| Literature DB >> 27816568 |
Domenico Giacco1, Michaela Amering2, Victoria Bird1, Thomas Craig3, Giuseppe Ducci4, Jürgen Gallinat5, Steven George Gillard6, Tim Greacen7, Phil Hadridge8, Sonia Johnson9, Nikolina Jovanovic1, Richard Laugharne10, Craig Morgan3, Matthijs Muijen11, Georg Schomerus12, Martin Zinkler13, Simon Wessely3, Stefan Priebe14.
Abstract
Social values and concepts have played a central role in the history of mental health care. They have driven major reforms and guided the development of various treatment models. Although social values and concepts have been important for mental health care in the past, this Personal View addresses what their role might be in the future. We (DG, PH, and SP) did a survey of professional stakeholders and then used a scenario planning technique in an international expert workshop to address this question. The workshop developed four distinct but not mutually exclusive scenarios in which the social aspect is central: mental health care will be patient controlled; it will target people's social context to improve their mental health; it will become virtual; and access to care will be regulated on the basis of social disadvantage. These scenarios are not intended as fixed depictions of what will happen. They could, however, be useful in guiding further debate, research, and innovation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27816568 DOI: 10.1016/S2215-0366(16)30219-X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Psychiatry ISSN: 2215-0366 Impact factor: 27.083