Hiring in life sciences? Share your open positions with our professional community. Read more Close

Advertisement

A social determination framework for mental health.

Created on 22 Jun 2026

Authors

Franco Mascayano, María Teresa Muñoz-Quezada, Alfonso Urzúa, María Soledad Burrone, Rodrigo Casanueva, Sebastián Rojas-Navarro, Pamela Grandón, Sandra Saldivia, Cristian Montenegro

Published in

Globalization and health. Jun 20, 2026. Epub Jun 20, 2026.

Abstract

Mainstream global mental health continues to privilege individual-level risk factors and biomedical approaches and treatments while sidelining the structural forces that shape mental distress. Despite calls for more socially embedded and decolonial approaches, policy and research too often neglect how structural phenomena such as globalization, colonialism, and neoliberal reforms directly drive mental health inequities.
Drawing on Latin American traditions of social medicine-particularly Jaime Breilh's paradigm of social determination of health-this debate article critiques reductionist frameworks that fragment structural causation into depoliticized lists of risk factors. We articulate a social determination approach for mental health research and practice, emphasizing the multi-level embodiment of power relations, the historical-political organization of social life, structural drivers embedded in institutions and policies, and the role of collective agency and praxis. Illustrative vignettes from Latin America (employment, discrimination, and environment) demonstrate how historically structured processes linking global political economy, institutional arrangements, and everyday social relations become embodied as mental distress, and how participatory and mixed-method research can help document these dynamics while supporting transformative, community-led responses.
We argue that adopting a social determination lens can reorient global mental health policy and scholarship toward structural justice, in line with recent international calls to decolonize and politicize mental health research.
Not applicable.

PMID:
42323695
Bibliographic data and abstract were imported from PubMed on 22 Jun 2026.

Read full publication at:
Please sign in to see all details.

Advertisement

Stats

  • Community rating n/a 0 votes
  • Reviewers' rating n/a 0 votes
  • Your rating

1-terrible, 9-excellent. How would you rate this publication? Sign in in to submit your rating.

  • Recommendations n/a n/a positive of 0 vote(s)
  • Views 0
  • Comments 0

Recommended by

  • No recommendations yet.

Post a comment

You need to be signed in to post comments. You can sign in here.

Comments

There are no comments yet.

Advertisement