrics, 120(6), 1390-1401. 7 The Lancet Global Mental Health Group. (2007). Scale up services for mental disorders: a call for action. The Lancet, 1 – 12. 8 UNAIDS (2009). AIDS Epidemic Update, November 2009: UNAIDS & WHO. 9 mhGAP: Mental Health Gap Action Programme : scaling up care for mental, neurological and substance use disorders (2008). WHO Press 10Saxena, S. & Garrison, P. (eds) (2004). Mental Health Promotion: Case studies from countries. WHO Press. 11 Maternal mental health and child health and development in low and middle income countries Report of the meeting held in Geneva, Switzerland 30 January – 1 February 2008; WHO Contact Dr Simone Honikman Tel +27 (0)21 689 8390 Email [email protected] Address: Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health, University of Cape Town; Building B, 46 Sawkins Road; Rondebosch, Cape Town, South Africa, 7700 UNHCR and Mental health programmes The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) was established in 1950 by the United Nations General Assembly. The agency is mandated to lead and coordinate international action to protect refugees and resolve refugee problems worldwide. Its primary purpose is to safeguard the rights and well-being of refugees. It strives to ensure that everyone can exercise the right to seek asylum and find safe refuge in another State, with the option to return home voluntarily, integrate locally or to resettle in a third country. It also has a mandate to help stateless people and supports internally displaced persons. Many protection risks have their roots in trauma, accumulated stress due to unattended psychosocial and mental health problems, family seperaton, threats and persuction, as well as inadequate access to shelter, food, basic health services. UNHCR is working in emergency and long term conflict affected displacement situations to address mental health in their ongoing public health programmes. In the immediate emergency UNHCR advocates to it’s partners and governments, to ensure a coordinated response in line with the Interagency Standing Committee Guidelines on Mental health and Psychosocial support. Once the situation stabilizes UNHCR strives to establish strong mental health and psychosocial support programmes embedded into the public health programmes. Mental Health and Psychosocial support programmes in refugee settings Mental health services are offered in all refugee operations, but vary in quality and extend of the services provided. Programmes are provided in line with the national programmes, protocols and services. However, mental health and psychosocial support programmes address the needs of conflict-affected populations. In an effort to improve the quality of programmes and the interlinkages between the health and social/community sector, UNHCR and Healtnet TPO are implementing a programme on improved psychosocial and mental wellbeing of refugees residing in Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi through developing, installing and evaluating a model of comprehensive services for MHPSS within existing UNHCR-supported care structures for refugees. Experiences are used to improve programming in other refugee operations. Monitoring Mental Illness in refugee camps Within the monthly Health Information System (HIS) (data collected at health facility level), UNHCR has included 7 categories of mental illness, that are dissagregated by the following age groups (0-4; 5-17, 18-60; 60+). The 7 categories have all been difined in case definitions groups. Other interventions A rapid assessment tool for alcohol and other substance use has been developed and used to identify patterns of substance use and related harms in conflict affected populations. Based on assessments in 9 countries, interventions that could be implemented to minimize harms related to substance use in conflict affected populations have been established. UNICEF Statement for mhGAP Forum The goal of UNICEF’s work with and for children and adolescents is to mobilize political will and resources to protect, respect and fufill the rights of all children – with special attention to the most marginalised and vulnerable. Guided by the Convention on the Rights of the Child and related human rights instruments, UNICEF invests in the well-being of children and adolescents within the context of the five focus areas of the organization’s Medium Term Strategic Plan (MTSP): Child Survival, Basic Education and Gender Equality, HIV/AIDS, Child Protection and Policy Advocacy for Children’s Rights. Within this context, special emphasis is afforded to working strategically with and for adolescents to ensure that they have the abilities, skills, values and experience to negotiate multiple life domains, become economically independent, protect themselves from exploitation and abuse, avoid risky behaviour and participate positively in their communities and families. Although mental health has not been formally integrated into its work for children and adolescents, UNICEF is interested in collaborating with partners in government, civil society and across the UN to explore how increased attention to mental health, substance abuse, violence, trafficking, physical and sexual abuse, living in conflict zones and related areas can strengthen adolescent well being and rights. For this reason, participation in the Mental Health GAP process is of special interest to UNICEF. UNICEF has carried out and is planning several initiatives that could