TY - JOUR
T1 - Shaping the future of mental health
T2 - three decades of reform in the Arab world
AU - Okasha, Tarek
AU - Abdel Aziz, Karim
AU - Aly El-Gabry, Dina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Institute of Psychiatry and Johns Hopkins University.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This review traces the evolution of psychiatry in Egypt and the broader Arab region from 1994 to 2024, offering a comprehensive analysis of reforms in mental health policy, clinical infrastructure, education, legislation and workforce development. This paper examines key challenges, including service fragmentation, sociocultural stigma, refugee mental health and underinvestment. It highlights current contradictions in the field, such as increased demand, limited access and the dominance of imported psychiatric models with insufficient cultural adaptation. Looking ahead to 2050, the review identifies emerging threats, including climate-related stressors, ethical dilemmas in digital psychiatry and persistent workforce shortages, while outlining strategic opportunities in research, digital innovation and culturally responsive care. The article calls for reimagining Arab psychiatry grounded in epistemic sovereignty, interdisciplinary collaboration and decolonial ethics. It advocates for the revitalization of indigenous knowledge systems, the expansion of community-based models and the development of care frameworks that are both globally informed and locally rooted. The review concludes with a vision of an Arab mental health renaissance: a future where psychiatry is equitable, context-sensitive and led by regional voices. This paper serves as a resource for clinicians, policymakers and educators committed to transforming mental health across the Arab world.
AB - This review traces the evolution of psychiatry in Egypt and the broader Arab region from 1994 to 2024, offering a comprehensive analysis of reforms in mental health policy, clinical infrastructure, education, legislation and workforce development. This paper examines key challenges, including service fragmentation, sociocultural stigma, refugee mental health and underinvestment. It highlights current contradictions in the field, such as increased demand, limited access and the dominance of imported psychiatric models with insufficient cultural adaptation. Looking ahead to 2050, the review identifies emerging threats, including climate-related stressors, ethical dilemmas in digital psychiatry and persistent workforce shortages, while outlining strategic opportunities in research, digital innovation and culturally responsive care. The article calls for reimagining Arab psychiatry grounded in epistemic sovereignty, interdisciplinary collaboration and decolonial ethics. It advocates for the revitalization of indigenous knowledge systems, the expansion of community-based models and the development of care frameworks that are both globally informed and locally rooted. The review concludes with a vision of an Arab mental health renaissance: a future where psychiatry is equitable, context-sensitive and led by regional voices. This paper serves as a resource for clinicians, policymakers and educators committed to transforming mental health across the Arab world.
KW - Arab psychiatry
KW - Middle East and North Africa
KW - cultural psychiatry
KW - decolonial mental health
KW - mental health systems
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016376617
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016376617#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1080/09540261.2025.2550616
DO - 10.1080/09540261.2025.2550616
M3 - Review article
C2 - 40923104
AN - SCOPUS:105016376617
SN - 0954-0261
JO - International Review of Psychiatry
JF - International Review of Psychiatry
ER -