| Literature DB >> 25858581 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Global mental health is a relatively new field that has focused on disparities in mental health services across different settings, and on innovative ways to provide feasible, acceptable, and effective services in poorly-resourced settings. Neuroethics, too, is a relatively new field, lying at the intersection of bioethics and neuroscience; it has studied the implications of neuroscientific findings for age-old questions in philosophy, as well as questions about the ethics of novel neuroscientific methods and interventions. DISCUSSION: In this essay, we address a number of issues that lie at the intersection of these two fields: an emphasis on a naturalist and empirical position, a concern with both disease and wellness, the importance of human rights in neuropsychiatric care, and the value of social inclusion and patient empowerment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25858581 PMCID: PMC4349616 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0274-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Intersections between global mental health and neuroethics
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| Naturalist and empirical approach | * Importance of evidence-based clinical practice locally and globally | * Advances in neuroscience may shed light on broad philosophical questions |
| * Particular need for mental health research in low- and middle-income countries | * Value of empirical approaches to answering specific bioethical questions | |
| Concern with both disease and wellness | * Focus on absence of disease as well physical, mental and social well-being | * Particular interest in the possible value of neuro-enhancement |
| * Emphasis not only on symptom reduction but also on recovery | * Commitment to using technologies to maximise potential of all | |
| Importance of human rights in neuropsychiatric care | * Emphasis on the human rights of those suffering from mental illness | * Emphasis on the social and legal implications of neuroscientific advances |
| * Importance of equivalent prioritization of mental and physical health | * Concern that neurotechnologies may fortify asymmetric relationships | |
| Value of social inclusion and patient empowerment | * Emphasis on value of consumer perspective; ‘nothing for us, without us’ | * Role, relevance, and importance of brain science to concepts of ‘self’ |
| * Focus on establishing and enhancing patient empowerment | * Emphasis on the meaning of neuroscience, and its contribution to flourishing |