Despite the ongoing impacts of the COVID‐19 pandemic and the difficulties in getting connected1, 2, the WPA has remained active in its professional work and in meeting its objectives during the last two years. As the situation is getting a bit better now, our work to implement the current triennium Action Plan also gets a noticeable momentum 3 . The WPA Executive Committee and its different components as well as the Secretariat staff are committed to fulfill their responsibilities4, 5, 6, 7, 8.
The WPA has strengthened its virtual work and e‐learning programmes among colleagues and trainees around the world, which has led to offering more online educational activities. Our educational portal is providing an excellent educational resource to our membership, and we were delighted to produce several educational modules, courses, teaching sessions and online training programmes 8 .
The enhanced and quicker development of the WPA education learning management system has also promoted the development of new education and training modules. Like many other professional organizations, the WPA has encouraged and supported its membership to use e‐mental health tools and e‐learning techniques. The portal also gives ready access to WPA's existing training materials available in several languages.
The available programmes on our educational portal and learning management system include new modules such as those on comorbidities of mental disorders, mood disorders and dementias. Recently held courses have attracted a lot of contacts, especially those on ICD‐11, tele‐psychiatry and yoga. Similarly, webinars on early intervention in psychosis, updates in psychopharmacology, psychotherapy, and child and adolescent psychiatry have attracted many participants.
Various programmes outlined in the Action Plan 2020‐2023 are also ongoing. Working Groups are implementing several initiatives in areas of training and research, and clinical updates. Activities by the Working Groups on Managing Comorbidity of Mental and Physical Health, Early Intervention in Psychosis, Public Mental Health, and Promotion of Psychiatry Among Medical Students are drawing additional attention to the current needs and opportunities in these areas of work9, 10, 11.
The support of the WPA Scientific Sections is playing a vital role in our activities. In a highly stimulating way, the Sections’ work is providing a great motivation to young psychiatrists to benefit from experts’ contributions. Similarly, WPA's network of Collaborating Centres 12 has been involved in various scientific initiatives, including joint educational seminars and support to young psychiatrists in research and other related activities.
The WPA Collaborating Centre Group and the WPA Working Group on Medical Students offered medical students and psychiatric trainees the opportunity to obtain travel fellowships to attend the 22nd World Congress of Psychiatry in Bangkok. Psychiatric trainees were invited to submit an essay on the topic of “Forced displacement and mental health: challenges and resilience”, while medical students were invited to submit an essay on “Breaking the silence: how is stigma a barrier to mental health?”. Over 40 submissions were received from 15 countries from the trainees, and over 150 entries were submitted by the medical students from 39 different countries. The quality of entries was outstanding, and the judges were pleased to review and assess so many good essays from around the world, which is an encouraging reflection of the talent amongst future psychiatrists.
Unfortunately, in addition to the COVID‐19 pandemic, several other adversities affected us in many parts of the world during this triennium. The WPA established an Advisory Committee for Responses to Emergencies (ACRE), that brought together the leaders of the larger Member Societies to facilitate practical and concrete support to Member Societies in need. This work continued mobilizing and fostering collaboration, information collection, and development of local, national and international strategies to cope with the mental health consequences of emergencies throughout 2021 and 2022.
In response to the war, and due to the grave concerns about the well‐being of the Ukrainian people, particularly psychiatric patients and psychiatric staff, the ACRE planned and initiated its support to Ukraine. Reflecting our long‐standing opposition to non‐defensive military activities and mindful of the recent statements of various health and welfare organizations, as well as the vote of the United Nations General Assembly condemning the invasion of Ukraine, the WPA also expressed grave concern at reports of attacks on civilian facilities such as private residences, schools and hospitals, and of civilian casualties, including children, women, older persons, and persons with disabilities.
The WPA also established an educational trauma resource centre on its website for mental health professionals, in Ukrainian, Russian and other languages, to help with the mental health challenges that people from Ukraine are currently facing. Support from our Member Societies and other components was very encouraging 13 .
Looking at Afghanistan's deteriorating conditions, that are not only causing a humanitarian crisis, but also adding concerns about provisions and delivery of health care for the general population, the WPA, as a part of its ACRE project, worked with its fellow Afghan mental health professionals to offer ongoing support through the provision of medicines, patient assessments and training. Similarly, the WPA offered support for buying psychotropic medicines to Sri Lanka, as the country was going through the worst economic crisis that it has faced in its history.
With the start of the WPA eNewsletter in 2021, we are facilitating sharing of activities and reports from our membership. The Newsletter has emerged as a strong medium for our visibility on the social media platform and a better communication among different components of the Association 14 .
World Psychiatry, the WPA official journal, has achieved the unprecedented impact factor of 79.683 and continues ranking as the number one in the list of psychiatric journals and in the Social Sciences Citation Index. The journal is published regularly in three languages (English, Spanish and Russian), with individual issues or articles also available on the WPA website in other languages (Chinese, French, Arabic, Turkish, Japanese, Romanian and Polish). More than 60,000 mental health professionals regularly receive the electronic or the print version of the journal. All the back issues can be freely downloaded from the PubMed system and the WPA website.
We very much enjoyed our successful hybrid World Congress of Psychiatry that took place in Bangkok in August 2022. While adapting and innovating new resources, we were able to redesign the scientific programme and ensured coverage of the most timely clinical, academic and research topics to our membership 15 . I am also pleased that we are actively working for our next World Congress to be held in Vienna, Austria from September 28 to October 1, 2023.
As we kick off for the last year of this triennium, we are positive that the challenges that will undoubtedly come, as the long‐term impact on mental health following this pandemic becomes more evident, will be addressed effectively. We are enthusiastic and learning fast with the changes and look forward with confidence to the future, remaining fully committed and confident to fulfilling our triennium's goals, and to continuing with our efforts to build up the future of psychiatry and mental health together.
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