Human rights imperative for mental health reforms

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01-11-2005, 11:57 AM

إيمان أحمد
<aإيمان أحمد
تاريخ التسجيل: 10-08-2003
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20 عاما من العطاء و الصمود
مكتبة سودانيزاونلاين
Human rights imperative for mental health reforms

    .

    رغم أن هذا البيان من منظمة العفو الدولية، يتحدث عن مبادرة في أوربا، إلا أن القضية هامة وحيوية، خاصة وأن الحديث عن معايير عالمية.
    لا أعرف إن كانت هناك قوانين تحمي أصحاب الاحتياجات العقلية الخاصة في السودان، أي في خلال تلقيهم للعلاج والعون الطبي والصحي!

    إن كانت هناك قوانين فنتمني الاطلاع عليها، ولابد أن محتواها قابل للبحث والمقارنة مع بعض الدول الأخري.
    أتمني أن يخبرنا أصحاب المعرفة في هذا المجال!
    إيمان


    ........

    News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty
    International

    AI Index: IOR 40/001/2005 11 January 2005

    Human rights imperative for mental health reforms


    The only way to ensure respect for human rights in mental health
    systems and in-patient facilities is through effective
    enforcement of international human rights standards, principally
    through rights-based national legislation, Amnesty International
    said on the eve of the World Health Organization's (WHO)
    European Ministerial Conference on Mental Health in Helsinki,
    Finland, on 12-15 January 2005.


    In Europe, one fifth of children and adolescents experience
    developmental, emotional or behavioural problems, and one in
    eight have a mental disorder. Many of these disorders are
    recurrent or chronic. Mental disorders affect one person in four
    in their lifetime, and can be found in 10 per cent of the adult
    population. It has been estimated that mental disorders and
    problems will increase by 50 per cent by the year 2020. Yet,
    according to the WHO Regional Office for Europe: "All countries
    [in the region] have to work with limited resources. Too often,
    prejudice and stigma hamper the development of mental health
    policies, and are reflected in poor services, low status for
    care providers and a lack of human rights for mentally ill
    people."

    Protecting the rights of people with, or at risk of, mental
    health problems or intellectual disabilities (hereafter referred
    to as people with mental disabilities), particularly those
    placed in mental health in-patient facilities, is at the core of
    recommendations which Amnesty International has addressed to a
    number of European states. Concerns about the treatment of
    people with mental disabilities, in Romania and Bulgaria in
    particular, have been the subject of Amnesty International
    reports.

    "Mental health services must take into account that patients
    have rights too - it is essential that people with mental
    illness have a right to inform and participate in all
    decision-making and policy formulation that affect them,"
    Amnesty International said.

    International human rights standards protecting the dignity and
    human rights of people with mental disorders should be
    incorporated into mental health laws and practice of all
    European states. All states should also ensure their allocation
    of resources to mental health services is sufficient to allow
    human rights standards to be met. Amnesty International urges
    all states, to review and reform their mental health systems and
    laws to ensure compliance with international human rights norms
    and best professional practice. Mental health service users
    should play a part in that process.

    At the Helsinki Conference, the 52 countries in the WHO European
    Region are expected to agree a Mental Health Declaration and
    Action Plan for Europe. Amnesty International considers that
    these commitments must be underpinned by human rights in
    international treaties that provide:
    important protections to people with mental health disabilities,
    including the right to the highest attainable standard of
    physical and mental health;
    protection against discrimination;
    protection against torture, inhuman, or degrading treatment;
    protection against arbitrary detention.

    Amnesty International urges Member States of the WHO European
    Region to engage meaningfully in follow-up actions arising from
    the Helsinki Conference, to ensure national laws and mental
    health services respect and promote the basic rights of all
    people with mental health problems, especially those placed in
    mental health facilities, and that they are provided with
    treatment and care that is in line with international human
    rights standards and best professional practice.

    "Even if the Helsinki Declaration and Action Plan adequately
    reflect human rights standards, its implementation will require
    concerted and well coordinated action by all relevant ministries
    and other authorities. It is essential that detailed programmes
    of action follow from governments which also promote human
    rights, with clear timeframes and dedicated resources," Amnesty
    International said.

    The organization urges the institutions of the European Union
    (EU) to support a human-rights-based approach to the Declaration
    and Action Plan, and its implementation.

    "The EU has already adopted a wide number of instruments such as
    the European Convention on Human Rights, the European Charter on
    Social Rights and the Charter of Fundamental Rights. It cannot
    ignore the appalling situation of mental health patients in its
    deliberations on the proposed accession of Bulgaria and Romania
    to the EU."

    Amnesty International urges that the inextricable links between
    respect for international human rights standards and national
    mental health systems be reflected in the Action Plan.

    "Failure of government policies to respect the wider human
    rights of communities - to physical health, non-discrimination,
    housing, education or respect for one's culture for example -
    can have a profound impact on the mental health of individuals."


    Background

    WHO, the EU and the Council of Europe, and a number of member
    states of WHO European Region, are organizing a Ministerial
    Conference entitled "Mental health: Facing the challenges,
    building solutions" to be held in Helsinki, Finland from 12 to
    15 January 2005, attended by invited representatives of all 52
    Member States in the WHO/European Region and of selected
    organizations. The topics of human rights and the stigma
    attached to mental ill health and care services will be a
    central theme of the Conference.


    Within the mental health systems of some states in the European
    region, particularly grave and systematic abuses of human rights
    have been documented by Amnesty International. For further
    information see:

    Romania: Memorandum to the government concerning inpatient
    psychiatric treatment
    http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maac3OHabddx2bb0g6Xb/

    Romania: Patients at the Poiana Mare psychiatric hospital AI
    Index: http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maac3OHabddx3bb0g6Xb/

    Harry Potter joins the fight to end Czech "cage bed" use
    http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maac3OHabddx4bb0g6Xb/

    Rough Justice: The law and human rights in the Russian
    Federation
    http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maac3OHabddx5bb0g6Xb/

    Mental Illness, The Neglected Quarter, AI Ireland, February
    2004;
    Bulgaria: Far from the eyes of society
    http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maac3OHabddx6bb0g6Xb/


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