Title
Reassessing the Mental Health Treatment Gap: What Happens if We Include the Impact of Traditional Healing on Mental Illness?
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Date
1-1-2020
Journal
Community Mental Health Journal
DOI
10.1007/s10597-020-00705-5
Keywords
Ethnopsychology; Medical anthropology; Mental health; Shamanism; Spirituality; Traditional medicine
Abstract
© 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature. In this Fresh Focus, we reassess what the mental health treatment gap may mean if we consider the role of traditional healing. Based on systematic reviews, patients can use traditional healers and qualitatively report improvement from general psychological distress and symptom reduction for common mental disorders. Given these clinical implications, some high-income countries have scaled up research into traditional healing practices, while at the same time in low-and middle-income countries, where the use of traditional healers is nearly ubiquitous, considerably less research funding has studied or capitalized on this phenomena. The World Health Organization 2003–2020 Mental Health Action Plan called for government health programs to include traditional and faith healers as treatment resources to combat the low- and middle-income country treatment gap. Reflection on the work which emerged during the course of this Mental Health Action Plan revealed areas for improvement. As we embark on the next Mental Health Action Plan, we offer lessons-learned for exploring potential relationships and collaborations between traditional healing and biomedicine.
APA Citation
Pham, T., Koirala, R., Wainberg, M., & Kohrt, B. (2020). Reassessing the Mental Health Treatment Gap: What Happens if We Include the Impact of Traditional Healing on Mental Illness?. Community Mental Health Journal, (). http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10597-020-00705-5