What is public mental health?
Public mental health involves: Reference Campion and Fitch1
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• assessment of levels of mental disorder and well-being, risk and protective factors in the local population including those from higher-risk groups
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• enabling delivery of appropriate level of interventions to treat mental disorder early, prevent mental disorder and promote mental well-being
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• ensuring that people at higher risk of mental disorder and poor mental well-being are proportionately prioritised in assessment and intervention delivery.
The cross-government public mental health strategy, Confident Communities, Brighter Futures, 2 describes a range of effective public mental health interventions. Both the current and previous cross-government mental health strategies 3,4 outline a twin-track approach, which includes early intervention for mental disorder and promotion of population mental well-being. One of the reasons for such an approach is the recognition that even if all those with mental disorder received the best available treatment, this would only partially alleviate the burden of mental disorder.
The Royal College of Psychiatrists’ position statement on public mental health 5 highlights the important public mental health role of psychiatrists. Many psychiatrists already adopt a public mental health approach in their work, although the position statement states that they should be engaged in the commissioning process and informing commissioners of the expected prevalence of mental disorders to anticipate levels of required service provision and unmet need. 5 The College’s position statement also advises that psychiatrists need to be engaged in assessing the promotion needs of their local population.
The government’s public mental health White Paper 6 signalled a new approach to public health, which places mental health and well-being at the heart of the new system, as an integral and complementary part of public health in England. Clinical commissioning groups and local authorities now jointly lead the local health and care system through health and well-being boards in collaboration with their communities. The boards have a key role in transforming health and care and achieving better population health and well-being through:
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• joint strategic needs assessments (JSNAs), which bring together into one report the current and future health and social care needs of the local population to inform health and social care planning and commissioning 7
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• joint health and well-being strategies, which set out the local strategy and the priorities identified by the health and well-being board to tackle the needs identified in their JSNAs, which therefore require accurate information about level of unmet mental health need.
Public mental health intelligence relevant to psychiatrists
The following four areas of public mental health intelligence are relevant to both psychiatrists and JSNAs:
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1 local levels of mental disorder and well-being, including in higher-risk groups
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2 local levels of risk and protective factors
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3 impact of mental disorder and poor well-being
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4 and proportion of the population receiving public mental health interventions, including those with mental disorder.
Local levels of mental disorder and well-being including in higher-risk groups
One in two people experience a mental disorder during their lifetime. Reference Kessler, Berglund, Dernier, Jin, Merikangas and Walters8 In England, national psychiatric morbidity surveys show that mental disorder is common:
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• 10% of children and young people experience a mental disorder Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman9
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• 17.6% of adults experience at least one common mental disorder Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10
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• 0.4% of adults have psychosis Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10
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• 6% have alcohol dependence Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10
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• 3% are dependent on illegal drugs Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10
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• 21% have tobacco dependence Reference McManus, Meltzer and Campion11
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• 5.4% of men and 3.4% of women have diagnosable personality disorder Reference Singleton, Bumpstead, O'Brien, Lee and Meltzer12
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• 5% of people aged over 65 and 20% of those aged over 80 have dementia. Reference Knapp and Prince13
Subthreshold mental disorders are also common, result in significant burden and increase the risk of transition to threshold disorder. Levels of subthreshold disorder include:
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• 18% of 5- to 16-year-olds experience subthreshold conduct disorder Reference Colman, Murray, Abbott, Maughan, Kuh and Croudace14
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• 17% of adults experience subthreshold common mental disorder Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10
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• 5% of adults experience subthreshold psychosis Reference van Os, Linscott, Myin-Germeys, Delespaul and Krabbendam15
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• 24% of adults drink more than the safe upper limit of alcohol. Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10
Well-being levels in the UK have been highlighted by an Office for National Statistics survey 16 of 165 000 adults, which found that for life satisfaction 76% scored 7 or more out of 10 and 7% scored less than 5, for life being worthwhile 80% scored 7 or more and 5% scored less than 5, whereas for happiness yesterday 78% scored 7 or more and 11% scored less than 5. An important risk factor for poor well-being affecting a large proportion of the population is mental disorder and subthreshold mental disorder.
