Mental Health in Focus: What the APA Is Saying
Washington, D.C., USATue May 05 2026
The American Psychiatric Association has responded to a new federal plan that highlights the country’s mental‑health crisis.
The organization welcomes the spotlight and says it will keep working to make high‑quality care easier for everyone.
They support more money for research and for training doctors who help people start, change or stop medications.
The APA also points out that drugs can save lives for many patients. Doctors advise people not to stop medication on their own.
At the same time, they argue that describing the crisis as mainly a problem of “over‑prescribing” is too simple.
The real issue, they say, is that many patients cannot get timely help and care is unevenly spread across the health system.
Shortages of mental‑health workers, too few hospital beds, short appointments and limited therapy options all play a role.
Adding psychiatric care to primary‑care teams through the Collaborative Care model could help, but it is not happening enough.
Deprescribing—cutting back on drugs—is only one part of the solution. In psychiatry, as in other medical fields, doctors and patients decide together which medicines are best. The APA says that blaming medications or creating broad rules hurts people who need them.
They want patients to see all the evidence‑based options and choose what fits their needs.
The APA’s priorities include:
* Keeping patients able to use any proven treatment, including medication when it helps.
* Encouraging doctors and patients to share decisions based on the best science.
* Promoting clear consent rules that do not add extra barriers to mental‑health care.
* Supporting smart ways to start, adjust or stop psychiatric drugs.
The association says it will keep working with the government and lawmakers to fix the mental‑health system.
https://localnews.ai/article/mental-health-in-focus-what-the-apa-is-saying-fd8b4c29
actions
flag content