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Wheatbelt - Mental Health Commission
Wheatbelt - Mental Health Commission

... • Significant increases in community-based mental health (to 175,000 hours per year) and drug and alcohol support services (to 7,000 hours per year). These include peer support, employment, education and training programs, housing, social opportunities and help with daily living tasks. • Increase ...
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Motivational Interviewing with Mental Health, Substance Abuse

... Interviewing (MI) when working with substance abuse and dual diagnosis clients. Motivational Interviewing (MI) is an empirically validated approach for working with mental health, addictions, and dual diagnosis clients. It is designed to assist clients who are ambivalent and/or resistive to change. ...
The Drugging of “Post Partum Depression”
The Drugging of “Post Partum Depression”

... There are no lab tests. So what’s the biochemical imbalance?” This does not mean that serious emotional difficulties do not exist, that people’s hopes cannot be shattered or that their methods of coping with this cannot fail. But it does mean that psychiatrists, psychologists and drug groups have us ...
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IOSR Journal of Computer Engineering (IOSR-JCE) e-ISSN: 2278-0661,p-ISSN: 2278-8727 PP 40-45 www.iosrjournals.org

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Mental Health Act 2014 Designated Mental Health Service

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Mental Health Measures in FF 1

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Testimony SB121 Behavior-Mental Health Issues_ Jeffrey Klein

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Anatomy of an Epidemic - Summary of Findings

... illnesses, with fairly good long-term outcomes. As George Winokur, a leading expert at Washington University, explained in a 1969 text: “Assurances can be given to a patient and to his family that subsequent episodes of illness after a first mania or even a first depression will not tend toward a mo ...
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Listowel Wingham Hospitals Alliance Board of Directors

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Case Example #2: Self Harm
Case Example #2: Self Harm

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Submission to the Exposure Draft Mental Health Bill Flick Grey and
Submission to the Exposure Draft Mental Health Bill Flick Grey and

... are a voluntary patient and want to leave a service or want to refuse a treatment, they are threatened with being made into an involuntary patient). This is such common practice that we consider it a structural issue, rather than one of individual service providers abusing the law. Moreover, an unkn ...
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Deinstitutionalisation

Deinstitutionalisation (or deinstitutionalization) is the process of replacing long-stay psychiatric hospitals with less isolated community mental health services for those diagnosed with a mental disorder or developmental disability. Deinstitutionalisation works in two ways: the first focuses on reducing the population size of mental institutions by releasing patients, shortening stays, and reducing both admissions and readmission rates; the second focuses on reforming mental hospitals' institutional processes so as to reduce or eliminate reinforcement of dependency, hopelessness, learned helplessness, and other maladaptive behaviours.According to psychiatrist Leon Eisenberg, deinstitutionalisation has been an overall benefit for most psychiatric patients, though many have been left homeless and without care. The deinstitutionalisation movement was initiated by three factors:A socio-political movement for community mental health services and open hospitals;The advent of psychotropic drugs able to manage psychotic episodes; Financial imperatives (in the US specifically, to shift costs from state to federal budgets)According to American psychiatrist Loren Mosher, most deinstitutionalization in the USA took place after 1972, as a result of the availability of SSI and Social Security Disability, long after the antipsychotic drugs were used universally in state hospitals. This period marked the growth in community support funds and community development, including early group homes, the first community mental health apartment programs, drop-in and transitional employment, and sheltered workshops in the community which predated community forms of supportive housing and supported living. According to psychiatrist and author Thomas Szasz, deinstitutionalisation is the policy and practice of transferring homeless, involuntarily hospitalised mental patients from state mental hospitals into many different kinds of de facto psychiatric institutions funded largely by the federal government. These federally subsidised institutions began in the United States and were quickly adopted by most Western governments. The plan was set in motion by the Community Mental Health Act as a part of John F. Kennedy's legislation and passed by the U.S. Congress in 1963, mandating the appointment of a commission to make recommendations for ""combating mental illness in the United States"".In many cases the deinstitutionalisation of the mentally ill in the Western world from the 1960s onward has translated into policies of ""community release"". Individuals who previously would have been in mental institutions are no longer continuously supervised by health care workers. Some experts, such as E. Fuller Torrey, have considered deinstitutionalisation to be a failure, while some consider many aspects of institutionalization to have been worse.
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