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      Evaluating the WHO Assessment Instrument for Mental Health Systems by comparing mental health policies in four countries.

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          Abstract

          Mental health is a low priority in most countries around the world. Minimal research and resources have been invested in mental health at the national level. As a result, WHO has developed the Assessment Instrument for Mental Health Systems (WHO-AIMS) to encourage countries to gather data and to re-evaluate their national mental health policy. This paper demonstrates the utility and limitations of WHO-AIMS by applying the model to four countries with different cultures, political histories and public health policies: Iraq, Japan, the Philippines and The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. WHO-AIMS provides a useful model for analysing six domains: policy and legislative framework; mental health services; mental health in primary care; human resources; education of the public at large; and monitoring and research. This is especially important since most countries do not have experts in mental health policy or resources to design their own evaluation tools for mental health systems. Furthermore, WHO-AIMS provides a standardized database for cross-country comparisons. However, limitations of the instrument include the neglect of the politics of mental health policy development, underestimation of the role of culture in mental health care utilization, and questionable measurement validity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Bull. World Health Organ.
          Bulletin of the World Health Organization
          1564-0604
          0042-9686
          Jun 2008
          : 86
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] New York University, New York, NY, USA. hamadahamid@gmail.com
          Article
          S0042-96862008000600015
          10.2471/blt.07.042788
          2647453
          18568276
          ba66c6ea-1dba-4788-9e81-21e05326d775
          History

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