Investing In Global Mental Health: The Time For Action Is Now
Despite widespread acknowledgement of the economic and global burden of mental disorders (as represented in years of life lost to disability and mortality), acting on these concerns and creating an investment plan for global mental health has been challenging. This failure can be explained by many factors, including scepticism about prevalence data for mental disorders. Without precise biological measures, these disorders might be viewed as being defined culturally by high-income countries, or as having overly inclusive criteria that reject traditional ideas of normal human suffering. Additionally, a perceived absence of effective treatments in low-income countries already facing overwhelming challenges of infectious diseases and other disorders and limited infrastructure might make attention to mental illnesses less of an immediate priority. Likewise, mental disorders might be more overtly associated with disability than death, despite evidence of early mortality due to suicide or other medical disorders.