Local variation of mental disorder and well-being
Although information about national levels of mental disorder and well-being is helpful, significant local variation occurs. Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10,Reference Deacon, Carlin, Spalding, Giles, Stansfield and Hughes17 Such variation is due to differences in local levels of risk and protective factors as well as variation in numbers from higher-risk groups. This highlights the importance of accurate assessment of local levels of mental disorder and well-being to inform about numbers requiring intervention and about the level of unmet need. Reference Campion and Fitch1
Levels of mental disorder and well-being in higher-risk groups
Certain groups at much higher risk of mental disorder are also likely to have lower levels of well-being and disproportionately benefit from public mental health interventions. Therefore, information is required about both the local numbers from such groups and their level of increased risk. 6 Examples of child and adolescent groups with several-fold increased risk include children with intellectual disability, special education needs, physical illness, with a parent with mental disorder, looked-after children and young offenders. Reference Campion and Fitch1 Examples of adult higher-risk groups include certain Black and minority ethnic groups, homeless people, prisoners, and lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual people.
Local levels of risk and protective factors
Mental disorder and well-being are associated with a range of risk and protective factors. Reference Campion and Fitch1,Reference Campion, Bhui and Bhugra18 A public health approach emphasises the importance of addressing such factors to prevent mental disorder and promote well-being. Commissioning decisions can be informed by local level of risk and protective factors including in higher-risk groups as well as impact of such factors. Reference Campion and Fitch1
Factors associated with increased risk of mental disorder during childhood and adolescence include: Reference Campion and Fitch1
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• during pregnancy and at birth:
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• smoking during pregnancy is associated with increased risk of conduct disorder Reference Murray, Irving, Farrington, Colman and Bloxsom19
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• alcohol consumption during pregnancy: fetal alcohol spectrum disorder is the most common non-genetic cause of intellectual disability Reference Carpenter20
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• stress: maternal stress during pregnancy is associated with child behavioural problems Reference O'Connor, Heron, Golding and Glover21 and impaired cognitive and language development Reference Bergman, Sarkar, O'Connor, Modi and Glover22
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• premature birth is associated with increased risk of mental illness in offspring Reference Nosarti, Reichenberg, Murray, Cnattingius, Lambe and Yin23
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• women with mental disorder have an increased risk of low birth weight and prematurity in their offspring 24,Reference Grote, Bridge, Gavin, Melville, Ivengar and Katon25
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socioeconomic factors including household income, state benefits, tenure and type of area: Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman9 children from lowest household income have threefold increased risk of mental disorder Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman9
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family factors including family structure Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman9
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parental factors: education qualifications, employment and presence of mental disorder Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman9
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child factors: age, gender, ethnicity, special education needs and physical illness.
Some of the strongest predictors of mental disorder are childhood adversity, particularly when associated with maladaptive family functioning (such as parental mental disorder, child abuse, neglect). Reference Kessler, McLaughlin, Green, Gruber, Sampson and Zaslavsky26 For instance, child abuse is associated with increased risk of depression (odds ratio (OR) = 2.9), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (OR = 4.0), psychosis (OR = 2.7), alcohol dependence (OR = 1.8) and drug problems (OR = 2.1). Reference Jonas, Bebbington, McManus, Meltzer, Jenkins and Kuipers27 Repeated sexual abuse during childhood and adolescence is associated with even higher rates of adult mental disorder including depressive disorder (OR = 6.2), PTSD (OR = 6.8), probable psychosis (OR = 15.3), alcohol dependence (OR = 5.2), eating disorder (OR = 11.7) Reference Jonas, Bebbington, McManus, Meltzer, Jenkins and Kuipers27 and attempted suicide (OR = 9.4). Reference Bebbington, Cooper, Minot, Brugha, Jenkins and Meltzer28
Factors associated with mental disorder in adulthood include deprivation, unemployment, debt, violence, stressful life events, inadequate housing and fuel poverty. Reference Campion and Fitch1 Factors associated with dementia include smoking, hypertension and high body mass index.