contribute to good practice and lessons learned in the area of mental health, substance abuse and related areas. These include: • UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS has implemented HIV prevention programming for most-at-risk and especially vulnerable adolescents throughout the CEE/CIS region. This work has included establishment of an evidence base around substance abuse among adolescents and young people and implementation of interventions designed to reduce risk and harm associated with drug use. • UNICEF has agreed with WHO to partner in carrying out a Desk Study of policies, programmes and interventions in adolescent mental health and well being across various UN agencies, development partners and international NGOs • The upcoming edition of UNICEF’s “State of the World’s Children,” (SOWC) on the topic of Adolescents, to be launched in January 2011, will include a special panel addressing mental health issues among adolescents • During the launch of SOWC, UNICEF and WHO will collaborate to hold an Expert Roundtable discussion on mental health for adolescents and young people. The roundtable will be jointly hosted by UNICEF and WHO and will include experts from Johns Hopkins University, George Washington University and other eminent institutions and organizations concerned with adolescent mental health UNICEF believes that adolescent mental health is integral to all programming aimed at improving the well-being of adolescents and is pleased to be a part of the mhGAP. The UNODC-WHO Joint Programme on Drug Dependence Treatment and Care is a milestone in the development of a comprehensive, integrated health-based approach to drug policy that can reduce demand for illicit substances, relieve suffering and decrease drug-related harm to individuals, families, communities and societies. The initiative sends a strong message to policymakers regarding the need to development services that address drug use disorders in a pragmatic, science-based and humanitarian way, replacing stigma and discrimination with knowledge, care, recovery opportunities and re-integration. The UNODC-WHO joint programme on drug dependence treatment and care was launched in February 2009, at the 52th CND (Commission on Narcotic Drugs) in Vienna as a result of UNODC’s emphasis on starting a large-scale urgent process to develop effective interventions to treat substance use disorders, particularly addiction, and reducing the health and social consequences of these conditions by means of supporting evidence-based drug dependence treatment and care worldwide with particular interest in middle and low income countries. The aim of the initiative is to advocate for effective and humane treatment for all people with drug use disorder, while implementing concrete coordinated, public health-oriented approaches from the health and law enforcement sector to address the problem. The Joint Programme is the first global joint effort building on the expertise, experience and activities of the two participating UN Organizations with regard to evidence-based services for drug dependence treatment and care. It offers Ministries of Health, Interiors, Justice and other relevant ministries in low- and middle-income countries specific recommendations to establish and strengthen policies and plans to scale up drug dependence treatment and care services. The Joint Programme is a valuable tool for policy/decision-makers and civil society. The Joint Programme aims to stimulate action at all levels by strengthening commitment to support development and implementation of evidence-based services for drug dependence treatment and care globally; and providing technical support to catalyse change in low- and middle-income countries for improving the coverage and quality of drug dependence treatment and care services, including by developing and disseminating the required norms, standards, guidelines and other technical tools. The Joint Programme is currently active in two countries in the Balkans, Albania and Serbia, and in Haiti. More information about the Joint Programme can http://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/drug-prevention-and-treatment/index.html Vienna International Centre │ PO Box 500 │ 1400 Vienna │ Austria Tel.: (+43-1) 26060-0 │ Fax: (+43-1) 26060-5866 be found at: WHO Collaborating Center for Psychosocial Rehabilitation and Community Mental Health of Yongin Mental Hospital is the leading, global mental health organization in psychosocial rehabilitation care, community mental health services, and psychiatric rehabilitation research. Our vision is to increase capabilities of mentally ill people as community members by providing services and recovery-oriented approaches to them. Since the Yongin WHO CC was designated in 2003, all staffs have moved toward this goal by developing psychosocial programs from the institution to the community. Mission The mission of the Yongin WHO CC is to provide extensive psychosocial rehabilitation programs through the advancement of research; to develop national mental health policy through affiliated community mental health centers; to provide the high quality of education to mental health professionals, mentally ill people, and their families; to conduct and disseminate evidence- based best practice and information; and increase awareness of mental health and fundamental human right issues. Program and Projects of the WHO CC PEPS (Patient Empowerment Program for Schizophrenia) Family