key: cord-0704076-k76osvqo authors: Brewin, CR; DePierro, J; Pirard, P; Vazquez, C; Williams, R title: Why we need to integrate mental health into pandemic planning date: 2020-10-17 journal: Perspect Public Health DOI: 10.1177/1757913920957365 sha: c24de0b84a6002f9a8fef1811feba53150c4911c doc_id: 704076 cord_uid: k76osvqo nan Since the outbreak of COVID-19, the extraordinary pressures placed on many healthcare staff who are dealing with the crisis have rapidly become obvious. Staff face relentless demands, lack of resources, involvement in very difficult clinical decisions, and severe risk to themselves and their families. 1 The more limited SARS epidemic of 2002-2003 demonstrated that significant consequences, primarily distress in the psychosocial domain and posttraumatic stress disorder and depression in the mental health arena, are to be expected for a substantial proportion of staff and also for those survivors who require intervention, assessment and treatment. 2, 3 The economic impact will exert its own separate toll on nations' mental health. 4 Many members of the public are likely to develop distress, depression and prolonged grief by isolation, loss of income and losing family members in heart-breaking circumstances with the possibility of comforting rituals drastically curtailed. 5 World Health Organization guidance on pandemic influenza risk management 6 includes as one of the possible necessary responses 'Address the psychological impacts of the pandemic, especially on the health workforce, and provide social and psychological support for health care workers, patients and communities'. Yet, apart from some consideration of patients with existing psychiatric conditions, there is virtually no mention of mental health consequences in official UK documents such as the 2012 Health and Social Care Influenza Pandemic Preparedness and Response, 7 or the London 2018 'Pandemic Influenza Framework'. 8 Within the US, expert-panel guidance on psychosocial and mental health needs related to public health emergencies including pandemics 9,10 is not reflected in the 2014 US Preparedness and Response Framework for Influenza Pandemics report. 11 Other countries make little if any mention of the need for psychosocial preparedness and intervention (e.g. France: 'Plan national de prévention et de lutte 'Pandémie grippale' (2011); Germany: 'Nationaler Pandemieplan' (2017); Spain: 'Plan de la Pandemia de Gripe' (2005) (2006) . 12 In practice, a variety of ad hoc initiatives to address people's psychosocial and mental health needs have been speedily instituted in all these countries but the frequent absence of integration within the entire response framework, or of a responsible authority being previously identified to oversee them, has led to multiple negative consequences. One is that national and local responses are being developed with few formal mechanisms for cooperation, leading to duplication of effort and inconsistency in the content and distribution of messaging conveyed to staff and the public. As a result, we hear reports of health services being inundated with well-meaning but ad hoc advice that they must find difficult to evaluate. Another is that care pathways are having to be developed from scratch in the absence of agreements about key components such as: funding; models of care, assessment, and treatment; organisation and integration between statutory healthcare and public health and third sector agencies; and data collection, sharing and governance. Previous experience with major incidents in the UK has repeatedly demonstrated that existing funding and data sharing arrangements have blocked the rapid deployment of psychosocial and mental healthcare pathways and led to enormous inefficiency. 13, 14 Furthermore, in countries such as the US, loss of health benefits coverage due to pandemic-related unemployment is likely to limit access to care; the absence of a unified safety net in disaster response plans for these in-need groups is of particular concern. Clinical knowledge of how to protect people's mental health following major incidents is well-advanced. It involves a interventions that are likely to include general information and advice and short-, medium-and longer-term psychosocial support in various forms. In the longer-term, some form of outreach and screening is frequently required to identify people who need formal mental health interventions but who will not otherwise receive treatment. 15 These initiatives, along with financial advice and support packages appropriate to the nature of the incident, are necessary to avoid the potential for long-term disruption to health and economic productivity, and the increased risk of stress-related disorders such as cardiovascular disease. Some national initiatives partly meet these needs, for example, the organisation in France of emergency psychosocial support teams to attend to victims in response to exceptional health situations. 16 But most of the time, mental health has not enjoyed the sophisticated planning and governance arrangements that guide emergency interventions for physical injury and infections. We call therefore for international resolve to learn the lessons of COVID-19. Public health systems should create national units responsible for maintaining and updating the organisational and scientific knowledge base and fully integrating mental health into thinking and planning for all future major incidents. Funders should plan to find the substantial additional finance that will be required to meet the mental health needs following such incidents. The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article. The author(s) received no financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article. Chris R Brewin https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7462-4460 Jonathan DePierro https://orcid.org/ 0000-0002-6883-5026 Managing mental health challenges faced by healthcare workers during covid-19 pandemic Long-term psychological and occupational effects of providing hospital healthcare during SARS outbreak Long-term psychiatric morbidities among SARS survivors The impact of economic recessions on depression and individual and social wellbeing: the case of Spain Addressing mental health needs: an integral part of COVID-19 response Pandemic influenza risk management: a WHO guide to inform and harmonize national and international pandemic preparedness and response Department of Health. 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