Open Journal of Psychiatry & Allied Sciences

Open Access
UGC CARE (Group 1)
  • Year: 2022
  • Volume: 13
  • Issue: 1

Conceptual framework of psychiatric care in India: moving from community psychiatry to public psychiatry

  • Author:
  • Barikar C Malathesh1, Narayana Manjunatha2,*, Channaveerachari Naveen Kumar3, Suresh Bada Math4, Jagadisha Thirthalli5
  • Total Page Count: 7
  • Page Number: 3 to 9

1Department of Psychiatry, All Indian Institute of Medical Sciences, Bibinagar, Hyderabad, India

2Tele-Medicine Centre, Department of Psychiatry, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, India

3Community Psychiatry, Tele-Medicine Centre, Department of Psychiatry, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, India

4Tele-Medicine Centre and Forensic Psychiatry, Department of Psychiatry, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, India

5Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services, Department of Psychiatry, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Bengaluru, India

Abstract

The psychiatric care across western countries has evolved from mental hospitals to community psychiatry as a by-product of deinstitutionalisation. The psychiatric care in India traditionally followed the homecare then shifted to mental asylums, then to various forms of community care such as co-community care within mental hospitals, camps, rural mental health clinics, District Mental Health Programmes (DMHPs), and general hospital units/private clinics. With these evolutions, the psychiatric care in India can be divided into mental hospital psychiatry and community psychiatry. This division hinders the growth of many other sub-specialties of psychiatry such as primary care psychiatry, disaster psychiatry, public psychiatry, etc. The authors propose to abandon the concept of community psychiatry and classifying psychiatric care into two broader divisions: clinical psychiatry and public psychiatry. Clinical psychiatry is divided into hierarchy-based primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary care psychiatry. In contrast, public psychiatry is to be divided into non-hierarchy-based community/local level (micro), district level (meso), state/country (macro), and global level (mega). The proposed public psychiatry cannot function in isolation or standalone field. It shall begin to synchronise with an Indianised Jacob's concept of public health to achieve its targets. The divisions proposed above should be kept in mind for framing the future policies on psychiatric care in India.

Keywords

Deinstitutionalisation, Lunatic Asylums, Persons With Mental Illness, Chlorpromazine, Community Care, Primary Care, Clinical Psychiatry, Public Health