Link Korea Project SEBoD (Socio-Economic Burden of Depression) Korea Alliance Program for psychoeducation of mentally ill Yongin WHO Mental Health Fellowship in Asia International Mental Health Symposium and Workshops Program for Development of Professional Academic Skills of Young Psychiatrists 10th International Mental Health 2009 Fellows from India and Japan Conference, Sept. 3-4, 2010 Yongin WHO CC can support in the implementation of mhGAP in the following ways By reinforcing existing partnership with WHO, Yongin WHO CC would involve in the implementation of mhGAP actively. By strengthening basic education and training for mental health professionals from middle and low income countries in Asia, Yongin WHO CC will help them to upgrade their skills and knowledge, and contribute to the implementation of mhGAP in their own countries. By developing and promoting programs for mental health care, Yongin WHO CC will try its best to promote of mental health by prevention of depression and others. By joining the WHO’s advocacy efforts of mental health, Yongin WHO CC will continue to increase awareness of mental health issues among policy makers and general population. For more information about Yongin WHO CC, please visit the following websites: http://www.yonginwhocc.or.kr/ or http://www.yonginwhocc.or.kr/english.php 4 Sangha-Dong, Giheung-Gu, Yongin-City, Kyeonggi-Province, Korea (449-769) Tel: +82-31-288-0233 Fax: +82-31-288-0363 Email: [email protected] WORLD ASSOCIATION FOR PSYCHOSOCIAL REHABILITATION ASSOCIATION MONDIALE POUR LA RÉADAPTATION PSYCHOSOCIALE ASOCIACIÓN MUNDIAL PARA LA REHABILITACIÓN PSICOSOCIAL Liaison Office with World Health Organization Mario Negri Institute Via La Masa 19 20156 Milano Italy Tel ++39-02-39014431 Fax ++39-02-39014300 E-mail [email protected] Milan, 27 September 2010 The World Association for Psychosocial Rehabilitation (WAPR) since its foundation in 1986 pursued the collaboration with World Health Organization as a key aspect of its activities, as witnessed by the 1996 a joint WAPR/WHO consensus statement, which defined psychosocial rehabilitation as a strategy that facilitates the opportunity for individuals impaired or disabled by a mental disorder to reach their optimal level of functioning in the community, through the improvement of individuals’ competencies and the introduction of environmental changes. The steady growth of WAPR over the last years mirrors the ever increasing importance of the prevention and reduction of social disability as a framework for the community care of people with severe mental disorders. Membership of the WAPR is open not only to mental health professionals, but also to researchers of various disciplines, administrators, policymakers, consumers and their relatives, advocacy groups. Therefore, the WAPR is a scientific society, a multi-disciplinary professional organization and an advocacy group, all rolled into one. This is because its primary aim is to provide all stakeholders with a forum for the ongoing discussion of the relevant issues concerning long-term mental health care, by sharing experiences in the areas of research, practices and policies. Psychosocial rehabilitation now is coming of age and the ambition of WAPR is to bring together the rigor of the scientific inquiry, the humanistic view, the attention to social and political context, the everyday experience of care, the empowerment of persons struggling for health. WAPR is represented in many countries of all continents, therefore it speaks to a worldwide audience, aiming to overcome the limitations of current scientific exchanges, too often restricted to professionals from a small group of highincome western countries. Over the last years the collaboration of WAPR with WHO programs has been especially relevant in the following areas: 1. Support to consumers organization and involvement of consumers in community mental health programs and services; 2. Definition of specific aspects related to mental health within the framework of community based rehabilitation; 3. Promotion of community mental health principles, priorities and practices in low/middle income countries, to shift service delivery from long term institutions to effective community care. 4. Training of health professionals in principles and practices of psychosocial rehabilitation of severe mental disorders. WAPR is proud to continue its collaboration with WHO and fully support the goals of mhGAP program. WAPR officers and organizational network will be available for all initiatives in the areas mentioned above. MEMBER ASSOCIATIONS Albania Algeria Argentina Armenia Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bahrain Bangladesh Belgium Bolivia Brazil Bulgaria Burkina Faso Cameroon Canada Chile China Colombia Congo, Dem. Rep. of Costa Rica Croatia Cuba Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Estonia Ethiopia Finland France Georgia Germany Greece Guatemala Guinea Honduras Hong Kong Hungary Iceland India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel Italy Japan Jordan Kazakhstan Kenya Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Latvia Lebanon Libya Lithuania Luxembourg Macedonia Malaysia Mexico Mongolia Morocco Myanmar Netherlands New Zealand Nicaragua Nigeria Norway Pakistan Panama Paraguay Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Romania Russia Saudi Arabia Senegal Serbia & Montenegro Singapore Slovakia Slovenia South Africa South