Integrating mental health services: the Finnish experience

The aim of this paper is to give a short description of the most important developments of mental health services in Finland during the 1990s, examine their influences on the organisation and provision of services, and describe shortly some national efforts to handle the new situation. The Finnish m...

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Main Authors: Ville Lehtinen, Vappu Taipale
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2001-06-01
Series:International Journal of Integrated Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ijic.org/index.php/ijic/article/view/30
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author Ville Lehtinen
Vappu Taipale
author_facet Ville Lehtinen
Vappu Taipale
author_sort Ville Lehtinen
collection DOAJ
description The aim of this paper is to give a short description of the most important developments of mental health services in Finland during the 1990s, examine their influences on the organisation and provision of services, and describe shortly some national efforts to handle the new situation. The Finnish mental health service system experienced profound changes in the beginning of the 1990s. These included the integration of mental health services, being earlier under own separate administration, with other specialised health services, decentralisation of the financing of health services, and de-institutionalisation of the services. The same time Finland underwent the deepest economic recession in Western Europe, which resulted in cut-offs especially in the mental health budgets.<br> Conducting extensive national research and development programmes in the field of mental health has been one typically Finnish way of supporting the mental health service development. The first of these national programmes was the Schizophrenia Project 1981–97, whose main aims were to decrease the incidence of new long-term patients and the prevalence of old long-stay patients by developing an integrated treatment model. The Suicide Prevention Project 1986–96 aimed at raising awareness of this special problem and decreasing by 20% the proportionally high suicide rate in Finland. The National Depression Programme 1994–98 focused at this clearly increasing public health concern by several research and development project targeted both to the general population and specifically to children, primary care and specialised services. The latest, still on-going Meaningful Life Programme 1998–2003 which main aim is, by multi-sectoral co-operation, to improve the quality of life for people suffering from or living with the threat of mental disorders. Furthermore, the government launched in 1999 a new Goal and Action Programme for Social Welfare and Health Care 2000–2003, in which mental health has been chosen as one of the eight priority areas.
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spelling doaj.art-3db8e5e9888641f5b828b8b1be1cf51c2022-12-22T01:22:21ZengUbiquity PressInternational Journal of Integrated Care1568-41562001-06-011230Integrating mental health services: the Finnish experienceVille LehtinenVappu TaipaleThe aim of this paper is to give a short description of the most important developments of mental health services in Finland during the 1990s, examine their influences on the organisation and provision of services, and describe shortly some national efforts to handle the new situation. The Finnish mental health service system experienced profound changes in the beginning of the 1990s. These included the integration of mental health services, being earlier under own separate administration, with other specialised health services, decentralisation of the financing of health services, and de-institutionalisation of the services. The same time Finland underwent the deepest economic recession in Western Europe, which resulted in cut-offs especially in the mental health budgets.<br> Conducting extensive national research and development programmes in the field of mental health has been one typically Finnish way of supporting the mental health service development. The first of these national programmes was the Schizophrenia Project 1981–97, whose main aims were to decrease the incidence of new long-term patients and the prevalence of old long-stay patients by developing an integrated treatment model. The Suicide Prevention Project 1986–96 aimed at raising awareness of this special problem and decreasing by 20% the proportionally high suicide rate in Finland. The National Depression Programme 1994–98 focused at this clearly increasing public health concern by several research and development project targeted both to the general population and specifically to children, primary care and specialised services. The latest, still on-going Meaningful Life Programme 1998–2003 which main aim is, by multi-sectoral co-operation, to improve the quality of life for people suffering from or living with the threat of mental disorders. Furthermore, the government launched in 1999 a new Goal and Action Programme for Social Welfare and Health Care 2000–2003, in which mental health has been chosen as one of the eight priority areas.http://www.ijic.org/index.php/ijic/article/view/30mental healthintegration of mental health servicesdecentralisationde-institutionalisationR&D programmes
spellingShingle Ville Lehtinen
Vappu Taipale
Integrating mental health services: the Finnish experience
International Journal of Integrated Care
mental health
integration of mental health services
decentralisation
de-institutionalisation
R&D programmes
title Integrating mental health services: the Finnish experience
title_full Integrating mental health services: the Finnish experience
title_fullStr Integrating mental health services: the Finnish experience
title_full_unstemmed Integrating mental health services: the Finnish experience
title_short Integrating mental health services: the Finnish experience
title_sort integrating mental health services the finnish experience
topic mental health
integration of mental health services
decentralisation
de-institutionalisation
R&D programmes
url http://www.ijic.org/index.php/ijic/article/view/30
work_keys_str_mv AT villelehtinen integratingmentalhealthservicesthefinnishexperience
AT vapputaipale integratingmentalhealthservicesthefinnishexperience