The Hon Mark Butler MP, Minister for Mental Health and Ageing, Minister for Social Inclusion, Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Mental Health Reform, Minister for Housing and Homelessness
Images of The Hon Mark Butler MP, Minister for Mental Health and Ageing, Minister for Social Inclusion, Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Mental Health Reform, Minister for Housing and Homelessness

THE HON MARK BUTLER MP

Minister for Mental Health and Ageing

Minister for Social Inclusion

Minister Assisting the Prime Minister on Mental Health Reform

Minister for Housing and Homelessness

Better Help for Health Professionals Means Better Help for Treating Mental Health Problems

Print page  Decrease text size  Increase text size


Health professionals will have access to new clinical practice guidelines to help them identify and treat mental health problems following National Health and Medical Research Council’s approval of guidelines developed by beyondblue: the national depression initiative.

PDF printable version of Better Help for Health Professionals Means Better Help for Treating Mental Health Problems (PDF 21 KB)

17 March 2011

Health professionals will have access to new clinical practice guidelines to help them identify and treat mental health problems following National Health and Medical Research Council’s approval of guidelines developed by beyondblue: the national depression initiative.

Minister for Mental Health and Ageing Mark Butler today welcomed the release of the two clinical practice guidelines addressing depression and related issues, and said that the Gillard Government has a strong commitment to making sure that people who are dealing with mental health issues receive the best possible care and treatment.

“These Guidelines will assist health professionals across Australia to identify and respond to depression and mental health risks for young people and mothers.

“One guideline will provide guidance in the effective treatment of depression amongst the traditionally hard to target group of adolescents and young adults aged 13 to 24 years. The second will assist primary and maternity care health professionals provide care to those in the perinatal (around birth) period to improve quality of life for mothers and their babies.

“We must not underestimate the effect of depression on people living with the condition and their families. These new guidelines will ensure that people seeking help can be confident that their health professional has the best available evidence to identify depression and to make the best possible decisions for treatment.

“Guidelines support experience and good clinical judgment. Today, health practitioners and families have a valuable addition to their treatment tool kit. I urge all health professionals who work with young people and new mothers to get a copy of the guidelines and take full advantage of the important information that they contain,” Mr Butler said.

The beyondblue Clinical Practice Guideline: Depression in Adolescents and Young Adults and Clinical Practice Guidelines for depression and related disorders – anxiety, bipolar disorder and puerperal psychosis – in the perinatal period were partly funded by the Australian Government.

Copies of the Guidelines are available from beyondblue or through the National Health and Medical Research Council’s Clinical Guidelines Portal and can be accessed through the National Health and Medical Research Council's website www.nhmrc.gov.au

For more information, contact the Minister’s Office on 02 6277 7220

Help with accessing large documents

When accessing large documents (over 500 KB in size), it is recommended that the following procedure be used:

  1. Click the link with the RIGHT mouse button
  2. Choose "Save Target As.../Save Link As..." depending on your browser
  3. Select an appropriate folder on a local drive to place the downloaded file

Attempting to open large documents within the browser window (by left-clicking) may inhibit your ability to continue browsing while the document is opening and/or lead to system problems.

Help with accessing PDF documents

To view PDF (Portable Document Format) documents, you will need to have a PDF reader installed on your computer. A number of PDF readers are available through the Australian Government Information Management Office (AGIMO) Web Guide website.