Korea Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Sweden Switzerland Syria Taiwan Thailand Tunisia Turkey Uganda United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States of America Uruguay Venezuela Vietnam Zambia WORLD FEDERATION OF NEUROLOGY A non-governmental organisation in association with the World Health Organization President Dr Vladimir Hachinski First Vice President Dr Werner Hacke Secretary-Treasurer General Dr Raad Shakir Executive Board Dr Ryuji Kaji Dr Gustavo Roman Dr Wolfgang Grisold Registered Office Hill House Heron Square Richmond-upon-Thames TW9 1EP UK Executive Director Mr Keith Newton Tel: +44 (0) 208 439 9556/9557 Fax: +44 (0) 208 439 9499 e-mail: [email protected] Website: www.wfneurology.org World Federation of Neurology (WFN) is a non-governmental organization in relation with WHO. It is a world-wide federation of national neurological societies comprising 110 member societies representing the majority of the world’s neurologists (approximately 30,000). Since 2007, the Chinese Society of Neurology, the Hong Kong Society of Neurology, and the Taiwan Society of Neurology are WFN members. The mission of the World Federation of Neurology is to improve human health worldwide by promoting prevention and the care of persons with disorders of the entire nervous system by: fostering the best standards of neurological practice; educating, in collaboration with neuroscience and other international public and private organizations; and facilitating research through its Research Groups and other means. Dementia, epilepsy and stroke are central areas in the field of activity of the WFN. WFN and the Mental health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP) World Federation of Neurology is especially involved in mhGAP matters through its Africa Initiative. The WFN Africa Initiative started because WHO had pointed out the lack of specialists in sub-Saharan Africa, which is dramatically worse than in any other continent. We need to train more neurologists, and concluded in London 2006 that the training should be on the African continent to ensure that the candidates return to their home countries. The following training programs are established: In established centres in Africa (*French-speaking, +English-speaking trainees): Western Africa: Dakar*, Abidjan* and Nigeria+, Northern Africa: Rabat*, Cairo+, Southern Africa: South Africa+ (Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban). Horn of Africa: Ethiopia (Addis Ababa). For the above established centres, the likely return per unit effort or resources is expected to be high especially in the West African centres. Several sub-Saharan African neurologists have already been trained in these countries and have returned to their native countries to practice. WFN is partnering with the International Brain Research Organization (IBRO) and the European Federation of Neurological Societies (EFNS) in developing neurology in Africa. IBRO has organized 20 Neuroscience Schools in Africa, which have provided opportunities for young African neuroscientists (basic and clinical) to receive high quality training. EFNS, IBRO and WFN are providing neurology training through Regional Teaching Courses (RTC), which have been held in Dakar (2008), Addis Ababa (2009) and Abidjan (2010). The next RTC is planned for July 2011in Yaounde (Cameroon) where the Government and the University are planning to start a Neurology Residency programme very soon. World Federation of Neurology is registered in England as a company limited by guarantee, No. 3502244 Registered Charity No. 1068673 WFN is engaged in initiating Teaching Courses for neurological nurses. The potential of Khartoum is interesting as the Faculty there has started a series of short training courses for nurses and other health workers. One such course was performed by Osheik Seidi in Sudan in 2009, and another is planned for 2011. The goal is to improve the neurologist/population ratio throughout the continent by 25% in 4 years (general neurology training). WFN works to facilitate inter-university exchange programs for general and specialized neurology training, facilitate inservice training of the African neurologists, develop leadership among African neurology trainers and trainees, harmonize neurology training programs and to assist African countries/sub-regions in the creation of new neurology training centres. How further collaboration between WHO and WFN can assist in the implementation of mhGAP The mhGAP (Mental Health Gap Action Programme) focuses on chronic disorders within mental health, like schizophrenia, depression, epilepsy and dementia. WHO hopes for community-based models. Much of the work has to be performed by nurses. The WHO programme says that “it is effective and feasible to treat people with epilepsy using inexpensive antiepileptic medicines at primary care level”. We agree fully, provided that the training in epilepsy is adequate and updated. Epilepsy affects around 50 million people worldwide, and 80 % of patients with epilepsy in Africa receive no treatment. One prerequisite for this part of the mhGAP is the training of health personnel. Each African University Hospital must therefore have at least one neurologist, who should be responsible for educating nurses and primary health care workers in neurology (epilepsy, stroke). WFN looks forward to an improvement and expansion in updated training of health personnel in epilepsy. References: 1. WHO/WFN. Atlas. Country Resources for Neurological Disorders 2004. WHO, Geneva 2004. 