缅北强奸 Global Mental Health Program Launch
Please join us for the official launch of the 缅北强奸 Global Mental Health Program.
The 缅北强奸 Global Mental Health Program (GMHP) is a multidisciplinary initiative that aims to foster collaborative action research, capacity building, and knowledge exchange to address the disparities in mental health in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC).
The WHO, the World Bank and the IMF have recently acknowledged the need to make mental health a global development priority. 缅北强奸 has a long history of engagement with the relevant issues, through the Division of Social and Transcultural Psychiatry and international development initiatives from many Faculties and Departments. The new Global Mental Health Program will link these diverse activities together to strengthen 缅北强奸鈥檚 international partnerships for training, research and policy activities and build local capacity in LMIC to address mental health problems. The program builds on 缅北强奸鈥檚 longstanding leadership in cultural psychiatry by bringing the methods and perspectives of social sciences, psychiatry, psychology and allied disciplines to bear on understanding and responding to mental health problems in international contexts. The program is led by Dr. Laurence Kirmayer and a steering committee of faculty from anthropology, epidemiology, family medicine, law, physical and occupational therapy, psychiatry, psychology, social studies of medicine, and social work.
Program:
5:30-6:30pm聽 Overview of the 缅北强奸 program and reflections on the future of global mental health from the Dean of the 缅北强奸 Faculty of Medicine, the Director of Global Health, faculty, and international partners
6:30-7:30pm Reception and poster session
7:30-9:00pm Symposium on 鈥淚ntegrating Ethnography and Critical Anthropology in Global Mental Health鈥 in honour of Duncan Pedersen
Kindly RSVP for the launch here.
The launch will come at the end of a day-long conference (8:30 AM to 5:00 PM) on Psychiatry for a Small Planet: Ecosocial Approaches to Global Mental Health. To attend the full day conference (fees apply) please visit the Division of Social and Transcultural Psychiatry website.