Mental health in India
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Mental_health_in_India
Mental healthcare in India is a right secured to every person in the country by law. Indian mental health legislation, as per a 2017 study, meets 68% (119/175) of the World Health Organization (WHO) standards laid down in the WHO Checklist of Mental Health Legislation. However, human resources and expertise in the field of mental health in India is significantly low when compared to the population of the country. The allocation of the national healthcare budget to mental health is also low, standing at 0.16%. India's mental health policy was released in 2014.
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Mental health in India
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Pranab Mukherjee presenting the Florence Nightingale Award 2015 to the Professor & Chief Nursing Officer, Nimhans, Bangalore, Karnataka, Dr. K. Lalitha, on the occasion of the International Nurses Day, at Rashtrapati Bhavan.jpg
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Dr H. Narayan Murthy 01.jpg
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Nimhans garden 4.jpg
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A.P.J. Abdul Kalam lighting the lamp to inaugurate the National Seminar, organised by the National Commission for Women to commemorate the International Women’s Day on the theme Mentally Ill Women... .jpg
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Mental healthcare in India is a right secured to every person in the country by law. Indian mental health legislation, as per a 2017 study, meets 68% (119/175) of the World Health Organization (WHO) standards laid down in the WHO Checklist of Mental Health Legislation. However, human resources and expertise in the field of mental health in India is significantly low when compared to the population of the country. The allocation of the national healthcare budget to mental health is also low, standing at 0.16%. India's mental health policy was released in 2014. The first Western-style mental healthcare institutions date back to the factories of the East India Company in the 17th century. Mental healthcare in colonial India and the years post-independence was custodial and segregationist. It slowly moved towards a more curative and therapeutic nature by the end of the 20th century. Public interest litigations and judicial intervention, followed by reviews and monitoring of the National Human Rights Commission and National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, coupled with an expansion of facilities for developing human resources in the field of mental healthcare, among other changes, has all positively contributed to the state of mental health and healthcare in the country.
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