2. WHO/WFN: Neurological Disorders. Public Health Challenges. WHO, Geneva 2006. 3. Aarli JA: Addressing Unmet Neurology Needs Worldwide. Neurology Today; 2008, July 17. 4. Aarli JA, Diop AG, Lochmüller H. Neurology in sub-Saharan Africa: A challenge for World Federation of Neurology. Neurology 2007:69:1715-1718. 5. Njamnshi AK. Nonphysician management of epilepsy in resource-limited contexts: roles and responsibilities. Epilepsia. 2009 Sep;50 (9):2167-8. Bergen/London 16 September 2010 Johan A. Aarli Past President WFN, WFN Representative to WHO The contribution of the World Psychiatric Association to the mhGAP The World Psychiatric Association (WPA) is the largest international association in the mental health field. It includes 135 national psychiatric societies, representing more than 200,000 psychiatrists. Several organizations of users and carers are among its affiliated members. As part of the mhGAP, the WPA organized with the WHO, in October 2009, a Policy Roundtable in Abuja, Nigeria, aiming to develop road maps for the nine African countries identified by the mhGAP as needing intensified support to scale up mental health services: Burundi, Cote d’Ivoire, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Ghana, Kenya, Liberia, Malawi and Nigeria. The Roundtable was attended by high-level representatives of those countries, including two ministers of health. The road maps produced have been shared with the relevant governments, and a follow-up meeting will take place in December 2010 in Sudan. The WPA Scientific Sections on Schizophrenia, Addiction Psychiatry, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Suicidology and Old Age Psychiatry and several WPA experts in the area of mood disorders provided their input in the production of the mhGAP intervention guide. The WPA is supporting the mhGAP by a donation. Further WPA activities relevant to the mhGAP include: a) the train-the-trainers workshops targeting clinical officers and nurses working in the community and aiming to promote the integration of mental health into primary care, carried out in collaboration with the national governments and followed by a phase of supervision and follow-up (we had one in Ibadan, Nigeria in January 2009 and five at different sites in Sri Lanka between June and July 2010); b) the trainthe-trainers workshops on the management of the mental health consequences of disasters and conflicts (a first one was co-organized with the WHO in Geneva in July 2009; several others have been held or are going to take place in various regions); c) the programme of one-year fellowships for young psychiatrists from low and lower middle income countries at centres of excellence in psychiatry (five fellowships have been already assigned and the selected young psychiatrists are now working at the University of Pittsburgh, the Institute of Psychiatry in London, the University of Maryland School of Medicine, the Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland and the University of Melbourne); d) the recently produced WPA guidance on steps, obstacles and mistakes to avoid in the implementation of community mental health care, which will be translated in several languages; e) the production of a set of recommendations about best practices in working with service users and carers; f) the international research project on physical health in people with severe mental disorders, including several centers in low and lower middle income countries; g) the WPA programme on depression in persons with physical diseases, with materials available now in 14 different languages; h) the dissemination of World Psychiatry, the official WPA journal, which is produced in several languages, reaches in its printed versions more than 33,000 psychiatrists in 121 countries and is freely available on the PubMed system. World Vision International Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP) About World Vision International (WVI) “Our vision for every child, life in all its fullness; Our prayer for every heart, the will to make it so” World Vision is a Christian relief, development and advocacy organisation dedicated to working with children, families and communities to overcome poverty and injustice. Inspired by our Christian values, we are dedicated to working with the world’s most vulnerable people. We serve all people regardless of religion, race, ethnicity or gender. World Vision is a federal partnership working in almost 100 countries worldwide, serving more than 100 million people. WVIs work in Mental Health and Psychosocial Support (MHPSS) Historically, alongside majority of humanitarian relief and development agencies, WVI has focused on concrete activities that address the visible impacts of poverty. WVI now acknowledges that both the tangible and intangible aspects of peoples’ lives contribute to poverty and disempowerment of children, families and their communities. In the past decade, WVI has increased its attention to the mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) needs of people in emergency and developing contexts. WVI has already contributed significantly to the practice of MHPSS programs through a range of community based psychosocial activities. To improve the organisation’s coordination and information-sharing in MHPSS programs, a WVI MHPSS Working Group has been established through WVIs Global Centre. The goal of this group is “To build the World Vision