WorldStage– The Fourth High-Level Meeting on Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) and Mental Health, held during the 80th United Nations General Assembly on September 25, 2025, marked a historic moment for global health policy.
For the first time, mental health was placed at the heart of discussions, no longer treated as a side issue but integrated into strategies for preventing and managing NCDs. The adoption of a new Political Declaration seemed to signal a global recognition that mental well-being is central to human development.
This shift occurred against the broader theme of the UNGA:“Better Together: 80 Years and More for Peace, Development and Human Rights.” Framing mental health within this context underscored its link to peace, stability, and the right to health. The declaration pledged to accelerate action toward the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), highlighting mental health as an essential piece of the global development puzzle.
The urgency of this focus is reflected in the staggering statistics. More than one billion people worldwide are currently living with mental health conditions, a number that swelled during the COVID-19 pandemic. The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that cases of anxiety and depression rose by about 25% in the first year of the pandemic alone. In Nigeria, an estimated one in five people are affected by mental health issues, but four in five receive no treatment.
Beyond its human toll, poor mental health has enormous economic consequences. The “silent epidemic” costs the global economy about $1 trillion annually in lost productivity, a figure projected to rise sharply by 2030. Lower- and middle-income countries (LMICs) carry the heaviest burden, yet their access to resources remains the weakest. The imbalance between need and funding is one of the most extreme challenges in global health today.
The new Political Declaration attempts to address this imbalance by committing countries to universal access to mental health care, integration of mental health services into primary healthcare systems, and targeted annual investments.
In the opinions of many public analysts, including Mr. Adebamiwa Gbenga, this marks a paradigm shift in framing mental health as a foundational component of public health rather than a peripheral concern. Considering that NCDs account for three-quarters of global deaths, this integration could prove transformative if properly implemented.
The summit also sought to build momentum on existing initiatives, such as the WHO’s Mental Health Gap Action Programme (mhGAP), which has expanded care access in many resource-poor settings. The growing use of telehealth, especially during the pandemic, was highlighted as a tool to bridge service gaps, offering potential solutions for countries where mental health professionals are scarce.
Broad support was another striking feature. The declaration reportedly received endorsement from all 193 UN member states, reflecting widespread recognition of the scale of the crisis. Leaders emphasized the need for intergenerational equity, greater funding commitments, and stronger voices from the Global South in shaping solutions.
For Nigeria, the summit’s goals echo its domestic reforms. The country’s Mental Health Act, signed into law in 2021 and implemented in 2023, provides a modern framework for mental health policy. But serious obstacles remain, fewer than 300 psychiatrists serve a population of over 200 million, and persistent stigma, underfunding, and the migration of skilled health workers undermine progress.
Still, the declaration is not without weaknesses. Its non-binding nature raises doubts about enforcement, while mental health continues to account for only about 2% of health budgets worldwide. In LMICs, the figure is even lower, and many past pledges have failed to materialize into real action. The gap between aspiration and delivery remains wide.
Equity is another challenge. Despite the language of “universal access,” inequalities between high- and low-income countries remain entrenched. Nigeria offers a case study of this divide, where the lofty goals of the 2021 Act clash with a lack of resources, cultural barriers, and professional shortages. Many communities still rely on informal or spiritual approaches to care, which global frameworks often overlook.
Another critical point raised by experts is the intersection of mental health with broader crises. Conflict, climate change, displacement, and economic shocks often intensify mental distress. Embedding mental health into humanitarian and disaster responses is therefore vital, yet remains uneven. Addressing this requires not just financial investment but also culturally tailored interventions that go beyond Western models.
Ultimately, the summit represents both a breakthrough and a test. By elevating mental health onto the world’s highest platform, the UNGA has given visibility and legitimacy to an issue long ignored. But declarations alone do not heal minds or rebuild systems. The true measure of success will be whether these commitments lead to sustained funding, practical reforms, and culturally sensitive approaches that close the gap between policy and reality especially in countries like Nigeria where the need is greatest.






























































