Promoting Mental Health in Indigenous Populations. Experiences from Countries. A collaboration between PAHO/WHO, Canada, Chile and Partners from the Region of the Americas 2014-2015

[Executive Summary]. In 2007, the countries of the Region of the Americas approved the Health Agenda for the Americas 2008-2017 establishing a priority for mental health. In 2014, the Pan American Health Organization’s Plan of Action on Mental Health (2015-2020) identified cross-cutting themes inclu...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Pan American Health Organization
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: PAHO 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://iris.paho.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/28415
http://www.who.int/iris/handle/10665/310759
id ftwhoiris:oai:apps.who.int:10665/310759
record_format openpolar
spelling ftwhoiris:oai:apps.who.int:10665/310759 2023-05-15T16:55:55+02:00 Promoting Mental Health in Indigenous Populations. Experiences from Countries. A collaboration between PAHO/WHO, Canada, Chile and Partners from the Region of the Americas 2014-2015 Pan American Health Organization 2016-05-19T21:48:29Z http://iris.paho.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/28415 http://www.who.int/iris/handle/10665/310759 en eng PAHO http://iris.paho.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/28415 http://www.who.int/iris/handle/10665/310759 Mental Health Health of Indigenous Peoples Ethnic Groups International Cooperation Technical Cooperation Publicationss 2016 ftwhoiris 2019-05-25T23:24:56Z [Executive Summary]. In 2007, the countries of the Region of the Americas approved the Health Agenda for the Americas 2008-2017 establishing a priority for mental health. In 2014, the Pan American Health Organization’s Plan of Action on Mental Health (2015-2020) identified cross-cutting themes including ethnicity, equity and human rights, in line with the World Health Organization’s Global Mental Health Action Plan (2013). Specialized literature indicates that the rates of mental health problems among indigenous communities are growing consistently around the world. Common issues include high suicide and substance abuse rates among indigenous youth. These, combined with numerous unfavourable social determinants result in high psychosocial vulnerability. Notwithstanding these circumstances, indigenous populations are the least likely to have access to adequate mental health services. Such realities have motivated several projects addressing issues related to indigenous wellbeing since 2009. The current collaborative project furthers work initiated by PAHO/WHO aimed at finding solutions to this complex health situation. The first goal of this project was to exchange experiences on indigenous mental health issues among participating countries from the Americas. The hope was that comparing initiatives and practices used to approach common mental health issues in different indigenous communities would yield useful new ideas. Furthermore, there was interest in exploring the potential relevance and adaptability of a standardized WHO mental health training tool – the Mental health Gap Action Programme Intervention Guide - in Nunavut. The project reported here was set up as a series of meetings and opportunities to facilitate attaining these aims, coordinated by PAHO in 2014-15. Two of these meetings, held in Chile (Santiago) and in Canada (Iqaluit), involved the active participation of representatives for indigenous healthcare. As expected, different indigenous groups are grappling with an array of common mental health issues. They have different ways of conceptualizing their problems and of organizing care, as determined by historical, geographic and cultural factors. While local, culturallyrooted solutions were not unanimously proposed, some successful intercultural interventions were reported. Representatives from the different indigenous groups expressed support for the usefulness of this project and enthusiastically requested that PAHO continue bridging indigenous mental health and global mental health. Preliminary discussions outlined possible future actions focusing on training and interventions in mental health. Other/Unknown Material Iqaluit Nunavut WHO (World Health Organization): Institutional Repository for Information Sharing (IRIS) Nunavut Canada
institution Open Polar
collection WHO (World Health Organization): Institutional Repository for Information Sharing (IRIS)
op_collection_id ftwhoiris
language English
topic Mental Health
Health of Indigenous Peoples
Ethnic Groups
International Cooperation
Technical Cooperation
spellingShingle Mental Health
Health of Indigenous Peoples
Ethnic Groups
International Cooperation
