The future of mental health care provision: lessons from the last quarter century and hopes for the next quarter

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Abstract

The last quarter century has seen a clear move internationally towards greater integration between healthcare service types - including across mental and physical health - as well as with social care. The drivers include growing population complexity and clinical need, and a recognition that the broader evidence base supports better outcomes and cost effectiveness through tackling social determinants of health in a more joined-up and preventative manner. Challenges have included a lack of granularity about which approaches work best at a local level, which data might support learning from these, and how we might disseminate this between often very different systems and populations. The next 25 years will see renewed efforts towards greater integrated and preventative community approaches. However, we still lack a consensus about inpatient provision and need to optimise this through clinically led learning and care models. Technology is at a point where we can have digital infrastructure that pulls large-scale population-level clinical effectiveness data. The opportunity is to anchor this as our key tool to grow and refine better care models, augmenting more traditional process and governance data-sets, and therein also leverage research findings into measured novel implementation in practice.

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Tracy, D. K. (2025). The future of mental health care provision: lessons from the last quarter century and hopes for the next quarter. International Review of Psychiatry. Taylor and Francis Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/09540261.2025.2556684

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