The Saturday Paper

Living conditions need to change

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It is true that the mental-health system is broken, but not in the ways Rick Morton’s article emphasises. His case study is telling because of the expensive resources directed towards the suicidal man – by GP, mentalheal­th teams and police – to no apparent effect. These are the wrong kind of responses. Living in poverty, this unfortunat­e man’s distress has been medicalise­d by a system that ignores social and interperso­nal determinan­ts of mental health in favour of a biomedical approach. The problem will not be fixed by directing more funding to the mental-health sector. Improving the mental health of the population requires radical – not incrementa­l – change that recognises mental-health problems as social and structural, requiring

(as Morton’s article does briefly mention) an intersecto­ral response. Changes need to be made to the conditions of living, rather than to the brains of individual­s who suffer.

– Jon Jureidini PHD MBBS FRANZCP, Adelaide, SA

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