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Insight
Matters
Spring, 2003
From
the APA: Twelve Principles for a Vision for Our Nation's Mental
Health System
1.Every
American with psychiatric symptoms has the right to a comprehensive
evaluation and an accurate diagnosis which leads to an appropriate,
individualized plan of treatment.
2.Mental health care should be patient and family centered,
community based, culturally sensitive, and easily accessible
without discriminatory administrative or financial barriers
or obstacles.
3.Mental health care should be readily available for patients
of all ages, with particular attention to the specialized needs
of children, adolescents, and the elderly. Unmet needs of ethnic
and racial minorities require urgent attention.
4.Access to mental health care should be provided across numerous
settings, including the workplace, schools, and correctional
facilities. An emphasis should also be placed on the early recognition
and treatment of mental illness.
5.Patients deserve to be treated with dignity and respect. When
they are clinically able, they are entitled to choose their
physician or community-based agency and to make decisions regarding
their care. When they are incapable of doing so, they should
receive the treatment they need and when able, they should choose
future care.
6.Patients deserve to receive care in the least restrictive
setting possible that encourages maximum independence with access
to a full continuum of clinical services, including emergency/crisis,
acute inpatient, outpatient, intermediate level, and long-term
residential programs.
7.Since mental illness and substance abuse occur together so
frequently, mental health care should be fully integrated with
the treatment of substance abuse disorders and with primary
care and other general medical services.
8.Support must expand for research into the etiology and prevention
of mental illness and into the ongoing development of safe and
effective treatment interventions.
9.Efforts must be intensified to combat and overcome the stigma
historically associated with mental illness through enhanced
public understanding and awareness.
10.Health benefits, access to effective services, and utilization
management must be the same for people with mental illness as
for other medical illnesses, preferably funded by integrated
financing systems. Although states are the ultimate locus of
responsibility for the public safety net, the federal government
and the private sector employers must also support an increased
investment in the mental health of Americans.
11.Funding for care should be commensurate with the level of
disability caused by a psychiatric illness. Disability occurs
both in the severly and persistently mentally ill and in patients
with other unforeseen psychiatric conditions who suffer despite
having previously been productive and functional.
12. More resources should be devoted to treatment and to training
an adequate supply of psychiatrists, especially child psychiatrists,
to meet the current and future needs of the population.
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