From ef41e635f842a5fb535f70b02ef80756bcb52ed0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Teleo Agents Date: Fri, 8 May 2026 04:34:26 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] vida: extract claims from 2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024 - Source: inbox/queue/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md - Domain: health - Claims: 2, Entities: 0 - Enrichments: 2 - Extracted by: pipeline ingest (OpenRouter anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5) Pentagon-Agent: Vida --- ...-signaling-care-infrastructure-collapse.md | 19 +++++++++------ ...e-despite-evidence-of-superior-outcomes.md | 19 +++++++++++++++ ...ted-creating-1625x-per-capita-disparity.md | 19 +++++++++++++++ ...ady-served rather than expanding access.md | 24 ++++++++----------- ...2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md | 5 +++- 5 files changed, 64 insertions(+), 22 deletions(-) create mode 100644 domains/health/fewer-than-10-percent-of-countries-transitioned-to-community-based-mental-health-care-despite-evidence-of-superior-outcomes.md create mode 100644 domains/health/global-mental-health-spending-frozen-at-2-percent-of-health-budgets-despite-1-billion-affected-creating-1625x-per-capita-disparity.md rename inbox/{queue => archive/health}/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md (98%) diff --git a/domains/health/caregiver-workforce-crisis-shows-all-50-states-experiencing-shortages-with-43-states-reporting-facility-closures-signaling-care-infrastructure-collapse.md b/domains/health/caregiver-workforce-crisis-shows-all-50-states-experiencing-shortages-with-43-states-reporting-facility-closures-signaling-care-infrastructure-collapse.md index 9c7566029..18ff6bf20 100644 --- a/domains/health/caregiver-workforce-crisis-shows-all-50-states-experiencing-shortages-with-43-states-reporting-facility-closures-signaling-care-infrastructure-collapse.md +++ b/domains/health/caregiver-workforce-crisis-shows-all-50-states-experiencing-shortages-with-43-states-reporting-facility-closures-signaling-care-infrastructure-collapse.md @@ -1,15 +1,13 @@ --- - type: claim domain: health -description: "Universal workforce shortages and facility closures indicate systemic care capacity failure not regional variation" +description: Universal workforce shortages and facility closures indicate systemic care capacity failure not regional variation confidence: proven -source: "AARP 2025 Caregiving Report" +source: AARP 2025 Caregiving Report created: 2026-03-11 -supports: -- family-caregiving-functions-as-poverty-transmission-mechanism-forcing-debt-savings-depletion-and-food-insecurity-on-working-age-population -reweave_edges: -- family-caregiving-functions-as-poverty-transmission-mechanism-forcing-debt-savings-depletion-and-food-insecurity-on-working-age-population|supports|2026-03-28 +supports: ["family-caregiving-functions-as-poverty-transmission-mechanism-forcing-debt-savings-depletion-and-food-insecurity-on-working-age-population"] +reweave_edges: ["family-caregiving-functions-as-poverty-transmission-mechanism-forcing-debt-savings-depletion-and-food-insecurity-on-working-age-population|supports|2026-03-28"] +related: ["caregiver-workforce-crisis-shows-all-50-states-experiencing-shortages-with-43-states-reporting-facility-closures-signaling-care-infrastructure-collapse"] --- # Caregiver workforce crisis shows all 50 states experiencing shortages with 43 states reporting facility closures signaling care infrastructure collapse @@ -52,3 +50,10 @@ Relevant Notes: Topics: - [[domains/health/_map]] + + +## Extending Evidence + +**Source:** WHO Mental Health Atlas 2024, HRSA 2025 + +WHO Mental Health Atlas 2024 documents 93 percent of behavioral health professionals experienced burnout (National Council for Behavioral Health 2023 survey, n=750), with 62 percent experiencing severe burnout. This workforce burnout rate compounds the supply constraint — you cannot grow the workforce if 93 percent are burned out. HRSA data shows 40 percent of US population (137 million) lives in Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas, with projected shortfalls of 88,000 mental health counselors and 114,000 addiction counselors by 2037-2038. diff --git a/domains/health/fewer-than-10-percent-of-countries-transitioned-to-community-based-mental-health-care-despite-evidence-of-superior-outcomes.md b/domains/health/fewer-than-10-percent-of-countries-transitioned-to-community-based-mental-health-care-despite-evidence-of-superior-outcomes.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..afc63db9f --- /dev/null +++ b/domains/health/fewer-than-10-percent-of-countries-transitioned-to-community-based-mental-health-care-despite-evidence-of-superior-outcomes.md @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +--- +type: claim +domain: health +description: Only 10 percent of countries have fully transitioned to community-based mental health care models, with 90 percent remaining in early stages despite proven better outcomes +confidence: proven +source: WHO Mental Health Atlas 2024, 144 countries +created: 2026-05-08 +title: Fewer than 10 percent of countries have transitioned to community-based mental health care despite evidence of superior outcomes and lower cost, indicating institutional care default persists through structural incentive lock-in not lack of evidence +agent: vida +sourced_from: health/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md +scope: structural +sourcer: World Health Organization +supports: ["the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access"] +related: ["healthcare is a complex adaptive system requiring simple enabling rules not complicated management because standardized processes erode the clinical autonomy needed for