From the Editor

Can philanthropy fill the unmet needs of psychiatry?

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Full integration of psychiatry into the rest of medicine remains an unmet need, despite good progress. Because almost every medical illness can cause psychiatric symp­toms, DSM-5 mandates that general medical conditions be ruled out before a primary psychiatric diagnosis is made.

Along the same lines, most severely mentally ill persons suffer from medical and neurologic ailments before their first episode,5 and many die prematurely from cardiovas­cular causes that often are the result of unhealthy lifestyle; iatrogenic complications; and lack of primary care inter­ventions.6 Psychiatric patients must always receive stan­dard general medical evaluation and management, side by side with their psychiatric care.

Philanthropy for psychiatry
Philanthropic support of psychiatry is a salutary trend. Some unmet needs in psychiatry, however, require not only money but a change in attitude (such as eliminating the absurd and discriminatory stigma of mental illness), better training, and forceful political activism by all of us.

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