2019
DOI: 10.1192/bjp.2019.138
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Systematic evaluation of the QualityRights programme in public mental health facilities in Gujarat, India

Abstract: Background Recognising the significant extent of poor-quality care and human rights issues in mental health, the World Health Organization launched the QualityRights initiative in 2013 as a practical tool for implementing human rights standards including the United Nations Convention on Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) at the ground level. Aims To describe the first large-scale implementation and evaluation of QualityRights as a scalable human rights-based approach in public me… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(50 citation statements)
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“…They include: (1) developing an evidence-based medicine selection process; (2) promoting information and education activities for health-care professionals and users on the selection process; (3) regulating psychotropic medicine availability; (4) implementing a reliable health and supply chain system; (5) ensuring the quality of psychotropic medicines including generics; (6) developing a community-based system of mental health care; (7) developing policies on the affordability of medicines; (8) developing pricing policies and fostering a sustainable financing system; (9) adopting evidence-based guidelines; (10) monitoring the use of psychotropic medicines; and (11) promoting training initiatives for health-care professionals on the critical appraisal of scientific evidence and appropriate use of psychotropic medicines. This is in addition to adequately addressing human rights' issues in patients with mental disorders where these currently exist in LMICs including implementing the QualityRights program building on current successes [61].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…They include: (1) developing an evidence-based medicine selection process; (2) promoting information and education activities for health-care professionals and users on the selection process; (3) regulating psychotropic medicine availability; (4) implementing a reliable health and supply chain system; (5) ensuring the quality of psychotropic medicines including generics; (6) developing a community-based system of mental health care; (7) developing policies on the affordability of medicines; (8) developing pricing policies and fostering a sustainable financing system; (9) adopting evidence-based guidelines; (10) monitoring the use of psychotropic medicines; and (11) promoting training initiatives for health-care professionals on the critical appraisal of scientific evidence and appropriate use of psychotropic medicines. This is in addition to adequately addressing human rights' issues in patients with mental disorders where these currently exist in LMICs including implementing the QualityRights program building on current successes [61].…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, helping to scale up mental health services using a wide range of different professionals. The WHO also introduced the QualityRights initiative in 2013 to improve the care of patients with mental health disorders [57,58,61,62], with studies in sites such as Gujarat in India showing that the QualityRights programme can be effectively implemented in resource-limited setting to improve the quality of mental health services [61]. We are also aware of the Partnership for Mental Health Development in Africa (PaM-D) to bring together diverse stakeholders to help create an infrastructure to develop mental health research capacity and science.…”
Section: Generalmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…More challengingly, a focus on the experience of social exclusion may generate momentum away from individual‐level explanations of experience and towards activities to generate collective action to improve mental health and social care system compliance with human rights legislation 9 . Modesty in clinical knowledge claims is empirically justified.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%