About this Research Topic
Living with a psychiatric or neurological disease can be stressful because it changes patients' lives, distressing their physical or/and mental health or threatening their survival. Nevertheless, people are able to take steps to cope with these new situations, manage their condition and maintain a good quality of life. These patients have different disease status and management requirements. One health care is a collaborative process that should be used in chronic condition management in which patients, caregivers, and healthcare providers identify and discuss problems caused by or related to the patient's condition and then develop plans and goals to empower patients. Employing One Health frameworks can provide innovative solutions to prevent and treat neurological disorders across the animal kingdom.
This Special Issue focuses on the current state of knowledge on how society in general, and health professionals in particular, can contribute to One Health care in Psychiatric and Neurological Diseases.
We invite researchers in the field to submit original research, clinical trials, study protocols, case studies, review, mini-review, hypotheses, theory, and perspectives that can further establish the current state of science on delivering one health care for people with psychiatric and neurological diseases.
All papers should look at one health care and contribute to the development of knowledge in this field.
Potential topics include, but are not limited to:
- Health status of people with psychiatric or neurological diseases;
- Ensuring access to one health care for people with psychiatric or neurological diseases;
- Pathways for one health care;
- Studies with the application of novel approaches to psychiatric and neurological diseases;
- Protecting and supporting people with psychiatric or neurological diseases through one health care;
- Benefits of an one health care approach;
- Challenges to delivering one health care.
Keywords: Psychiatric Diseases, Neurological diseases, Person-centredness, Dementia, Parkinson's disease, Autism spectrum disorders, Schizophrenia, Mood disorders, Bipolar disorder., One Health
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.