Mental health for all by involving all Vikram Patel

I want you to imagine this for a moment

two men Rahul and Rajiv living in the

same neighborhood from the same

educational background similar

occupation and they both turn up at

their local accident emergency

complaining of acute chest pain Rahul is

offered a cardiac procedure but Rajiv is

sent home what might explain the

difference in the experience of these

two nearly identical men Rajiv

suffers from a mental illness the

difference in the quality of medical

care received by people with mental

illness is one of the reasons why they

live shorter lives than people without

mental illness even in the best resource

countries in the world this life

expectancy gap is as much as twenty

years in the developing countries the

world this gap is even larger

but of course mental illnesses can kill

in more direct ways as well the most

obvious example is suicide it might

surprise some of you here as it did me

when I discovered that suicide is at the

top of the list of the leading cause of

death in young people in all countries

of the world including the poorest

countries of the world but beyond the

impact of a health condition on life

expectancy we’re also concerned about

the quality of life lived now in order

for us to examine the overall impact of

a health condition both our life

expectancy as well as on the quality of

life lived we need to use a metric

called a dolly which stands for a

disability adjusted life here now when

we do that we discover some startling

things about mental illness from a

global perspective we discover that for

example mental illnesses are amongst the

leading causes of disability around the

world depression for example is a third

leading cause of disability alongside

conditions such as diarrhea and

pneumonia and children when you put all

the mental illnesses together they

account for roughly 15% of the total

global burden of disease

did mental illnesses are also very

damaging to people’s lives but beyond

just the burden of disease let us

consider the absolute numbers the World

Health Organization estimates that there

are nearly four to five hundred million

people living on our tiny planet who are

affected by mental illness now some of

you here look a bit astonished by that

number but consider for a moment the

incredible diversity of mental illnesses

from autism and intellectual disability

in childhood through to depression

anxiety substance misuse and psychosis

and adulthood all the way through to

dementia and old age and I’m pretty sure

that each and every one of us present

here today can think of at least one

person at least one person who is

affected by mental illness in our most

intimate social networks I see some

nodding heads there but beyond the

staggering numbers what’s truly

important from a global health point of

view what’s truly worrying from a global

health point of view is that the vast

majority of these affected individuals

do not receive the care that we know can

transform their lives and remember we do

have robust evidence that a range of

interventions medicines psychological

interventions and social interventions

can make a vast difference and yet even

in the best resource countries for

example here in Europe roughly 50% of

affected people don’t receive these

interventions in the sorts of countries

I work in that so-called treatment gap

approaches an astonishing 90% it isn’t

surprising then that if you should speak

to anyone affected by mental illness the

chances are that you will hear stories

of hidden suffering shame and

discrimination in nearly every sector of

their lives but perhaps most

heartbreaking of all are the stories of

the abuse of even the most basic human

rights such as the young woman shown in

this image here that are played out

every day sadly even in the very