value creation", "the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access"] +--- + +# Fewer than 10 percent of countries have transitioned to community-based mental health care despite evidence of superior outcomes and lower cost, indicating institutional care default persists through structural incentive lock-in not lack of evidence + +The WHO Mental Health Atlas 2024 documents that fewer than 10 percent of countries have fully transitioned to community-based mental health care models, with most countries remaining in early stages of transition away from hospital/institutional care. This is striking because community-based care has been shown to produce better clinical outcomes at lower cost than institutional care — the evidence base is established, not emerging. The 90 percent non-adoption rate indicates this is not a knowledge problem but a structural incentive problem. Institutional care persists because existing infrastructure, workforce training, reimbursement systems, and regulatory frameworks are all optimized for facility-based delivery. Transitioning to community-based care requires coordinated changes across multiple systems simultaneously — a coordination problem that individual rational actors cannot solve. This is textbook structural misalignment: a proven better system exists, the evidence is available, yet adoption stalls because the transition requires breaking path dependencies that no single institution can overcome alone. diff --git a/domains/health/global-mental-health-spending-frozen-at-2-percent-of-health-budgets-despite-1-billion-affected-creating-1625x-per-capita-disparity.md b/domains/health/global-mental-health-spending-frozen-at-2-percent-of-health-budgets-despite-1-billion-affected-creating-1625x-per-capita-disparity.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..5abc99d68 --- /dev/null +++ b/domains/health/global-mental-health-spending-frozen-at-2-percent-of-health-budgets-despite-1-billion-affected-creating-1625x-per-capita-disparity.md @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +--- +type: claim +domain: health +description: Mental health accounts for only 2 percent of health budgets globally, unchanged since 2017, with per-capita spending ranging from $65 in high-income countries to $0.04 in low-income countries +confidence: proven +source: WHO Mental Health Atlas 2024, 144 countries +created: 2026-05-08 +title: Global mental health spending is frozen at 2 percent of health budgets despite 1 billion people affected, creating a 1,625x per-capita disparity between high-income and low-income countries that no other disease category approaches +agent: vida +sourced_from: health/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md +scope: structural +sourcer: World Health Organization +supports: ["the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access"] +related: ["medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm", "the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access"] +--- + +# Global mental health spending is frozen at 2 percent of health budgets despite 1 billion people affected, creating a 1,625x per-capita disparity between high-income and low-income countries that no other disease category approaches + +The WHO Mental Health Atlas 2024 documents that mental health spending has remained frozen at 2 percent of global health budgets since 2017 — eight years without movement despite the WHO-Lancet Commission 2018, the COVID-19 mental health crisis 2020-2022, and the US Surgeon General's Loneliness Advisory 2023. This is not a data problem or awareness problem but a structural misalignment problem. The per-capita spending disparity is extraordinary: high-income countries spend $65 per person annually on mental health, while low-income countries spend $0.04 per person — a 1,625x gap. This disparity exceeds any other disease category. Over 1 billion people worldwide live with a mental health condition, yet the resource allocation has not shifted in nearly a decade. The 2 percent ceiling persists across 144 countries surveyed, indicating this is a systemic structural constraint, not a country-specific policy failure. The spending freeze occurs despite documented evidence of need, proven interventions, and international advocacy — suggesting that individually rational institutional budget decisions produce collectively irrational health outcomes. diff --git a/domains/health/the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access.md b/domains/health/the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access.md index 452a81790..13f276374 100644 --- a/domains/health/the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access.md +++ b/domains/health/the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access.md @@ -3,19 +3,9 @@ type: claim domain: health description: SAMHSA projects a 250K professional shortage while nearly half the US lives in mental health HPSAs and teletherapy has not improved access for high-deprivation populations creating a two-tier system where technology helps the insured while underserved populations fall further behind confidence: likely -supports: -- generic-digital-health-deployment-reproduces-existing-disparities-by-disproportionately-benefiting-higher-income-users-despite-nominal-technology-access-equity -- Medicaid-accepting facilities are 25 percent less likely to offer telehealth services, reproducing in-person access disparities in digital modalities -reweave_edges: -- generic-digital-health-deployment-reproduces-existing-disparities-by-disproportionately-benefiting-higher-income-users-despite-nominal-technology-access-equity|supports|2026-04-03 -- Audio-only telehealth is the equity-relevant modality because it over-indexes on populations that video-based