Abstract

Increasing academic and governmental attention is being directed towards improving legislative and human rights protections for the mentally ill and the mentally vulnerable in developing nations. Many states have made sincere attempts to discern such protections and enunciate them in legislation. A significant gap continues to exist here, however, between aspiration and implementation. One strategy for improving implementation in this area, which been little examined to date, involves the opportunities created by large-scale, collaborative research projects in developing nations. Such projects offer the potential for enhanced resources, attention and skills capable of promoting a domestic institutional culture of respect for legislative and human rights mental health protections. This paper, as a case study, discusses the possibilities for enhancing mental health protections offered by a multi-national toxicology research project in rural Sri Lanka. The project is a Wellcome Trustfunded research trial investigating treatment options for cases of self-poisoning involving organophosphate insecticides. It is known as the South Asian Clinical Toxicology Research Collaboration (bSACTRCQ).

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