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HENRIK
WAHLBERG, M.D.
Finland/Sweden
I'm
grateful for choosing psychiatry for specialization. It was' the road
less traveled', but one that "made all the difference"; a road
that has led on, for me, to discovering and working in the field of
cultural psychiatry.
The
French expression "Liberté, égalité, fraternité" was the
Magna Carta of my childhood. I grew up with a passion for human rights
and for global solidarity against oppression. Later I realized the
importance of mind, emotions and human relations. I devoted myself to
the psychological dimension of the French national commitment to
"Liberté, égalité, fraternité" as applied to mental health
and the treatment of people with mental illnesses.
I
studied medicine at the University of Helsinki and received my training
as a psychiatrist in Finland and Sweden. I have worked in different
locations in Finland, Sweden and Norway as a clinical psychiatrist and I
have had long-term experience in the development and administration of
mental health services in Scandinavia.
As
a consultant and project manager for the World Health Organization in
the Balkans and the Middle-East, at different periods between 1999 and
2004, working on WHO emergency teams and on national mental health
programs, I encountered deficient and obsolete mental health services in
urgent need of improvement. Frequently the services and the facilities
violated basic human rights. I have a dream that every country will soon
provide good mental health services! Global organizations such as the
WHO and the WPA can play an important role in the development of
neglected mental health services, and can also spur cooperation between
countries and mental health professionals.
Currently,
I work at the Transcultural Center in Stockholm, where I'm involved with
the postgraduate training of the health care staff. I am also the
coordinator of the Nordic Network for Cultural Psychology and Psychiatry
(CPPN). I continue to be a devoted advocate of better services and
conditions for mentally ill people - in cooperation with consumers,
family organizations and NGOs. I'm a member of the Finnish, Swedish and
American Psychiatric Associations.
Transcultural
psychiatry can build bridges between people and cultures and improve the
prerequisites for health care: good communication, empathy, mutual
understanding and respect. Transcultural psychiatry is, in my opinion,
too much focused on immigrants and on their problems in the health
services, and pays too little attention to the reciprocity and the new
traditions and opportunities for health care that immigrants bring with
them to their new homelands.
infocppn(a)aol.com
henrik.wahlberg(a)sll.se
June 3, 2008
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