institutions that were built to care for

people with mental illnesses the mental

hospitals

it’s this injustice that has really

driven my mission to try and do a little

bit to transform the lives of people

affected by mental illness Anna at a

particularly critical action that I

focused on is to bridge the gulf between

the knowledge we have that can transform

lives the knowledge of effective

treatments and how we actually use that

knowledge in the everyday world and an

especially important challenge that I’ve

had to face is the great shortage of

mental health professionals such as

psychiatrists and psychologists

particularly in the developing world

now I trained in medicine in India and

after that I chose psychiatry as my

specialty

much to the dismay of my mother and all

my family members who can’t afford

neurosurgery would be a more respectable

option for their brilliant son any case

I went on I soldiered on with psychiatry

and found myself training in Britain and

some of the best hospitals in this

country I was very privileged I worked

in a team of incredibly talented

compassionate but most importantly

highly trained specialized mental health

professionals soon after my training I

found myself working first in Zimbabwe

and then in India and I was confronted

by an altogether new reality this was a

reality of a world in which there were

almost no mental health professionals at

all in Zimbabwe for example there were

just about a dozen psychiatrists most of

whom lived and worked in Harare City

leaving only a couple to address the

mental health care needs of nine million

people living in the countryside in

India I found a situation was not a lot

better to give you a perspective if I

had to translate the proportion of

psychiatrists in the population that one

might see in Britain to India one might

expect roughly 150,000 psychiatrists in

India in reality

take a guess the actual number is about

3,000 about two percent of that number

it became quickly apparent to be that I

couldn’t follow the sorts of mental

health care models that I have been

trained in one that relied heavily on

specialized expensive mental her

professionals to provide mental health

care in countries like India and

Zimbabwe I had to think out of the box

about some other model of care it was

then that I came across these books

and in these books I discovered the idea

of task-shifting

in global health the idea is actually

quite simple the idea is when you’re

short of specialized health care

professionals use whoever is available

in the community trained them to provide

a range of health care interventions and

in these books I read inspiring examples

for example of how ordinary people had

been trained to deliver babies diagnose

and treat early pneumonia to great

effect and it struck me that if you

could train ordinary people to deliver

such complex health care interventions

then perhaps they could also do the same

with mental health care well today I’m

very pleased to report to you that there

have been many experiments in tar

shifting in mental health care across

the developing world over the past

decade and I want to share with you the

findings of three particular such

experiments all three of which focused

on depression the most common of all

mental illnesses in rural Uganda Paul

Bolton and his colleagues using

villagers demonstrated that they could

deliver interpersonal psychotherapy for

depression and using a randomized

control design showed that 90 percent of

the people receiving this intervention

recovered as compared to roughly 40

percent in the comparison villages

similarly using a randomized control

trial in rural Pakistan Aarti Freeman

and his colleagues showed that lady

health visitors who are community

maternal health workers in Pakistan’s

health care system could deliver