Inequality and deprivation are key underlying elements for a range of risk factors for mental disorder and poor mental well-being, which then further increase inequality. Whereas higher-risk groups benefit more from public mental health interventions, larger groups at less elevated risk also benefit. Therefore, a proportionate universalistic approach can both target higher-risk groups and accommodate larger population groups.
Population level of risk factors
As well as level of increased risk associated with particular factors, it is also important to assess the local level of such risk factors. Reference Campion and Fitch1,Reference Campion, Bhui and Bhugra18 For instance, 25.3% of 18- to 24-year-olds and 18.6% of 11- to 17-year-olds experienced severe maltreatment during childhood. Similarly, 2.9% of women and 0.8% of men experienced sexual abuse in childhood (sexual intercourse), whereas 11.1% of women and 5.3% of men experienced sexual touching in childhood. Reference Campion and Fitch1 The Guidance for Commissioning Public Mental Health Services Reference Campion and Fitch1 also provides information on how to accurately estimate overall numbers of people in different higher-risk groups who have a mental disorder.
Impact of mental disorder and poor well-being
In the UK, mental disorder is responsible for 22.8% of burden of disease; for comparison, the figure for cardiovascular disease is 16.2% and for cancer 15.9%. 29 No other health condition matches mental ill health in the combined extent of prevalence, persistence and breadth of impact. It is therefore important that local strategy development, commissioning and public health take account of the local impact of mental disorder.
A key reason for the size of impact is that mental disorder starts early, with 50% of lifetime mental illness (excluding dementia) starting by age 14, Reference Kessler, Berglund, Dernier, Jin, Merikangas and Walters8,Reference Kim-Cohen, Caspi, Moffitt, Harrington, Milne and Poulton30 and 75% starting by the mid-20s. Reference Kessler, Amminger, Aguilar-Gaxiola, Alonso, Lee and Ustün31 Mental disorder during childhood and adolescence results in a broad range of disadvantages including worse health, social skills and school outcomes, higher levels of health-risk behaviours such as smoking, alcohol and drug misuse, higher levels of self-harm and suicide, as well as antisocial behaviour and offending (Table 1). Reference Campion and Fitch1,Reference Campion, Bhui and Bhugra18
Emotional disorder, % |
Conduct disorder, % |
Hyperkinetic disorder, % |
Whole survey prevalence, % |
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Age 5-16 years | ||||
Health and social skill outcomes | ||||
Health is fair or bad (parent report) | 23 | 17 | 18 | 7 |
Found it harder than average to make friends | 35 | 24 | 32 | 10 |
No friends | 6 | 8 | 10 | 2 |
School outcomes | ||||
2 or more years behind in intellectual development | 23 | 36 | 40 | 9 |
More than 15 days’ absence in the previous term | 17 | 14 | 11 | 4 |
Ever been excluded from school | 12 | 34 | 29 | 2 |
Age 11-16 years | ||||
Self-reported risk-taking behaviours | 19 | 30 | 15 | 6 |
Regularly smokes | ||||
Regularly drinks | 13 | 19 | 13 | 9 |
Drinks twice a week or more | 5 | 12 | 7 | 3 |
Taken drugs at some time | 20 | 28 | 23 | 8 |
Taken drugs, mainly cannabis | 16 | 23 | 18 | 7 |
Taken drugs other than cannabis | 7 | 16 | 7 | 2 |
Self-reported self-harm | 28 | 21 | 18 | 7 |
Mental disorder during childhood and adolescence also results in worse subsequent adult health outcomes including higher rates of adult mental disorder and suicide, unemployment and lower earnings, marital problems, crime and violence. Reference Campion and Fitch1 In adults, mental disorder increases risk of:
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• physical illness
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• reduced life expectancy - for instance, schizophrenia is associated with 20.5 years’ reduced life expectancy for men and 16.4 years’ reduced life expectancy for women Reference Brown, Kim, Mitchell and Inskip32
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• suicide and self-harm
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• health-risk behaviour including poor diet, less exercise, more smoking, drug and alcohol misuse; smoking is the largest single preventable cause of death, yet 42% of adult tobacco consumption in England is by those with mental disorder Reference McManus, Meltzer and Campion11 and 43% of under-17-year-old smokers have either emotional or conduct disorder Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman9
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• unemployment
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• poor housing
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• stigma and discrimination.
