Community inclusion as a human right and medical necessity for individuals with serious mentalillnesses

Authors

  • Mark S. Salzer Ph.D, Professor and Chair, Department of Rehabilitation Sciences Director, Temple University

Keywords:

Community inclusion, Social inclusion, Recovery, Mental health

Abstract

Community inclusion refers to equal opportunities for people to participate in the community and willingness to welcome and active community attitude. The opportunity to participate in the community is both a medical necessity and a rights issue. This concept provides a novel theoretical framework for the advancement of mental health policies, programs, and global practices that enable the development of the well-being and health of people with mental disorders. Eleven fundamentals for promoting community inclusion of individuals with serious mental illnesses that are supported by key conceptual, theoretical, and research evidence. These fundamentals reflect beliefs and schemas that need to be present to truly prioritize and facilitate inclusion, intervention strategies and achieve the most impactful objectives that were expected. The greater inclusion, greater community participation, which includes work, education, religion and spiritual participation, and other domains associated with having a life that makes sense, all of which generates physical, cognitive and mental benefits for anyone, disregarding the presence or absence of a mental disorder. The concept of community inclusion offers a transformative next step in the delivery of mental health services that clearly articulates community participation in meaningful areas as the target for promoting full health and wellness. 

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Published

2017-11-10

How to Cite

Salzer, M. S. (2017). Community inclusion as a human right and medical necessity for individuals with serious mentalillnesses. Vertex Revista Argentina De Psiquiatría, 28(135, set.-oct.), 367–374. Retrieved from https://revistavertex.com.ar/ojs/index.php/vertex/article/view/425