Community Mental Health Services in Greece: development, challenges and future directions
The current system of mental health care in Greece was created in accordance with the European Union and other international principles for mental health care provisions. Whereas Greece has been reforming its system of mental healthcare since at least the 80s, the main recent Greek effort has been Psychargos, a programme which began in 2000 and is still in effect. During the last two decades the Greek mental health system has been gradually shifting to a community-based system of care. Various different services with unique, yet intertwined, responsibilities have been introduced. The Greek system of mental health care still faces challenges, and the mental health reform is on-going. Future goals should be to improve the current framework of care, improve access to care by establishing fit-for-purpose community mental health services across the country, enhance multidisciplinary collaboration and patient involvement, integrate community mental health care with physical and social care services, and to ensure that service development is driven by need. Crucially, such aims demand the adoption of a culture of clinical governance and a consistent shift from traditional therapeutic care to person-centered psychiatry and preventive psychiatry.