Abstract
A disorder-focused approach in mental healthcare in the Netherlands, combined with a disorder-linked reimbursement system, risks medicalisation of stress-related mental variations that may result from the current societal pressures to be beautiful and successful. Furthermore, a disorder-linked reimbursement system may lead to inappropriate treatment, dictated by group-based guidelines tied to DSM-classifications rather than the complexities and contexts of individual needs for care. Finally, there can be both over- and under-treatment as a result of a free-market healthcare system in which quality of care is equated with symptom reduction. We propose several adaptations, including, firstly, creating eCommunities offering self-help and peer support and, secondly, reinventing mental illnesses as vulnerabilities primarily requiring a 'heal and deal' approach of strengthening resilience as well as reducing symptoms. The conceptual foundation of mental healthcare as a free-market economy, and the current quality system, should be reconsidered. It is fundamental that reimbursement should not depend on arbitrary diagnostic algorithms of disorder.
Translated title of the contribution | Medicalization and inappropriate care within the Netherlands mental health system: The role of disorder-focused thinking and reimbursement |
---|---|
Original language | Dutch |
Article number | D3534 |
Journal | Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde |
Volume | 162 |
Issue number | 51-52 |
Publication status | Published - 2018 |
Keywords
- Humans
- Insurance, Health, Reimbursement
- Medical Overuse
- Medicalization
- Mental Disorders/therapy
- Mental Health Services/economics
- Netherlands
- Reimbursement Mechanisms
- Self-Help Groups
- Stress, Psychological/therapy