Please note that this Acrobat format download may not exactly match the appearance of the original printed version of this publication (which is available from the CEMH (telephone 020 7848 0198) or the PSSRU (email address below)). The authors retain the copyright in this publication. While it may be freely distributed as an Acrobat file, quotations must be acknowledged and permission for use of longer excerpts must be obtained in advance. We welcome comments about the content of the Review and would appreciate notification of problems with the electronic version. The Review is sent free of charge to local authorities and health authorities and to interested individuals in the UK. Further copies can be ordered from the CEMH (020 7848 0198) or PSSRU (01227 827773) at the PSSRU. If your mailing details are incorrect, please let us know. There are back issues available of issues two, three, four and five; issue one is out of print. A complete listing of articles in these issues can be found on the inside back cover of this edition. If you have access to the Internet, general information about PSSRU and CEMH research, and electronic versions of this and other publications, can be obtained from the PSSRU and CEMH websites as on page 1. There is today, as there has always been, an important 'economic agenda' running through mental health policy. This agenda has both macro and micro aspects: that is, questions are raised both about the operation of the whole mental health care system and about the efficiency and equity of specific care and treatment arrangements within it. Since the PSSRU first started to conduct research on mental health care (and care for people with learning disabilities) in the mid 1980s, and particularly since the formal establishment of a programme in 1991, our research activities have drawn from across this agenda and have been heavily influenced by the developing policy and practice contexts in England. When CEMH was established in 1993 in London, we had the further opportunity to examine both macro and micro issues in relation to both policy and practice. A very busy work schedule in the intervening six years has contained a great many macro and micro studies. Much of the research conducted within PSSRU and CEMH has been genuinely inter-disciplinary, as will be clear from this and previous issues of the Mental Health Research Review. Of course, running strongly …
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