The role of policy and legislation in mental health care

The interface of policy and legislation is crucial in making quality mental health care accessible in an effective manner. Shortage of psychiatrists and other mental health personnel in India poses a huge challenge in delivering mental health care. The social context is instrumental in subjecting th...

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Main Author: Shipra Gupta
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2021-01-01
Series:Indian Journal of Social Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.indjsp.org/article.asp?issn=0971-9962;year=2021;volume=37;issue=2;spage=230;epage=234;aulast=Gupta
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spelling doaj-5f01940582e347b9ad644571fb03b5662021-07-27T04:26:18ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsIndian Journal of Social Psychiatry0971-99622021-01-0137223023410.4103/ijsp.ijsp_160_21The role of policy and legislation in mental health careShipra GuptaThe interface of policy and legislation is crucial in making quality mental health care accessible in an effective manner. Shortage of psychiatrists and other mental health personnel in India poses a huge challenge in delivering mental health care. The social context is instrumental in subjecting the mentally ill to human rights violations and discriminations with low awareness, illiteracy, superstitions, denial, and the prevailing social perception of mental illness in India. The enormity of problem requires a multipronged approach supported by a robust policy with specific achievable goals. Mental health policy relies on the legal framework to achieve its goals, and ameliorate the lives of persons with mental disorders. Policy and legislation are two complementary approaches for improving mental health care and services. International developments in mental health care have brought a paradigm shift from “charity-” to “rights-” based approach which is very much reflected in India's first-ever Mental Health Policy, 2014, and the newly enacted Mental Healthcare Act, 2017. This shift entails a “participatory” approach for developing community-based facilities, services, and rehabilitation provisions. An analytical approach has been adopted to gauge the likely outcome of the combined role of this ambitious policy and law in light of existing mental health-care infrastructure and “social context.” An attempt has been made to highlight the main concerns and challenges in effective implementation of new law while putting forth feasible solutions to attain the policy goals. The paper concludes on a note that legal and health measures should work in tandem and eventual convergence be directed toward the best interest of mentally ill persons.http://www.indjsp.org/article.asp?issn=0971-9962;year=2021;volume=37;issue=2;spage=230;epage=234;aulast=Gupta2017community integrationdiscriminationlegislationmental healthmental healthcare actpolicystigma
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shipra Gupta
spellingShingle Shipra Gupta
The role of policy and legislation in mental health care
Indian Journal of Social Psychiatry
2017
community integration
discrimination
legislation
mental health
mental healthcare act
policy
stigma
author_facet Shipra Gupta
author_sort Shipra Gupta
title The role of policy and legislation in mental health care
title_short The role of policy and legislation in mental health care
title_full The role of policy and legislation in mental health care
title_fullStr The role of policy and legislation in mental health care
title_full_unstemmed The role of policy and legislation in mental health care
title_sort role of policy and legislation in mental health care
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Indian Journal of Social Psychiatry
issn 0971-9962
publishDate 2021-01-01
description The interface of policy and legislation is crucial in making quality mental health care accessible in an effective manner. Shortage of psychiatrists and other mental health personnel in India poses a huge challenge in delivering mental health care. The social context is instrumental in subjecting the mentally ill to human rights violations and discriminations with low awareness, illiteracy, superstitions, denial, and the prevailing social perception of mental illness in India. The enormity of problem requires a multipronged approach supported by a robust policy with specific achievable goals. Mental health policy relies on the legal framework to achieve its goals, and ameliorate the lives of persons with mental disorders. Policy and legislation are two complementary approaches for improving mental health care and services. International developments in mental health care have brought a paradigm shift from “charity-” to “rights-” based approach which is very much reflected in India's first-ever Mental Health Policy, 2014, and the newly enacted Mental Healthcare Act, 2017. This shift entails a “participatory” approach for developing community-based facilities, services, and rehabilitation provisions. An analytical approach has been adopted to gauge the likely outcome of the combined role of this ambitious policy and law in light of existing mental health-care infrastructure and “social context.” An attempt has been made to highlight the main concerns and challenges in effective implementation of new law while putting forth feasible solutions to attain the policy goals. The paper concludes on a note that legal and health measures should work in tandem and eventual convergence be directed toward the best interest of mentally ill persons.
topic 2017
community integration
discrimination
legislation
mental health
mental healthcare act
policy
stigma
url http://www.indjsp.org/article.asp?issn=0971-9962;year=2021;volume=37;issue=2;spage=230;epage=234;aulast=Gupta
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