Recommendations
This study adds weight to something that advocates have been saying for years: the life expectancy gap associated with mental illness is real, large, and persistent. Physical health prevention should be default for anyone receiving mental health care in primary care, community services, hospitals, and psychosocial support settings.
Relevant actions from Equally Well’s Call to Action include:
1) Make physical healthcare routine wherever mental health care happens
Integrate screening and early intervention programs (including for cancer screening, immunisation, smoking cessation, cardiovascular disease and diabetes) with mental health services.
Warm referrals (not just advice) to GPs, chronic disease nurses, smoking cessation supports, dietitians and exercise physiology where available.
Commissioned shared-care models and asynchronous case conferencing so people don’t have to coordinate complex systems alone.
2) Build accountability: measure what matters and embed lived experience leadership
Embedding lived experience roles at all levels of system re-design can ensure that a human-rights lens underpins reform for health equity.
Workforce training and co-produced service redesign across mental health, primary care and specialist settings can reduce diagnostic overshadowing and improve access pathways.
Measuring and reporting on KPIs related to closing this health gap can instil accountability and incentivise action.
Source:
Chang, W. C. (2023). Life expectancy and years of potential life lost in people with mental disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis. EClinicalMedicine, 65.
Download the Factsheet