To ensure the challenges of a wide international primary care community are reflected fully, authors from different world regions – Africa, Asia Pacific, East Mediterranean, Europe, IberoAmericana-CIMF, North America and South Asia – have co-contributed to individual chapters on the detection and management of depression and anxiety in primary care in their own countries, including the screening tools used, how widely these tools are adopted and by whom, and current policies. As well as the medical model, it also presents the alternative viewpoint that feeling low or anxious is part of the human condition and the attention should be on supporting people in their journey through life, struggling to deal with the mainly social challenges they meet, rather than defining these problems as disorders or diseases requiring identification and treatment.
Key Features:
Addressing primary care detection and management of mental health issues across the globe, the book will be an invaluable practical aid for family medicine practitioners and the wider primary and community care teams and a useful reference for those involved in policy setting at regional and national levels including ministries of health.
Sherina Mohd Sidik, MBBS, MMED (Fam Med), PhD (Community Health) is a family medicine specialist and professor in family medicine at Universiti Putra Malaysia (UPM), Malaysia.
Felicity Goodyear-Smith, MBChB, MGP, MD, FRNZCGP (Dist) is a general practitioner and professor of general practice and primary health care at The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.