OBJECTIVE: The growing burden of mental disorders in Latin America and the Caribbean has become too large to ignore. There is a need to know more about the prevalence of mental disorders and the gap between the number of individuals with psychiatric disorders and the number of those persons who remain untreated even though effective treatments exist. Having that knowledge would make it possible to improve advocacy, adopt better policies, formulate innovative intervention programs, and apportion resources commensurate with needs. METHODS: Data were extracted from community-based psychiatric epidemiological studies published in Latin America and the Caribbean from 1980 through 2004 that used structured diagnostic instruments and provided prevalence rates. Estimates of the crude rates in Latin America and the Caribbean for the various disorders were determined by calculating the mean and median rates across the studies, by gender. In addition, data on service utilization were reviewed in order to calculate the treatment gap for specific disorders. RESULTS: Nonaffective psychosis (including schizophrenia) had an estimated mean one-year prevalence rate of 1.0%; major depression, 4.9%; and alcohol use abuse or dependence, 5.7%. Over one-third of individuals with nonaffective psychosis, over half of those with an anxiety disorder, and some three-fourths of those with alcohol use abuse or dependence did not receive mental health care from either specialized or general health services. CONCLUSIONS: The current treatment gap in mental health care in Latin America and the Caribbean remains wide. Further, current data likely greatly underestimate the number of untreated individuals. The epidemiological transition and changes in the population structure will further widen the treatment gap in Latin America and the Caribbean unless mental health policies are formulated or updated and programs and services are expanded.
OBJECTIVE: The growing burden of mental disorders in Latin America and the Caribbean has become too large to ignore. There is a need to know more about the prevalence of mental disorders and the gap between the number of individuals with psychiatric disorders and the number of those persons who remain untreated even though effective treatments exist. Having that knowledge would make it possible to improve advocacy, adopt better policies, formulate innovative intervention programs, and apportion resources commensurate with needs. METHODS: Data were extracted from community-based psychiatric epidemiological studies published in Latin America and the Caribbean from 1980 through 2004 that used structured diagnostic instruments and provided prevalence rates. Estimates of the crude rates in Latin America and the Caribbean for the various disorders were determined by calculating the mean and median rates across the studies, by gender. In addition, data on service utilization were reviewed in order to calculate the treatment gap for specific disorders. RESULTS: Nonaffective psychosis (including schizophrenia) had an estimated mean one-year prevalence rate of 1.0%; major depression, 4.9%; and alcohol use abuse or dependence, 5.7%. Over one-third of individuals with nonaffective psychosis, over half of those with an anxiety disorder, and some three-fourths of those with alcohol use abuse or dependence did not receive mental health care from either specialized or general health services. CONCLUSIONS: The current treatment gap in mental health care in Latin America and the Caribbean remains wide. Further, current data likely greatly underestimate the number of untreated individuals. The epidemiological transition and changes in the population structure will further widen the treatment gap in Latin America and the Caribbean unless mental health policies are formulated or updated and programs and services are expanded.
Authors: Miguel A Salinero-Fort; Rodrigo Jiménez-García; Carmen de Burgos-Lunar; Rosa M Chico-Moraleja; Paloma Gómez-Campelo Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol Date: 2014-10-02 Impact factor: 4.328
Authors: Laura Sampson; Silvia S Martins; Shui Yu; Alexandre Dias Porto Chiavegatto Filho; Laura Helena Andrade; Maria Carmen Viana; Maria Elena Medina-Mora; Corina Benjet; Yolanda Torres; Marina Piazza; Sergio Aguilar-Gaxiola; Alfredo H Cia; Juan Carlos Stagnaro; Alan M Zaslavsky; Ronald C Kessler; Sandro Galea Journal: Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol Date: 2018-09-01 Impact factor: 4.328
Authors: José Mauricio Hernández Sarmiento; Nidia Correa; Marta Correa; José Gabriel Franco; Matilde Alvarez; Clara Ramírez; Lina M Gómez; Antonio Carlos Toro; Nora Helena Londoño; Milton Martínez; Mary Alejandra Restrepo; Elsa Zapata; Gloria Isabel Mejía; Jaime Robledo Journal: J Immigr Minor Health Date: 2013-08
Authors: Y-P Wang; A D P Chiavegatto Filho; A M Campanha; A M Malik; M A Mogadouro; M Cambraia; M C Viana; L H Andrade Journal: Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci Date: 2016-04-12 Impact factor: 6.892
Authors: Ronald C Kessler; Terence M Keane; Robert J Ursano; Ali Mokdad; Alan M Zaslavsky Journal: Int J Methods Psychiatr Res Date: 2008-12 Impact factor: 4.035