Ortega Francisco, Müller Manuela Rodrigues
Rio de Janeiro State University, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Front Sociol. 2020 Sep 29;5:535125. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2020.535125. eCollection 2020.
Global Mental Health (GMH) is the field of study, research, and intervention, which aims at improving access to mental health worldwide. It is based on the global burden of disease research program and on the existence of a large "treatment gap" between the need and availability of mental health services, displaying individual and social costs of undiagnosed and untreated mental disorders, especially in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC). Few academic publications in Brazil dialogue directly with the field of GMH, although several issues drawn from its agenda have been the subject of mental health policies in the country. Brazil can be classified as a middle-income country with a well-structured national health system. This system is oriented toward primary health care, which integrates both community mental health services and the broader health care network. The debate between GMH advocates and critics has unearthed old controversies in psychiatry such as universality or cultural specificity of mental disorders, their expressions, and their relationship with social and economic factors. We intend to examine how these controversies reverberate in the Brazilian mental health scenario, taking as an illustration the debates around Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in the country. ADHD discussions oppose those who argue that the condition is underdiagnosed and undertreated, and those who claim that there is overdiagnosis and overtreatment and thus, medicalization of childhood. This article presents the current status of the Brazilian mental health literature on ADHD, with emphasis on tensions around diagnosis, prevalence and interventions. Our aim is to highlight how the differential in discourse shapes the debate on ADHD in Brazil and how this may contribute to the GMH agenda. This goal will be undertaken in three steps. First, we will briefly examine studies around GMH and ADHD. Secondly, we address Brazilian studies on this theme, considering the specificities regarding the constitution of the mental health field. Finally, we will examine the debate of treatment gap vs. medicalization in the country in order to underscore the potentials and limitations of each perspective.
全球精神卫生(GMH)是一个研究、调研与干预领域,旨在改善全球范围内的精神卫生服务可及性。它基于全球疾病负担研究项目,以及精神卫生服务需求与可获得性之间存在的巨大“治疗缺口”,揭示了未诊断和未治疗的精神障碍所带来的个人和社会成本,尤其是在低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC)。巴西很少有学术出版物直接与全球精神卫生领域进行对话,尽管其议程中涉及的几个问题已成为该国精神卫生政策的主题。巴西可被归类为中等收入国家,拥有结构完善的国家卫生系统。该系统以初级卫生保健为导向,整合了社区精神卫生服务和更广泛的卫生保健网络。全球精神卫生倡导者与批评者之间的辩论揭示了精神病学中一些由来已久的争议,比如精神障碍的普遍性或文化特异性、其表现形式以及它们与社会和经济因素的关系。我们打算以巴西围绕注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)的辩论为例,审视这些争议如何在巴西的精神卫生场景中产生反响。ADHD的讨论存在分歧,一方认为该病症诊断不足且治疗不足,另一方则声称存在过度诊断和过度治疗,进而导致儿童被医学化。本文介绍了巴西精神卫生文献中关于ADHD的现状,重点关注诊断、患病率和干预措施方面的紧张关系。我们的目的是强调话语差异如何塑造巴西关于ADHD的辩论,以及这可能如何推动全球精神卫生议程。这一目标将分三步实现。首先,我们将简要审视围绕全球精神卫生和ADHD的研究。其次,我们将探讨巴西关于这一主题的研究,同时考虑精神卫生领域构成方面的特殊性。最后,我们将审视该国关于治疗缺口与医学化的辩论,以强调每种观点的潜力和局限性。