cognitive behavior therapy for mothers

who were depressed again showing

dramatic differences in the recovery

rates roughly 75 percent of mothers

recovered as compared to about 45

percent in the comparison villages and

in my own trial in Goa in India we again

showed that lay counsellors drawn from

local communities could be trained to

deliver psychosocial interventions for

depression and anxiety leading to 70

percent recovery rates as compared to 50

percent in the comparison primary health

centers now if I had to draw together

all these different experiments and are

shifting and there of course been many

other examples and try and identify what

are the key lessons we can learn that

makes for a successful tar shifting

operation I’ve coined this particular

acronym thunder what sundar stands for

in Hindi

is attractive it seems to me that there

are five key lessons that I’ve shown on

this slide that are critically important

for effective tar shifting the first is

that we need to simplify the message

that we’re using stripping away all the

jargon that medicine has invented around

itself

we need to unpack complex healthcare

interventions into smaller components

that can be more easily transferred to

less strained individuals we need to

deliver healthcare not in large

institutions but close to people’s homes

and we need to deliver healthcare using

whoever is available and affordable in

our local communities and importantly we

need to reallocate the few specialists

who are available to perform roles such

as capacity building and supervision but

for me tar shifting is an idea with

truly global significance because even

though it has arisen out of the

situation of the lack of resources that

you find in developing countries I think

it has a lot of significance for better

resourced countries as well why is that

well in part because healthcare in the

developed world the health care costs in

the developing world are rapidly

spiraling out of control and a huge

chunk of those costs are human resource

costs but equally important is because

health care has become so incredibly

professionalized that has become very

remote and removed from local

communities for me what’s truly sundar

about the idea of tar shifting though

isn’t that it simply makes health care

more accessible and affordable but that

it is also fundamentally empowering it

empowers ordinary people to be more

effective in caring for the health of

others in their community and in doing

so to become better guardians of their

own health indeed from ATAR shifting is

the ultimate example of the

democratization of medical knowledge and

therefore medical power just over 30

years ago in the nations of the world

assembled in alma mater and made this

iconic declaration well I think all of

you can guess that 12 years on we’re

still nowhere near that goal

still today armed with that knowledge

that ordinary people in the community

can be trained and with sufficient

supervision and support can

liver a range of health care

interventions effectively perhaps that

promise is within reach now indeed to

implement the slogan of health for all

we will need to involve all in that

particular journey and the case of

mental health in particular we would

need to involve people who are affected

by mental illness and their caregivers

it is for this reason that some years

ago the movement for global mental

health was founded as a sort of a

virtual platform upon which

professionals like myself and people

affected by mental illness could stand

together shoulder to shoulder an

advocate for the rights of people with

mental illness to receive the care that

we know can transform their lives and to

live a life with dignity and in closing

when you have a moment of peace acquired

in these a very busy few days or perhaps