telehealth systematically underserves|related|2026-04-24 -- Culturally adapted digital mental health interventions achieve double the effect size for racial/ethnic minorities compared to standard apps|related|2026-04-24 -- Medicaid-accepting facilities are 25 percent less likely to offer telehealth services, reproducing in-person access disparities in digital modalities|supports|2026-04-24 -- MHPAEA enforcement closes coverage gaps but not access gaps because payers differentially treat mental health versus medical reimbursement rates|related|2026-04-30 -related: -- Audio-only telehealth is the equity-relevant modality because it over-indexes on populations that video-based telehealth systematically underserves -- Culturally adapted digital mental health interventions achieve double the effect size for racial/ethnic minorities compared to standard apps -- MHPAEA enforcement closes coverage gaps but not access gaps because payers differentially treat mental health versus medical reimbursement rates +supports: ["generic-digital-health-deployment-reproduces-existing-disparities-by-disproportionately-benefiting-higher-income-users-despite-nominal-technology-access-equity", "Medicaid-accepting facilities are 25 percent less likely to offer telehealth services, reproducing in-person access disparities in digital modalities"] +reweave_edges: ["generic-digital-health-deployment-reproduces-existing-disparities-by-disproportionately-benefiting-higher-income-users-despite-nominal-technology-access-equity|supports|2026-04-03", "Audio-only telehealth is the equity-relevant modality because it over-indexes on populations that video-based telehealth systematically underserves|related|2026-04-24", "Culturally adapted digital mental health interventions achieve double the effect size for racial/ethnic minorities compared to standard apps|related|2026-04-24", "Medicaid-accepting facilities are 25 percent less likely to offer telehealth services, reproducing in-person access disparities in digital modalities|supports|2026-04-24", "MHPAEA enforcement closes coverage gaps but not access gaps because payers differentially treat mental health versus medical reimbursement rates|related|2026-04-30"] +related: ["Audio-only telehealth is the equity-relevant modality because it over-indexes on populations that video-based telehealth systematically underserves", "Culturally adapted digital mental health interventions achieve double the effect size for racial/ethnic minorities compared to standard apps", "MHPAEA enforcement closes coverage gaps but not access gaps because payers differentially treat mental health versus medical reimbursement rates", "the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access"] --- # the mental health supply gap is widening not closing because demand outpaces workforce growth and technology primarily serves the already-served rather than expanding access @@ -53,4 +43,10 @@ Topics: **Source:** JMIR 2024 e59939; ASPE/HHS Medicaid telehealth trends 2019-2021 -Medicaid-accepting facilities are 25 percent less likely to offer telehealth services than non-Medicaid facilities, and facilities in counties with >20 percent Black residents are 42 percent less likely to offer telehealth. This is the structural mechanism: provider participation in telehealth follows the same disparities as in-person care, reproducing access gaps in digital form despite coverage expansion (46 states now reimburse audio-only telehealth). The coverage-to-access gap demonstrates that policy enabling reimbursement is insufficient without addressing provider participation patterns. \ No newline at end of file +Medicaid-accepting facilities are 25 percent less likely to offer telehealth services than non-Medicaid facilities, and facilities in counties with >20 percent Black residents are 42 percent less likely to offer telehealth. This is the structural mechanism: provider participation in telehealth follows the same disparities as in-person care, reproducing access gaps in digital form despite coverage expansion (46 states now reimburse audio-only telehealth). The coverage-to-access gap demonstrates that policy enabling reimbursement is insufficient without addressing provider participation patterns. + +## Extending Evidence + +**Source:** WHO Mental Health Atlas 2024, 144 countries + +WHO Mental Health Atlas 2024 extends the US-focused mental health supply gap claim to global scale: global median of 13.5 specialized mental health workers per 100,000 people, with low-income countries having 0.1 psychiatrists per 100,000 versus 8.6 in high-income countries (86x disparity). European Region shows 1 in 3 people with mental health conditions don't receive needed treatment even in relatively well-resourced regions. The treatment gap in low-income countries is presumed far larger based on workforce density data. diff --git a/inbox/queue/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md b/inbox/archive/health/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md similarity index 98% rename from inbox/queue/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md rename to inbox/archive/health/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md index f775ce703..1ce43fc29 100644 --- a/inbox/queue/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md +++ b/inbox/archive/health/2026-05-08-who-mental-health-atlas-2024.md @@ -7,10 +7,13 @@ date: 2025-09-02 domain: health secondary_domains: [] format: article -status: unprocessed +status: processed +processed_by: vida +processed_date: 2026-05-08 priority: high tags: [mental health, global health, WHO, health workforce, health financing, treatment gap, international comparison] intake_tier: research-task +extraction_model: "anthropic/claude-sonnet-4.5" --- ## Content