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Rethinking funding priorities in mental health research

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Roberto Lewis-Fernández*
Affiliation:
Columbia University Medical Center, and New York State Center of Excellence for Cultural Competence, and Hispanic Treatment Program, at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, USA
Mary Jane Rotheram-Borus
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences, Semel Institute, University of California at Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California, USA
Virginia Trotter Betts
Affiliation:
HealthFutures, Inc., Nashville, Tennessee, USA
Lisa Greenman
Affiliation:
Washington, DC, USA
Susan M. Essock
Affiliation:
Columbia University Medical Center, New York, USA
Javier I. Escobar
Affiliation:
Rutgers-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA
Deanna Barch
Affiliation:
Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, Missouri, USA
Michael F. Hogan
Affiliation:
Dartmouth (Geisinger) Medical School, Case Western Reserve Medical School, and New York University Medical School, and Hogan Health Solutions, New York, USA
Patricia A. Areán
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA
Benjamin G. Druss
Affiliation:
Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Ralph J. DiClemente
Affiliation:
Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
Thomas H. McGlashan
Affiliation:
Yale University School of Medicine, and Connecticut Mental Health Center, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Dilip V. Jeste
Affiliation:
Sam and Rose Stein Institute for Research on Aging, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California, USA
Enola K. Proctor
Affiliation:
Brown School of Social Work, and Center for Mental Health Services Research, Washington University in St Louis, St Louis, Missouri, USA
Pedro Ruiz
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Miller School of Medicine, University of Miami, Miami, Florida, USA
A. John Rush
Affiliation:
Duke–National University of Singapore, and Duke Medical School, Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA
Glorisa J. Canino
Affiliation:
Behavioral Sciences Research Institute, and Department of Pediatrics, University of Puerto Rico Medical School, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Carl C. Bell
Affiliation:
Jackson Park Hospital, Family Medicine Clinic, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Renata Henry
Affiliation:
Danya Institute, and Central East Addiction Technology Transfer Center, Newark, Delaware, USA
Portia Iversen
Affiliation:
Cure Autism Now, and Autism Genetic Resource Exchange, Los Angeles, California, USA
*
Roberto Lewis-Fernández, MD, Director, New York State Center of Excellence for Cultural Competence, and Hispanic Treatment Program, at the New York State Psychiatric Institute, Unit 69, Room 3206, 1051 Riverside Drive, New York, NY 10032, USA. Email: [email protected].
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Summary

Mental health research funding priorities in high-income countries must balance longer-term investment in identifying neurobiological mechanisms of disease with shorter-term funding of novel prevention and treatment strategies to alleviate the current burden of mental illness. Prioritising one area of science over others risks reduced returns on the entire scientific portfolio.

Type
Editorials
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2016 

In the USA the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is undergoing its first leadership transition in 13 years. With an annual budget of 1.4 billion US dollars, this transition presents a critical opportunity to examine US mental health research funding priorities. Balancing research investments between projects that investigate ways to alleviate the current burden of disease and those that seek scientific breakthroughs leading to future cures is a challenge each country must address. Reference Hoddinott, Rosegrant and Torero1,2 As current or former members of the NIMH National Advisory Mental Health Council, we have repeatedly reflected on changing emphases in NIMH funding priorities. We offer these reflections in the hope of influencing NIMH policy and to add to the international conversation on mental health research funding priorities, given the impact of NIMH as the world's largest funder of research on mental disorders.

The USA and other high-income countries have an ongoing need to examine these priorities. Despite spending more than any other country on healthcare (4271 US dollars annually/person), the USA ranks 37th in global health outcomes and fails to serve even half of its residents needing mental health services. Reference Murray and Frenk3 As recently as 2015, an Institute of Medicine report decried the quality of mental healthcare in the USA. Americans' national provision of mental health prevention and treatment services needs an overhaul and research should guide this process. The USA is not alone in this challenge. Globally, 450 million people with mental health problems are underserved, 2 and countries across the economic spectrum need research to inform healthcare policy on how to prevent and treat mental illnesses within resource constraints.

