The Independent

‘An unfolding nightmare’: Trieste’s pioneering mental health model is under threat

The city is considered to have the best treatment system in the wor d (AFP/Getty)

- MARK SMITH l

The Italian city that spawned one of the world’s most successful models for recovery from mental illness is facing growing

pressure from the region’s hard-right government to dismantle its globally renowned system of community psychiatry. Trieste, once the principal Adriatic seaport of the AustroHung­arian empire, and its surroundin­g region of Friuli-Venezia Giulia tucked against the borders of Austria and Slovenia, has been a beacon of holistic psychiatry reform since the 1970s, when the late Franco Basaglia began closing the city’s mental asylum.

Basaglia’s work in Trieste ultimately led to the abolition of all asylums in Italy – called Law 180, promulgate­d in 1978, and still known affectiona­tely today as Basaglia’s Law.

Now more than 4,000 people – along with dozens of prominent psychiatri­sts, including several from the UK – have signed a letter of protest condemning the regional government’s plans to downgrade its mental health service and instead introduce a system that provides new opportunit­ies for profit and capital investment.

The petition list includes UK clinical psychiatri­st and author Lucy Johnstone, John Jenkins, a former senior policy adviser in the Department of Health, the renowned US psychiatri­st Harold Pincus, vice chair of the Department of Psychiatry at Columbia University’s College of Physicians and Surgeons and SP Sashidhara­n, a Glasgow-based psychiatri­st and professor at Glasgow University’s Institute of Health and Wellbeing.

Seven former directors from the department of mental health services in Trieste and Friuli-Venezia Giulia have also signed their names in protest.

“For nearly 50 years, Trieste has had one of the best mental health systems in the world. It is an open-door approach that respects the rights of the individual and is built on a network of social support. Many of us in this country and across the world, working in mental health, have been hugely influenced by the Trieste model,” said Professor Sashidhara­n.

“The threat to this model of care by right-wing politician­s in Trieste and its region is of huge internatio­nal concern. There is a

real risk that the best mental health system in the world would be dismantled for political purposes.”

This has nothing to do with benefiting people with mental illness, but everything to do with ideology

Declaring that freedom itself is therapeuti­c, Basaglia’s radical idea was that recovery from mental illness is impossible when people are deprived of human rights and dignity.

In place of the asylum, Basaglia establishe­d a network of walk-in community mental health centres, from which he advanced his therapeuti­c principles of freedom and individual­ised recovery models, which he then combined with a myriad of community services.

His vision evolved into a unique model of deinstitut­ionalisati­on and social psychiatry, incorporat­ing community employment, housing, job training, the arts, recreation and more. The model, which soon spread to the wider Friuli-Venezia Giulia region, for decades has remained a World Health Organisati­on-designated “centre of excellence for mental health recovery”.

Its methods and principles have been emulated in more than 30 countries, including Canada, Spain, France, Australia, Brazil and parts of the UK – including at least half a dozen NHS trusts across England and Wales. A campaign is now underway to establish the model as a pilot programme in Scotland.

Psychologi­sts, psychiatri­sts and social activists from around the world who visited Trieste over the past four decades consider

the work done there as a revelation.

In terms of recovery outcomes, as well as drasticall­y reduced costs, it remains one of the most successful models of mental health treatment anywhere. In Trieste itself, suicide rates have halved over the past 20 years, and rates of drug addiction, hospitalis­ation, re-admission and homelessne­ss have all plummeted.

A recently published WHO report noted that the Trieste model is also best placed to help those suffering from mental illness amid the Covid-19 pandemic. The report added that the pandemic had “highlighte­d the inadequate and outdated nature of mental health systems and services worldwide”.

Franco Basag l ia’s radica l ideas he l ped revo l utionise the fie ld in the 1970s (Mondadori via Getty) However, the politics of Italy shifted dramatical­ly to the right. And the regional government of Friuli-Venezia Giulia, under whose political control Trieste rests, is no exception. A 2018 election handed the region’s presidency to Massimilia­no Fedriga of the far-right Northern League, which shares power with a coalition of right-wing allies, including Forza Italia and the Brothers of Italy.

Almost immediatel­y, Fedriga and his allies declared war on the “Basaglians”, characteri­sing their opposition as part of the coalition’s fight against the left. Now, under the auspices of financial cutbacks related to Covid-19, efforts to dismantle the system have accelerate­d.

Dr Roberto Mezzina, a former director of mental health services in Trieste, who is now the chair of the Internatio­nal Mental Health Collaborat­ing Network and advises on establishi­ng the Trieste model around the world, said: “The reduction of public mental health services in Trieste and Friuli-Venezia Giulia, which have been operating with exceptiona­l success for more than 40 years, has already started. We are watching this nightmare unfold with great alarm.

“The regional government’s objective is to reduce or abolish the community mental health centres under the pretence of their right-wing ideology and Covid-19 cutbacks. But this is really about bringing back the old system of hospital beds, long-term residentia­l facilities and outpatient visits based on medication.

“This has nothing to do with cost or benefiting people with mental illness, but everything to do with ideology and creating a favourable environmen­t for speculatio­n and private capital. We have built a world-class psychiatri­c recovery model here and now they are trying hard to dismantle it.”

Multiple staff cuts have already been enforced across Trieste and Friuli-Venezia Giulia’s network of community mental health centres. New managers have also been recruited in the mental

health service, many with a background in locked mental wards and who are avowed anti-reformists.

The regional government of Friuli-Venezia Giulia did not respond to requests for comment.

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