DHAKA: Nearly 1 in 10 people worldwide have mental health disorder, but only one per cent of the global health workforce is working in the area, the WHO said today with a top official underlining that a country of India's size needs about ten times more specialists than it currently has.
"On average globally, there is less than one mental health worker per 10,000 people. In low and middle-income countries rates fall below 1 per 1,00,000 people, whereas in high-income countries the rate is 1 per 2000 people," a statement on the World Health Organisation's Mental Health Atlas 2014 report, released Tuesday, said, reports Zee News.
The report pointed that there is a large discrepancy in median number of mental health beds per 1,00,000 population: five for low and lower-middle income countries and 50 for high income countries.
The large disparities extend to outpatient services and social support, it said.
The most neglected type of mental health promotion programme are the ones that pertain to maternal mental health promotion and violence prevention of women and children, the WHO said.
Dr Shekhar Saxena, Director of WHO Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, told PTI that "for a country of India's size, we need about ten times as many specialists as we have now. So in spite of the availability of money, the progress is very slow."
The WHO official said that though over the years the mental health budget has increased significantly in the five year plans, human resources and infrastructure are the factors that are limiting the progress that can be made.
He said that the district mental health programme in India is a model for many other countries in the same region and in the same income states, but the implementation seems to be facing a lot of challenges.
BDST: 1422 HRS, JULY 15, 2015
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