Mental Health: The case for a cross-jurisdictional approach combining policy and research efforts on the island of Ireland

Mental Health: The case for a cross-jurisdictional approach combining policy and research efforts on the island of Ireland by Dr Patricia Clarke

Mental Health: The case for a cross-jurisdictional approach combining policy and research efforts on the island of Ireland by Dr Patricia Clarke

Despite the fact that mental illness is the most common health condition on the island – affecting every fourth citizen – it has long been treated as the ‘Cinderella’ sector of the health services in both Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland. In this report Dr Patricia Clarke looks at the context and challenges to the transformation of mental health on the island to make it person-centred and provided with seamless community-based services. Recent separate but parallel reports on mental health policy in the two jurisdictions both concluded that this was required. She compares these two main mental health policy documents, theBamford Review in Northern Ireland and A Vision for Change in the Republic of Ireland, and identifies similarities and differences in policy and research approaches across the border. She finds that 80% of publicly-funded mental health research in the Republic and 57% in the UK takes place in universities.

See the report.

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Notes from the Next Door Neighbours

Notes from the Next Door Neighbours

WHAT THEY SAY…

I applaud the Director, Andy Pollak, and his team on a tremendous record of achievement over well nigh 12 years. Pages 112-173 of the Journal, on the Centre’s work, show just how far-reaching and significant is its range and how it touches on areas so relevant to the quality of our future on the island. I saw this at first hand through my involvement for several years in a highly innovative programme it ran for the training of personnel engaged in cross-border policy or operations. The Centre’s Journal typifies the quality of excellence which the Centre brings to all that it does. Beautifully produced, a pleasure just to handle but, most important of all, a treasure chest of highly readable articles written to the highest professional standards. Start any of these articles and you will become hooked. And not just hooked, but challenged, because these articles irresistibly prompt the response: What must be done about this? — Sir George Quigley, Chairman, Bombardier Aerospace