Arab Times

Experts urge huge expansion of online therapy

Mental health burden growing across the world

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LONDON, April 4, (Agencies): A “massive and growing” mental health burden across the world can only be tackled successful­ly with a major expansion of online psychiatri­c resources such as virtual clinics and web-based psychother­apies, specialist­s said on Tuesday.

With resources tight and the global mental health system only serving around 10 percent of patients even now, specialist­s speaking at the European Congress on Psychiatry (ECP) said the web is the only option for signi?cant extra treatment capacity.

The World Health Organizati­on (WHO) said last week mental disorders — in particular depression — are now the leading cause of ill health and disability worldwide.

Rates of depression have risen by more than 18 percent since 2005, the WHO says, and a lack of support for mental health combined with a common fear of stigma means many do not get the treatment they need.

Michael Krausz, a professor of psychiatry at the University of British Columbia in Canada, and a leading specialist at the World Psychiatri­c Associatio­n, said “E-mental health” should be a major part of the answer.

“Through a proactive approach we can create an additional virtual system of care which could build capacity, improve the quality of care and make mental health care more effective,” he told the ECP.

Web-based psychologi­cal treatments such as online cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) have proven effective in several conditions including depression and anxiety. Krausz said there is also potential for online CBT to be modified for conditions such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

“Online assessment­s, web-based psychother­apies,... and online research strategies will significan­tly change the field,” he told the congress.

Technologi­es like virtual reality and arti?cial intelligen­ce can also be used in certain therapies for anxiety, and various online games and apps are being developed to support treatment of depression in children.

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TRENTON, NJ: A top maker of brand-name and generic narcotic painkiller­s has agreed to pay the US government $35 million to resolve a probe of its distributi­on of those drugs.

Mallinckro­dt PLC said Monday it has reached an agreement with the US Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion and the US attorneys for the Eastern District of Michigan and Northern District of New York. The deal is subject to further review and approval by the DEA and Justice Department.

WELLINGTON, New Zealand: An outbreak of typhoid fever among a church community in New Zealand has caused one death and left at least 14 other people hospitaliz­ed, health authoritie­s said Tuesday.

A person who traveled to the Pacific Islands recently apparently contracted the disease there then spread it to others in New Zealand, Health Minister Jonathan Coleman said.

Most of the cases began emerging last week, and Coleman said authoritie­s don’t believe the disease has been spread through water contaminat­ion.

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