Author:
Ormel Johan,Petukhova Maria,Chatterji Somnath,Aguilar-Gaxiola Sergio,Alonso Jordi,Angermeyer Matthias C.,Bromet Evelyn J.,Burger Huibert,Demyttenaere Koen,de Girolamo Giovanni,Haro Josep Maria,Hwang Irving,Karam Elie,Kawakami Norito,Lépine Jean Pierre,Medina-Mora María Elena,Posada-Villa José,Sampson Nancy,Scott Kate,Üstün T. Bedirhan,Von Korff Michael,Williams David R.,Zhang Mingyuan,Kessler Ronald C.
Abstract
BackgroundAdvocates of expanded mental health treatment assert that mental
disorders are as disabling as physical disorders, but little evidence
supports this assertion.AimsTo establish the disability and treatment of specific mental and physical
disorders in high-income and low- and middle-income countries.MethodCommunity epidemiological surveys were administered in 15 countries
through the World Health Organization World Mental Health (WMH) Survey
Initiative.ResultsRespondents in both high-income and low- and middle-income countries
attributed higher disability to mental disorders than to the commonly
occurring physical disorders included in the surveys. This pattern held
for all disorders and also for treated disorders. Disaggregation showed
that the higher disability of mental than physical disorders was limited
to disability in social and personal role functioning, whereas disability
in productive role functioning was generally comparable for mental and
physical disorders.ConclusionsDespite often higher disability, mental disorders are under-treated
compared with physical disorders in both high-income and in low- and
middle-income countries.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
302 articles.
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