afterwards spare a thought for the

person you thought about who has a

mental illness or persons that you

thought about who have mental illness

and their to care for them thank you

you

我想让你想象一下

,住在同一街区的两个男人 Rahul 和 Rajiv

来自相同的

教育背景、相似的

职业,他们都出现

在当地的事故紧急情况下,

抱怨急性胸痛 Rahul

接受了心脏手术,但 Rajiv 是

送回家 什么可以解释

两个几乎相同的男人的经历差异 拉吉夫

患有精神疾病 精神疾病患者接受

的医疗服务质量的差异

是他们比没有精神疾病的人寿命短的原因之一

疾病 即使在世界上资源最好的

国家 这种

预期寿命差距在发展中国家高达 20

岁 在

世界上这个差距甚至更大

但是当然精神疾病也可以

以更直接的方式杀死 最

明显的例子是自杀

当我发现自杀在

lea 列表的顶部时,这可能会让你们中的一些人感到惊讶 世界

所有国家的年轻人的死因,

包括世界上最贫穷的

国家,但除了

健康状况对预期寿命的影响之外,

我们还关注

现在的生活质量,

以便我们检查

健康状况对我们的

预期寿命和生活质量的总体影响

我们需要使用一个

称为多莉的指标,它代表

残疾调整后的生活,当

我们这样做时,我们会发现一些

关于精神疾病的令人吃惊的事情 从

全球的角度来看,我们发现

例如精神疾病是

世界范围内

导致残疾的主要原因之一 例如,当您将所有精神疾病放在一起时,抑郁症是导致残疾的第三大原因,与

腹泻、

肺炎和儿童等

疾病并驾齐驱

大约 15% 的

全球疾病总负担

精神疾病

对人们的生活也造成了很大的损害,但超出了

只是疾病负担让我们

考虑一下绝对数字

世界卫生组织估计

有近四到五亿

人生活在我们这个小星球上

受到精神疾病的影响现在

你们中的一些人看起来对这个数字有点惊讶

,但是 考虑一下

精神疾病的惊人多样性,

从童年的自闭症和智力

残疾到抑郁

焦虑药物滥用和精神病

和成年期一直到

痴呆症和老年,我很确定

我们每个人都在场

在我们最亲密的社交网络中,今天在这里可以想到至少一个人 至少一个受精神疾病影响的人

我看到

那里有些人在点头,但除了

惊人的数字之外,

从全球健康的角度来看,真正重要的是

什么真正令人担忧的是 全球

健康的观点是,

这些受影响的人中的绝大多数

没有接受 c 我们是否知道可以

改变他们的生活并记住我们确实

有强有力的证据表明一系列

干预药物心理

干预和社会干预

可以产生巨大的影响,但即使

在资源最好的国家,

例如欧洲,大约 50% 的

受影响人群

在我工作的那些国家,没有接受这些干预措施,

所谓的治疗差距

接近惊人的 90%

,如果你应该

与任何受精神疾病影响的人交谈

,那么你会听到故事也就不足为奇了

在他们生活的几乎每一个领域都隐藏着痛苦的耻辱和歧视,

但也许最

令人心碎的是

关于侵犯最基本

人权的故事,比如这张照片中显示的年轻女子,

这些故事

每天都在悲伤地上演,甚至 在

为照顾精神疾病患者而建立的机构中,

精神病院

正是这种不公正现象引起了人们的注意 盟友

推动我的使命是尝试并做

一点改变

受精神疾病影响的人的生活 Anna 在

我关注的一项特别关键的行动中,我

关注的是弥合

我们拥有的可以改变

生活的知识与有效

治疗知识之间的鸿沟 以及我们如何

在日常生活中实际使用这些知识,

而我不得不面对的一个特别重要的挑战

是精神科医生和心理学家等心理健康专业人员的严重短缺,

特别是在发展中国家,

现在我在印度接受医学培训,

之后 我选择了精神病学作为我的

专业,

这让我的母亲和

我所有负担不起

神经外科费用的家人感到沮丧

英国和

这个国家的一些最好的医院

我很荣幸我

在一支才华横溢的团队中工作

但最重要的是,

在我接受培训后不久,我

发现自己首先在津巴布韦工作

,然后在印度工作,我遇到

了一个全新的现实,这是一个

几乎没有心理健康专业人员的世界的现实

例如,在津巴布韦,

只有十几名精神科医生,

其中大部分人在哈拉雷市生活和工作,

只剩下一对夫妇来解决生活在印度农村

的 900 万人的心理保健需求。

如果我

必须将

人们可能在英国看到的精神科医生在人口中的比例转换

为印度,那么给你一个视角会更好,人们可能会

预计印度大约有 150,000 名精神科医生

实际上猜测实际数字约为

3,000 大约 2% 这个数字

很快就变得很明显,我

无法遵循

我一直以来的那种心理健康护理模式

在印度和津巴布韦等国家接受过严重依赖

专业昂贵的心理

专家提供心理保健的培训

我发现了全球卫生

中任务转移

的想法 这个想法实际上

很简单 这个想法是当你

缺乏专业的医疗保健

专业人员时,请使用社区中可用的任何人来

培训他们提供

一系列医疗保健干预措施,并且

在这些 我读过一些鼓舞人心的书

,例如如何

训练普通人接生来诊断

和治疗早期

肺炎,这让我感到震惊,如果你

能训练普通人提供

如此复杂的医疗保健干预措施,

那么也许他们也可以做到

今天精神保健也一样,我

很高兴向您报告,

在焦油转移方面已经进行了很多实验

在过去十年中,我在发展中国家的精神卫生保健领域进行

了研究

,我想与您分享

三个特定的此类实验的结果,

所有三个实验都侧重

于乌干达农村最常见的

精神疾病中的抑郁症 Paul

Bolton 和他的同事使用

村民们证明他们可以

为抑郁症提供人际心理治疗,

并且使用随机

对照设计表明,

接受这种干预的人中有 90%

康复,相比之下,

在比较村庄中,大约 40% 的人

同样使用了

在巴基斯坦农村的随机对照试验 Aarti Freeman

和他的 同事们表明,

在巴基斯坦医疗保健系统中担任社区孕产妇保健工作者的女性健康访问者

可以

为再次抑郁的母亲提供认知行为治疗,

显示

出康复

率的巨大差异大约 75% 的母亲

康复,而相比之下,这一比例约为 45

% v

在我自己在印度果阿的试验中,我们再次

表明,

可以对来自当地社区的非专业辅导员进行培训,以

提供针对

抑郁症和焦虑症的心理社会干预措施,从而导致 70

% 的康复率,而现在对比初级卫生中心的康复率为 50

%,

如果 我必须将

所有这些不同的实验汇集在一起,并且正在

转移,当然还有许多

其他示例,并尝试确定

我们可以学到哪些关键课程,这些经验可以

使焦油转移

操作成功 我创造了这个特殊的

首字母缩略词 Thunder what sundar

印地语中的代表

很有吸引力 在我看来

,我在这张幻灯片上展示了五个关键教训,

它们

对于有效转移焦油至关重要 第一个

是我们需要简化

我们正在使用的信息 剥离所有

医学围绕自身发明的

行话 我们需要将复杂的医疗保健

干预分解成更小的

组件 更容易转移到

压力较小的个人 我们需要

提供医疗保健,而不是在大型

机构,而是在人们家附近

,我们需要使用当地社区

可用且负担得起的任何人提供医疗保健

,重要的是,我们

需要重新分配为数不多的

专家 可以担任

诸如能力建设和监督之类的角色,但

对我来说,焦油转移是一个具有

真正全球意义的想法,因为

即使它是在发展中国家缺乏资源的情况下出现的,

我认为

它有很多 对资源更好的

国家的重要性以及为什么

这部分是因为

发达国家的医疗保健 发展中国家的医疗保健成本

正在迅速

失控,其中很大

一部分成本是人力资源

成本,但同样重要的是因为

健康 护理变得如此

专业化,以至于变得非常

遥远和远离

对我来说,当地社区真正

了解焦油转移的想法

并不是因为它只是让医疗保健

更容易获得和负担得起,而是

它还从根本上增强了它

使普通人能够更

有效地关心他人健康的能力

在他们的社区中,这样

做是为了更好地保护

自己的健康,确实从 ATAR 转移是

医学知识民主化的终极例子,

因此就在 30

多年前,世界各国

聚集在母校并取得了 这个

标志性的宣言,我想

你们都可以猜到,12 年过去了,我们

仍然离这个目标还很远

有效的护理干预 也许

现在确实可以实现这一承诺,以

实现我们所有人的健康

口号 我需要让所有人都参与到那个

特殊的旅程中,尤其是精神健康的案例中,

我们

需要让

受精神疾病影响的人和他们的照顾者参与进来

,正是出于这个原因,几年

前全球精神

健康运动成立为 一种

虚拟平台,

像我这样的专业人士和

受精神疾病影响的人可以在此平台上

并肩站在一起,

倡导

精神疾病患者接受

我们知道可以改变他们的生活并与他们一起

生活的护理的权利

在这非常忙碌的几天或之后,当

您获得

片刻的平静时,尊严

和结束 为他们谢谢你