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SAMHSA News - March/April 2004, Volume 12, Number 2
 

From the Administrator: Mental Health in Iraq


My recent visit to Iraq reaffirmed my belief in the centrality of mental health to overall health and well-being. As the Iraqis rebuild their country and their physical health after terrible trauma, they also seek to restore a sense of emotional equilibrium and security. Their recognition of the importance of mental health in the rebuilding of their health care system reflects the growing acceptance of this premise not only here in the United States, but also abroad.

Our compassion and our shared humanity dictate the necessity and the value of assisting other countries. But beyond that, we have a responsibility, as a leader among countries with the most advanced services for mental health care, to share what we know and to help others create better mental health services.

Offering assistance also gives us an opportunity to help reshape the attitudes of the larger society toward mental illness. As in our own country, there is still too much stigma attached to mental illness among the Iraqis and too many people still regard it as shameful.

By investing a modest amount of resources, we can contribute to enormous progress in Iraq and thereby forge a new basis of trust on which to strengthen the relationship between our countries. At the same time, promoting the inclusion of mental health services as part of health care abroad helps us further the same agenda here at home.

Right now, we have a unique opportunity to transform the mental health service system here in the United States. Both the Bush Administration and the Congress are committed to supporting the kind of change called for in the report from the President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health, Achieving the Promise: Transforming Mental Health Care in America (See SAMHSA News, Volume XI, Number 3).

The commonality of our tasks reinforces the importance of each: the Iraqis, to rebuild a devastated mental health service system; ours, to transform a mental health service system that needs fixing "beyond simple repair," in the words of the Commission's report. As we ensure that Iraqis achieve a life free of fear and full of choices, we strive to achieve the same goals here in the United States for people with or at risk for mental or substance use disorders.

Charles G. Curie, M.A., A.C.S.W.
Administrator, SAMHSA

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