Economic impact of mental disorder
National costs of mental disorder which arise from this broad range of factors are as follows (such costs can also be calculated locally):
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• to economy: £105.2 billion annual cost of mental health problems in England 33
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• to the National Health Service (NHS): £11.9 billion or 11.1% of annual budget spent on mental health services in 2009/2010 34
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• to UK employers: £28.3 billion annually 35
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• crime: £60 billion annual cost of crime in England and Wales by adults who had conduct problems during childhood and adolescence. 36
Benefits of mental well-being
The benefits of well-being are due to more than just absence of mental disorder. 5 Health benefits of mental well-being include reductions in: mental disorder in children and adolescents, including persistence; mental disorder and suicide in adults; physical illness; associated healthcare utilisation; and mortality. Reference Campion and Fitch1,Reference Campion, Bhui and Bhugra18 Benefits of mental well-being outside health include improved educational outcomes, healthier lifestyle, reduced risk-taking, increased productivity at work, fewer missed days off work, higher income, better social relationships, reduced antisocial behaviour, crime and violence, and reduced substance misuse.
Numbers receiving intervention to treat mental disorder, prevent mental disorder and promote mental health: estimating level of unmet need
Regarding treatment, the most recent national psychiatric morbidity surveys show that only a minority of those in the UK with mental disorder except psychosis receive any intervention; Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman9,Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10 the following proportion receiving any intervention for different mental disorder:
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• 23-28% of children with emotional and conduct disorders are seen by child and adolescent mental health services and receive less support from other services
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• 24% of adults with common mental disorder; however, less than 10% of older people with depression receive adequate treatment
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• 28% of adults screening positive for PTSD
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• 81% of adults with probable psychosis received some form of treatment compared with 85% in 2000
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• 65% of adults with ‘psychotic disorder’ in past year
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• 14% of adults with alcohol dependence
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• 14% of adults with cannabis dependence
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• 36% of adults with dependence on other drugs.
Public mental health commissioning guidance Reference Campion and Fitch1 enables estimation of the local proportion of those with different mental disorder who receive intervention, thereby highlighting the size of unmet need. The guidance also draws attention to the fact that an even smaller proportion receive prevention or promotion interventions and highlights ways to estimate local promotion and prevention of unmet need. Establishing the size of unmet need informs the JSNA, which in turn informs health and well-being board decisions regarding priorities and commissioning.
The proportion of individuals receiving public mental health interventions is related to available local resources. The commissioning guidance Reference Campion and Fitch1 includes spend per head of population since level of local resource often does not reflect the level of mental disorder and poor well-being.
The previous section on public mental health intelligence can support coordinated delivery of effective public mental health intervention.
Delivery of effective public mental health interventions
A range of effective public mental health interventions to treat mental disorder early, prevent mental disorder and promote well-being are outlined in several policy and other publications. 2-6,Reference Campion, Bhui and Bhugra18
Early intervention for mental disorder is associated with improved outcomes, but it can also prevent a significant proportion of adult mental disorder Reference Kim-Cohen, Caspi, Moffitt, Harrington, Milne and Poulton30 and associated wide-ranging consequences. Early promotion of recovery through activities such as supported employment, housing assistance and debt advice is also important. Early promotion of physical health, prevention of health-risk behaviour and detection of physical illness can defend against the significantly reduced life expectancy in those who develop a mental disorder. Reference Campion and Fitch1
One of the reasons why only a minority of people with a mental disorder receive any intervention is poor recognition by both the general population and health staff. Early recognition and intervention for mental disorder can be facilitated by both health staff training and wider population campaigns to highlight symptoms, similar to campaigns for other health issues, such as cancer. Regarding prevention, although early intervention for mental disorder, associated health risk behaviour and physical health can prevent a range of outcomes, a number of interventions can prevent mental disorder and suicide. Reference Campion and Fitch1 These include interventions to address inequalities, stigma, discrimination, violence and abuse, whereas others can prevent a range of health risk behaviours such as smoking. In addition, a range of effective interventions can promote well-being across the life course. Reference Campion and Fitch1
Public mental health interventions are delivered by a range of service providers including primary and secondary care, social care, public health, local authorities, third sector, education, employers and criminal justice. Therefore, public mental health also has an important role in facilitating greater collaboration and coordination of activities of such a group of organisations. A coordinated delivery of public mental health interventions results not only in improvement in a range of outcomes, but also in economic savings, reduced inequalities and parity of esteem.
