Dissolving the dichotomy in health and healthcare
- PMID: 29902046
- DOI: 10.1037/fsh0000364
Dissolving the dichotomy in health and healthcare
Abstract
The New England Journal of Medicine Catalyst recently published an article entitled "It's Time to Treat Physical and Mental Health With Equal Intent" (Compton-Phillips & Mohta, 2018). The article describes a survey of the NEJM Catalyst Insights Council, a qualified group (n=565) of U.S. executives, clinical leaders, and clinicians who are directly involved in health care delivery. Ninety nine percent of council members responded that mental health should not only be integrated into ambulatory medical care settings but also embrace a "shared concept of mutual responsibility" (p. 11). As a long-time clinician, educator, and advocate for integrated care, Runyan was so pleased to see this dogmatic statement in a New England Journal of Medicine publication. Labeling disease as either physical or emotional has never served the individual well and may further exacerbate existing stigma and reluctance to seek the most appropriate services. Runyan argues it is time to use intentional language to avoid deconstructing physical and mental health in our discourse or be complicit when others dichotomize measurement and funding. Runyan challenges leaders and aspiring leaders in the field of integrated care to use language and advocate for measures that blur, if not dissolve, this unhelpful and artificial dichotomy. (PsycINFO Database Record
(c) 2018 APA, all rights reserved).
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