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Non-governmental organization From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The World Federation for Mental Health (WFMH) is an international, multi-professional non-governmental organization (NGO), including citizen volunteers and former patients. It was founded in 1948 in the same era as the United Nations (UN) and the World Health Organization (WHO).[1]
The goal of this international organization includes;
The Federation, through its members and contacts in more than 94 countries on six continents, has responded to international mental health crises through its role as the only worldwide grassroots advocacy and public education organization in the mental health field. Its organizational and individual membership includes mental health workers of all disciplines, consumers of mental health services, family members, and concerned citizens. At its very outset the WFMH was concerned with educating both the public and influential professionals, and with human relations, with a view both to the health of individuals and that of groups and nations.[1] The WFMH founding document, "Mental Health and World Citizenship", understood "world citizenship" in terms of a "common humanity" respecting individual and cultural differences, and declared that "the ultimate goal of mental health is to help [people] live with their fellows in one world.[1]
Members include mental health service providers and service users. In 2009, the World Fellowship for Schizophrenia and Allied Disorders, an international network of families of people with serious mental illness, merged with the World Federation. The World Federation has close ties with the World Health Organization. For many years after its founding, the WFMH was the only NGO of its kind with a close working relationship with UN agencies, particularly the WHO. In recent decades, though, a number of international mental health organizations, often limited to members of particular professions, have developed. In varying degree they have filled needs formerly addressed mainly by WFMH.[1] The WFMH envisions a world in which mental health is a priority for all people. Public policies and programs reflect the crucial importance of mental health in the lives of individuals.[1] The first Director General of the WHO, G. Brock Chisholm, who was a psychiatrist, was one of the leaders in forming the federation with the goal of creating a representative organization that could consult with the UN on mental health issues.
The mission of the World Federation for Mental Health is to promote the advancement of mental health awareness, prevention of mental disorders, advocacy, and best practice recovery focused interventions worldwide. Mental health day is celebrated at the initiative of the World Federation of Mental Health and WHO supports this initiative through raising awareness on mental health issues using its strong relationships with the Ministries of health and civil society organizations across the globe.[3] Mental Illness Awareness Week (MIAW) is an annual national public education campaign designed to help open the eyes of Canadians to the reality of mental illness. The week was established in 1992 by the Canadian Psychiatric Association, and is now coordinated by the Canadian Alliance on Mental Illness and Mental Health (CAMIMH) in cooperation with all its member organizations and many other supporters across Canada.[4]
Event | Year | Location | Theme |
---|---|---|---|
World Congress | 1948 | London, England, UK | Founding meeting of WFMH |
World Congress | 1951 | Mexico DF, Mexico | |
World Congress | 1954 | Toronto, Canada | |
World Congress | 1961 | Paris, France | |
World Congress | 1968 | London, England, UK | |
World Congress | 1973 | Sydney, Australia | Cultures in Collision (25th Anniversary Congress) |
World Congress | 1977 | Vancouver, Canada | Today's Priorities in Mental Health: Knowing and Doing |
World Congress | 1979 | Salzburg, Austria | The Mental Health of Children and Families |
World Congress | 1981 | Manila, Philippines | Mental Health, Cultural Values and Social Development: A Look into the '80s |
World Congress | 1983 | Washington, DC, USA | Personal and social responsibility in the search for mental health: Collaboration between volunteers, professionals and governments in the formation of mental health policy and the delivery of services. |
World Congress | 1985 | Brighton, England, UK | Mental Health 2000 A.D. [Sub-theme: Action Programs for a World in Crisis.] |
World Congress | 1987 | Cairo, Egypt | The Many Worlds of Mental Health |
World Congress | 1989 | Auckland, New Zealand | Mental Health – Everyone's Concern |
World Congress | 1991 | Mexico DF, Mexico | People and Science: Together for Mental Health |
World Congress | 1993 | Tokyo, Japan | Mental Health: Toward the 21st Century |
World Congress | 1995 | Dublin, Ireland | Time for Reflection |
World Congress | 1997 | Lahti, Finland | Cornerstones for Mental Health |
World Congress | 1998 | London, England, UK | Partners for Mental Health: Nations for Mental Health (50th Anniversary Symposium) |
World Congress | 1999 | Santiago, Chile | Interfaces in Mental Health: Poverty, Quality of Life and Society" |
World Congress | 2001 | Vancouver, Canada | Respecting Diversity in Mental Health in a Changing World |
World Congress | 2003 | Melbourne, Australia | Partnerships in Health |
World Congress | 2005 | Cairo, Egypt | Equity and Mental Health |
World Congress | 2007 | Hong Kong SAR, China | East Meets West: Impact of Culture on Mental Health |
World Congress | 2009 | Athens, Greece | Working Together for Mental Health |
World Congress | 2011 | Cape Town, South Africa | The African Footprint in Global Mental Health |
World Congress | 2013 | Buenos Aires, Argentina | Social Inclusion through Interdisciplinary Interventions |
World Congress | 2015 | Cairo, Egypt | |
World Congress | 2017 | New Delhi, India | Partnerships in mental health |
World Congress | 2019 | Buenos Aires, Argentina | Abordajes inclusivos en salud mental. Clínica, comunidad y derechos. |
Year | Theme |
---|---|
2017 | Mental health in the workplace |
2018 | Young People and Mental Health |
2019 | Mental health promotion and suicide prevention |
2020 | Mental Health for All: Greater Investment – Greater Access. Everyone, everywhere |
2021 | Mental Health in an Unequal World. Together we can make a difference |
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