Due to the wide impact of mental disorder and well-being, public mental health interventions improve a range of NHS, public health and social care outcomes, Reference Campion and Fitch1 resulting in improved mental health, physical health, life expectancy, healthy lifestyles, resilience, economic productivity, social functioning and quality of life. They also reduce the burden and economic costs of mental ill health, health-risk behaviours, crime and violence.
Economic savings
The London School of Economics and Political Science estimated the significant economic savings which arise from public mental health interventions even in the short term as part of the mental health strategy. Reference Knapp, McDaid and Parsonage37 This work highlighted where savings occur and stressed that lack of intervention results in higher economic cost. For early intervention of mental disorder, each pound spent results in the following net savings sometimes within the first year: Reference Knapp, McDaid and Parsonage37
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• parenting interventions for families with conduct disorder (£8)
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• early diagnosis and treatment of depression at work (£5)
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• early intervention of psychosis (£18)
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• early intervention for psychosis at-risk mental state (£10)
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• screening and brief interventions in primary care for alcohol misuse (£12).
For mental health promotion, each pound results in the following net savings: Reference Knapp, McDaid and Parsonage37
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• school-based social and emotional learning programmes (£84)
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• school-based interventions to reduce bullying (£14)
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• work-based mental health promotion (£10 with savings in year 1)
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• debt advice services (£4).
Targeted promotion interventions for those recovering from mental illness result in the following savings: Reference Campion and Fitch1
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• employment support (individual placement support) for people with severe mental illness: annual savings of £6000 per client
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• housing support services for men with enduring mental illness: annual savings £11 000-£20 000 per client.
The commissioning guidance Reference Campion and Fitch1 outlines how local economic savings of such interventions can be calculated depending on the proportion receiving intervention. This can enhance investment.
Reduced inequalities and parity of esteem
As highlighted in the section on prevention, interventions to address inequality can also prevent mental disorder. Reference Campion and Fitch1 Mental disorder itself results in a further range of inequalities which can also be prevented by early treatment of mental disorder, early intervention for health-risk behaviours, early treatment of physical illness and early targeted promotion of well-being to facilitate recovery.
Only a minority of people with mental disorder in the UK receive any intervention, Reference Green, McGinnity, Meltzer, Ford and Goodman9,Reference McManus, Meltzer, Brugha, Bebbington and Jenkins10 in contrast to conditions such as cancer where almost all affected receive intervention. Those with mental disorder also have reduced access to interventions for health-risk behaviour and treatment of physical illness compared with the general population. Almost no spend occurs on cost-effective interventions to prevent mental disorder and promote mental well-being despite its prominence in mental health and public health policy. 34 Such a level of inaction has a broad range of impacts and costs affecting a large proportion of the population and may be due to a combination of lack of public mental health knowledge and discriminating attitudes towards mental health. Transparency about the local impact of mental disorder, proportion receiving intervention and the effects of inaction can facilitate parity and investment.
Conclusions
Clinical commissioning groups and local authorities now jointly lead local healthcare systems through health and well-being boards in collaboration with their communities, 7 whereas local authorities have also taken on responsibility for public health. Significant local variation exists in levels of mental disorder, well-being and public mental health interventions. The JSNA is a key vehicle for highlighting local relevant public mental health information, although this is often missing. The commissioning guidance Reference Campion and Fitch1 enables inclusion of local public mental health information such as level of risk and protective factors, numbers from groups at higher risk of mental disorder and poor well-being, local levels of mental disorder and well-being, and proportion receiving public mental health interventions, including those from higher-risk groups, which enables estimation of level of unmet need. Such information enables transparency about the proportion of the local population which commissioners consider acceptable to provide cost-effective public mental health interventions for. The local impact of such decisions including economic costs or savings can also be estimated.
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