partnership’s interest and expertise in MHPSS programming to support children, families and communities to reach their full potential and experience ‘life in all its fullness’.” Specific objectives of WVIs MHPSS working group include: • Establishing an information and knowledge base about MHPSS that will be accessible for WVI staff; • Developing and expanding evidence-based MHPSS programs for WVI to implement as part of humanitarian and development programs; • Collaborating with internal and external partners to promote MHPSS in WVI and in the broader mental health and humanitarian sectors. WVIs work in the MHPSS sector has begun work in earnest towards reducing the mental health gap in low and middle income countries. Some of the significant work over recent years has included: • Development and validation of an Interpersonal Psychotherapy for Groups (IPT-G) program for people living with depression, anxiety and/or significant symptoms of trauma; • Collaboration with War Trauma Foundation and World Health Organisation to develop a Psychological First Aid Guide for low and middle income countries; • Piloting Trauma-Focused Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (TF-CBT) approaches for supporting children affected by child-trafficking • Implementation of a rehabilitation program for former child soldiers in northern Uganda; • Co-Chairing of the IASC MHPSS Reference Group (with UNICEF); • Supporting the integration and scale-up of the IASC Guidelines on Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Emergency Settings (IASC, 2007) throughout WVI and through inter-agency initiatives; • Supporting the integration and scale-up of community-based psychosocial support activities across the standard WVI programming models; • • • • Working towards the integration of MHPSS activities as a cross-cutting concern for all other sectors, such as nutrition, early childhood development, education, livelihoods, health, water and sanitation and child protection; Increasing international staff capacity to design and implement MHPSS activities and/or programs in emergency and development contexts; Developing organisation-wide communications guidelines to promote and advocate for MHPSS needs and issues; Exploring ways for WVI to establish monitoring and evaluation indicators to increase the organisations capacity to measure impacts of MHPSS activities and programs. WVI collaborations sought to assist in the implementation of mhGAP. WVI is interested in continued collaboration with other organisations to develop our MHPSS programs and responses, which is ultimately intended to assist in achieving the mhGAP objectives. With organisational interest growing in MHPSS a range of partnership opportunities exist. WVI has identified the following areas as priorities for future collaboration: • • • • • • • Exploring partnerships with agencies to support the roll-out of the Psychological First Aid Guide for low and middle income countries; Developing training and partnership arrangements that have potential to provide WVI with surge capacity for MHPSS responses in emergencies; Developing validated materials that can support the combined needs of spiritual nurture and MHPSS in emergencies as well as developing contexts; Establishing a network of human resources that can be utilised to support the design and evaluation of MHPSS programs; Developing WVI guidelines for implementing MHPSS programs, including supervision and other ethical requirements and responsibilities; Exploring partnerships with academic institutions for research opportunities, particularly around alternative interventions for community-based mental health activities. Use our influence as a large global development organisation to make the case for governments and other development actors to pay greater attention to mental health and identifies specific actions that can be taken. "Unflinching in its candor, Unlisted, reminds me of the incredible power that one compelling story can have in shaping the way we think about major societal issues." HELENE GAYLE, PRESIDENT OF CARE This Award Winning documentary is the focus of a major Mental Illness Awareness Campaign in the US involving national TV, nationwide screenings, and press. The goal is to inspire individuals and families to come out about their own experiences with mental illness so to: • Expose the crisis of families fractured by untreated mental illness • Help individuals and families get support and services • Dispel myths and reduce stigma Physician and filmmaker Delaney Ruston spent years hiding from her dad, unlisted in the phone book, because his untreated schizophrenia was so out of control. Now that her dad is finally receiving treatment and services, Delaney decides to reconnect…..and to film her journey. As a doctor Ruston has seen how untreated mental illness tears families apart…but is rarely discussed. Her story aims to change that. The film is now available to aid your work in encouraging people to learn more and share their stories. For a FREE DVD contact: [email protected] or [email protected] www.unlistedfilm.com has free downloadable Screening Tool Kit *** Where in the World is Mental Health? is Ruston’s documentary inproduction exploring global mental health. Thus far filming has occurred in France, China, India, and the US. Ruston welcomes your insights on this topic and film project (email above) To learn more visit www.unlistedfilm.com and see the trailer under “more films”.