The role of neuroscience in the solution

In recent years, the NIMH funding allocation has prioritised searching for neurobiological mechanisms of mental illness, seeking a new world of personalised medicine. The expectation is that identifying an individual's biological signature at genomic and neurocircuitry levels will generate novel prevention and treatment interventions. Growth in neuroscience investment at US federal granting agencies has been impressive, including President Obama's BRAIN initiative and targeted funds such as innovation awards, molecular libraries and the Research Domain Criteria initiative (a reframing of the research paradigm towards understanding mechanisms of mental illness). Other high-income countries have also prioritised neuroscience research, including the European Commission's Human Brain Project, Japan's Brain/MINDS project and Australia's AusBrain. 4 Currently, the number of new PhDs in neuroscience outstrips all other life sciences, heralding a ‘golden age of neuroscience’. Reference Norris, Palmer, Stroud and Altevogt5

Neuroscience is unquestionably crucial for mental health. Discovering causes of autism or pathophysiologies of diverse illnesses encompassed by the diagnosis of schizophrenia opens possibilities for new treatments. Still, investing in neuroscience is a long-term proposition. Although the USA ‘Decade of the Brain’ 4 began in 1990, substantial public health benefits are yet to be realised. Reference Priebe, Burns and Craig6 Hence the key question remains: how can funding policy in mental health research improve how we tackle the current burden of disease as we await innovations derived through advances in neuroscience that may be generations away?

Opportunity costs

Mental health research funding is a form of social investment. Reference Hoddinott, Rosegrant and Torero1 As with any investment portfolio, diversification is a prudent strategy. A disproportionate investment in neuroscience is as imprudent as investing only in growth stocks and neglecting less risky investments that yield immediate albeit potentially more modest benefits. Publicly funded government agencies are custodians of research for the public good. A diversified research portfolio, balanced between longer- and shorter-term pay-outs, has the advantage of demonstrating to stakeholders a present and steady payoff in improvements to routine practice. Fortunately, the services-research end of the NIMH portfolio provides such examples today. When outgoing NIMH Director Insel gave his final top ten list of best mental health research stories for the year, his pick for number one was from the services-research portfolio, noting, ‘this year we saw a spectacular example of how to move research into practice … The Recovery After an Initial Schizophrenia Episode (RAISE) project developed a patient-centred, multi-element treatment approach for optimising outcomes after a first episode of psychosis’. Reference Insel7 Although NIMH support for projects like RAISE continues, those funding levels are dwarfed by neuroscience-related investments. As presented at open access Council meetings, yearly total investment in non-HIV/AIDS services and interventions research since 2012 comprises ~15% of the NIMH budget, with basic and translational neuroscience research accounting for the remaining 85%.

To prioritise one area of science over others risks compromising the overall return-on-investment. Neuroscience is one road to improving mental health, but overenthusiasm for this area means losing opportunities for advancements in mental health through research in areas such as developing sustainable interventions to overcome disparities in access to effective treatment and outcomes; crafting technologies and implementation strategies to disseminate scalable, cost-efficient interventions; devising approaches to empower people to overcome barriers to engagement and retention in treatment; and deploying preventive interventions to reduce the burden of mental illness, including clarifying how to implement best practices in suicide prevention, especially given the dramatic rise in suicide. Scalability of prevention interventions is key. Solutions may leverage technological advances, such as mHealth-based counselling, computer and web-based resources and collaboration with caregivers – such as teachers, clergy and primary care providers – who are first points-of-contact for those in need.

When NIMH leaders sought to illustrate the limited impact of mental health research on public health, they compared the multiple-decade decline in cardiovascular mortality with an increasing suicide rate, citing our limited understanding of mechanisms and the lack of new treatment agents as barriers to progress. Yet, epidemiological explanations of the decline in cardiovascular mortality find that lifestyle changes affecting risk factors (such as smoking) account for 44–76% of decreased mortality, whereas novel treatments account for 23–47%. Reference Ford and Capewell8 Research on how to develop and implement preventive (including early-detection) mental health interventions could have similarly salutatory effects. For instance, a substantial proportion of children's emotional impairments and poor school functioning could be alleviated by improving parenting skills, learning environments and habits of daily living. 9 Prevention research should also identify strategies for mitigating the effects of social determinants and physical environments triggering mental illness. Pursuing these opportunities would result in a more diversified portfolio of intervention development, dissemination and implementation than currently exists.