Technical Cooperation
Pan American Health Organization
Promoting Mental Health in Indigenous Populations. Experiences from Countries. A collaboration between PAHO/WHO, Canada, Chile and Partners from the Region of the Americas 2014-2015
topic_facet Mental Health
Health of Indigenous Peoples
Ethnic Groups
International Cooperation
Technical Cooperation
description [Executive Summary]. In 2007, the countries of the Region of the Americas approved the Health Agenda for the Americas 2008-2017 establishing a priority for mental health. In 2014, the Pan American Health Organization’s Plan of Action on Mental Health (2015-2020) identified cross-cutting themes including ethnicity, equity and human rights, in line with the World Health Organization’s Global Mental Health Action Plan (2013). Specialized literature indicates that the rates of mental health problems among indigenous communities are growing consistently around the world. Common issues include high suicide and substance abuse rates among indigenous youth. These, combined with numerous unfavourable social determinants result in high psychosocial vulnerability. Notwithstanding these circumstances, indigenous populations are the least likely to have access to adequate mental health services. Such realities have motivated several projects addressing issues related to indigenous wellbeing since 2009. The current collaborative project furthers work initiated by PAHO/WHO aimed at finding solutions to this complex health situation. The first goal of this project was to exchange experiences on indigenous mental health issues among participating countries from the Americas. The hope was that comparing initiatives and practices used to approach common mental health issues in different indigenous communities would yield useful new ideas. Furthermore, there was interest in exploring the potential relevance and adaptability of a standardized WHO mental health training tool – the Mental health Gap Action Programme Intervention Guide - in Nunavut. The project reported here was set up as a series of meetings and opportunities to facilitate attaining these aims, coordinated by PAHO in 2014-15. Two of these meetings, held in Chile (Santiago) and in Canada (Iqaluit), involved the active participation of representatives for indigenous healthcare. As expected, different indigenous groups are grappling with an array of common mental health issues. They have different ways of conceptualizing their problems and of organizing care, as determined by historical, geographic and cultural factors. While local, culturallyrooted solutions were not unanimously proposed, some successful intercultural interventions were reported. Representatives from the different indigenous groups expressed support for the usefulness of this project and enthusiastically requested that PAHO continue bridging indigenous mental health and global mental health. Preliminary discussions outlined possible future actions focusing on training and interventions in mental health.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Pan American Health Organization
author_facet Pan American Health Organization
author_sort Pan American Health Organization
title Promoting Mental Health in Indigenous Populations. Experiences from Countries. A collaboration between PAHO/WHO, Canada, Chile and Partners from the Region of the Americas 2014-2015
title_short Promoting Mental Health in Indigenous Populations. Experiences from Countries. A collaboration between PAHO/WHO, Canada, Chile and Partners from the Region of the Americas 2014-2015
title_full Promoting Mental Health in Indigenous Populations. Experiences from Countries. A collaboration between PAHO/WHO, Canada, Chile and Partners from the Region of the Americas 2014-2015
title_fullStr Promoting Mental Health in Indigenous Populations. Experiences from Countries. A collaboration between PAHO/WHO, Canada, Chile and Partners from the Region of the Americas 2014-2015
title_full_unstemmed Promoting Mental Health in Indigenous Populations. Experiences from Countries. A collaboration between PAHO/WHO, Canada, Chile and Partners from the Region of the Americas 2014-2015
title_sort promoting mental health in indigenous populations. experiences from countries. a collaboration between paho/who, canada, chile and partners from the region of the americas 2014-2015
publisher PAHO
publishDate 2016
url http://iris.paho.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/28415
http://www.who.int/iris/handle/10665/310759
geographic Nunavut
Canada
geographic_facet Nunavut
Canada
genre Iqaluit
Nunavut
genre_facet Iqaluit
Nunavut
op_relation http://iris.paho.org/xmlui/handle/123456789/28415
http://www.who.int/iris/handle/10665/310759
_version_ 1766046951818657792