The "Lancet Commission" report by 28 global specialists in
psychiatry, public health and neuroscience, as well as mental health
patients and advocacy groups, said the growing crisis could cause
lasting harm to people, communities and economies worldwide.
While some of the costs will be the direct costs of healthcare and
medicines or other therapies, most are indirect - in the form of
loss of productivity, and spending on social welfare, education and
law and order, the report's co-lead author Vikram Patel said.
The wide-ranging report did not give the breakdown of the potential
$16 trillion economic impact it estimated by 2030.
"The situation is extremely bleak," Patel, a professor at Harvard
Medical School in the United States, told reporters.
He said the burden of mental illness had risen "dramatically"
worldwide in the past 25 years, partly due to societies ageing and
more children surviving into adolescence, yet "no country is
investing enough" to tackle the problem.
"No other health condition in humankind has been neglected as much
as mental health has," Patel said.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that around 300
million people worldwide have depression and 50 million have
dementia. Schizophrenia is estimated to affect 23 million people,
and bipolar disorder around 60 million.
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The Lancet report found that in many countries, people with common
mental disorders such as depression, anxiety and schizophrenia
routinely suffer gross human rights violations – including
shackling, torture and imprisonment.
Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the medical journal the Lancet,
which commissioned the report, said it highlighted the "shameful and
shocking treatment of people with mental ill health around the
world".
It called for a human rights-based approach to ensure that people
with mental health conditions are not denied fundamental human
rights, including access to employment, education and other core
life experiences.
It also recommended a wholesale shift to community-based care for
mental health patients, with psychosocial treatments such as talking
therapies being offered not just by medical professionals but also
by community health workers, peers, teachers and the clergy.
The report was published ahead of a first global ministerial mental
health summit in London this week.
(Reporting by Kate Kelland; Editing by Alison Williams)
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