In sum, too often our mental health research funding neglects immediate public health needs to focus on future discoveries, reflecting the drive for technological solutions for disorders that are unequally distributed and partly socially determined. Time frames for such payoffs have previously been consistently under-estimated, underscoring the prudence of keeping a healthy portion of the research portfolio invested in projects with shorter-term benefits.

Finding the right balance

Ultimately, what is the right funding balance between neuroscience and applied research? Ensuring that the mental health research portfolio yields steady payoffs independent of the pay-outs that come with scarce scientific breakthroughs requires investing a more substantial proportion of the research portfolio in developing novel applied treatments, such as RAISE, and to the science of how to implement basic science advances, including how to tailor them across diverse clinical settings and communities. Research must be funded to overcome barriers at every level – from systems to patient-level factors – that limit the use and effectiveness of interventions, including through prevention/early-intervention strategies and therapies for those already ill.

Public health has always been a cornerstone of the NIMH mandate. One of its foundational documents, the Action for Mental Health Report of 1960, defined the agency's mission as ‘arriv[ing] at a national program that would approach adequacy in meeting the individual needs of the mentally ill people of America’. 10 NIMH research must advance current prevention and care delivery strategies, even as it races towards a cure. En-route, NIMH should fund research to evaluate the evidence base and make practice recommendations feasible to implement in routine practice settings. Such standards could be used by states and other payers as they hold managed care organisations and other provider groups accountable. Broadly in US health policy, an emerging consensus calls for health in all policies, mental health in all health, and attention to the social determinants of health. The recent distribution of funding from NIMH suggests that these concepts need increased attention, priority and dollars.

Next steps

We call for an increase in public discussion of how to apportion funding resources across mental health research domains, as broad participation by stakeholders can lead to new policy priorities. This conversation should be fostered within national and international health organisations, government funding agencies such as the NIMH, and professional journals and organisations as well as in public forums, legislative hearings and political debates. These discussions must address thorny details, such as what proportion of the budget should be allocated to what research areas; the near-term public health consequences of particular priorities; and how to leverage inter-agency collaborations to attain a robust and sustainable public health impact. The conversation should be international in scope. The NIMH can contribute to, and benefit from, the global discussion on funding policy conducted by organisations like the Roadmap for Mental Health Research and Well-Being in Europe, the Global Mental Health Initiative, Horizon 2020 and Grand Challenges Canada. Paramount in these discussions must be alleviating the terrible burden that individuals and families living with mental illness face every day. As Harry Hopkins, co-architect of the 1940s New Deal, replied to members of Congress who opposed allocating federal funds to lift the economy out of the Great Depression, claiming that the economy would sort itself out ‘in the long run’: ‘People don't eat in the long run, they eat every day’.

Acknowledgements

The authors appreciate the assistance of David A. Brent, Dolly John, Maryann E. Koussa, Samantha Díaz, Myrna Weissman and John Markowitz.

Footnotes

See commentary, pp. 510–511, this issue.

Declaration of interest

Some authors work in research areas (e.g. optimising interventions for people with mental illnesses) that could receive additional funding if the recommendations for realignment of funding priorities made in the article were implemented. Specific conflicts of interest: R.L.-F., National Alliance on Mental Illness, Eli Lilly & Co, American Psychiatric Association, Cambridge University Press, UptoDate and American Psychiatric Publishing Inc.; D.B., Pfizer, Roche, Takeda, Amgen; M.F.H., Otsuka, Education Development Center, Policy Research Associates; A.J.R., Medavante, Takeda, Eli Lilly & Co, Santium Inc.

References

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