ABSTRACT

Mental health has always been a low priority worldwide. Yet more than 650 million people are estimated to meet diagnostic criteria for common mental disorders such as depression and anxiety, with almost three-quarters of that burden in low- and middle-income countries. Nowhere in the world does mental health enjoy parity with physical health. Notwithstanding astonishing medical advancements in treatments for physical illnesses, mental disorder continues to have a startlingly high mortality rate. However, despite its widespread neglect, there is now an emerging international imperative to improve global mental health and wellbeing. The UN’s current international development agenda finalised at the end of 2015 contains 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including SDG3, which seeks to ensure healthy lives and promote wellbeing for all at all ages. Although much broader in focus than the previous eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the need for worldwide improvement in mental health has finally been recognised. This Handbook addresses the new UN agenda in the context of mental health and sustainable development, examining its implications for national and international policy-makers, decision-makers, researchers and funding agencies. Conceptual, evidence-based and practical discussions crossing a range of disciplines are presented from the world’s leading mental health experts. Together, they explore why a commitment to investing in mental health for the fulfilment of SDG3 ought to be an absolute global priority.

part I|42 pages

The global imperative

chapter 2|22 pages

The Rights to Mental Health and Development

ByLawrence O. Gostin, Laura Davidson

part II|51 pages

Economic perspective

chapter 3|13 pages

Meeting SDG3

The role of economics in mental health policy
ByMartin Knapp, Valentina Iemmi

chapter 5|12 pages

Mental Health and Economic Development in Vietnam 1

ByChris Underhill, Victoria K. Ngo, Tam Nguyen

part III|90 pages

Demographic and cultural perspectives

chapter 8|19 pages

Addressing Mental Health From a Gender Perspective

Challenges and opportunities in meeting SDG3
ByCarol Vlassoff

chapter 9|10 pages

Men's Mental Health and Wellbeing

The global challenge
BySvend Aage Madsen

part IV|85 pages

Policy

chapter 13|21 pages

Strengthening Government Policy to Achieve Target 3.4 of SDG3 1

ByRachel Jenkins

chapter 14|14 pages

Mental Health, Disability Rights, and Equal Access to Employment

Global challenges in light of the Sustainable Development Goals
ByAart Hendriks

chapter 15|13 pages

Prioritising Rights-Based Mental Health Care in the 2030 Agenda

ByDainius Pūras, Julie Hannah

chapter 16|16 pages

Natural and Humanitarian Disasters, and Mental Health

Lessons from Haiti
ByGiuseppe Raviola

chapter 17|19 pages

Paradigm Shift

Treatment alternatives to psychiatric drugs, with particular reference to low- and middle-income countries 1
ByPeter Lehmann

part V|87 pages

Legal perspectives

chapter 19|14 pages

The Sustainable Development Goals, Psychosocial Disability, and the Meaning of Wellbeing in SDG3

Towards an approach that combines the subjective and objective
ByDavid Bilchitz

chapter 21|27 pages

The Law as Sword and Shield

Realising the rights of those with psychosocial disability through international, regional, and national complaints systems
ByLaura Davidson

part VI|42 pages

Country perspectives

chapter 22|12 pages

A Case Study

Colombia, conflict, and the peace process, from a user-perspective
BySalam A. Gómez

chapter 23|12 pages

Legislating on Mental Health India to Achieve SDG3

ByAmita Dhanda

chapter 24|11 pages

Breaking the Restraints

Civil society's struggle to abolish human rights violations in Israel's psychiatric system
BySharon Primor, Dahlia Virtzberg

chapter |5 pages

Afterword

Joining up for our future in global mental health
ByVikram Patel