This practicum has stressed the point that I will forever be a student. To effectively support my future clients must stay current with studies, treatment options and legislation. My ability to stay up today or build a network of people who can have knowledge on best treatment and latest legislation. The field of mental and emotional health is rather broad. There are many new developments in treatment options in these fields, as a responsible social worker I will need to have up to date information, so I can…
Describe the major components of the Sociological Model of Mental Illness and compare it to the Medical Model of Mental Illness. What evidence exists that supports the Sociological Model of Mental Illness? What evidence exists that supports the Medical Model of Mental Illness? (Approximately 2-4 paragraphs)…
The Hero's Journey is never an easy one. This particular journey, as detailed in Homer's The Odyssey, is one of struggle, loss, heartache, pain, growth and triumph. It is comprised of many steps that Odysseus has to overcome and battle through in order to achieve his final goal of reaching his home and his loved ones. From the Call to Adventure to the Freedom or Gift of living, Odysseus conquered them all. The story begins in the middle of the story, as many of the oral Greek traditions did, with the Journey of Telemachus to find his father. Although Telemachus has not yet met his father, it is almost as if they are journeying together, where the end of both of their journeys results in being reunited. Telemachus journeys from being a boy to becoming a man, while out in the sea Odysseus is battling Poseidon to return to the home that wife that he loves and the home he has left behind.…
There are many in the scientific community who believe that there is a strong genetic component or pre-disposition to autism spectrum disorders.…
* Education in the need to understand mental illness as a medical condition to promote the reversal of social exclusion, discrimination and social isolation which result in stigma.…
In 2011 The Department of Health published the report No Health Without Mental Health: A Cross-Governmental Mental Health Outcome Strategy For People Of All Ages (HM Government 2011) supporting the Government’s aim of achieving a balance between mental and physical health, with the view that an individual’s mental health is central to their quality of life (HM Government 2011). This strategy is relevant in Mental Health nursing today as The Office for National Statistics (2009) discovered that one in four people will experience at least one diagnosable mental health problem at some point in their life and one in six adults experience a mental health problem at any one time. From these statistics it is evident to see that mental health has a significantly large impact on the population as a whole and subsequently influences the health and quality of lives of many individuals. One of the main objectives of this strategy is to is to improve both the physical and mental health of those suffering with a mental illness, promoting recovering and providing support to not only themselves but also to their family and friends (Department of Health 2011).…
- A teenager who has a hostile impulsive would be able to plea for the insanity defense and could be admitted into a psychiatric ward. The reason why is because if a psychiatrist was about to diagnose the teen with a mental illness such as bipolar or depressive disorders while founding out after taken many different psychology test that proves that the teen is dangerous to their self and other people around them would cause them to be admitted.…
“The human mind is a channel through which things-to-be are coming into the realm of things-that-are”, a notable quote from Henry Ford in 1930. The mind is a powerful thing. It has the ability to control our body in order to live, to talk, to share with others. Civilizations can be built, movements can start, governments can be constructed, etc. all because of the mind giving you a process. When there is a mental illness, it can make the process difficult. Alzheimer’s affects more than 5.2 million people today. Symptoms, myths, misconceptions, treatments are all fundamental in the understanding of Alzheimer’s disease, and to hopefully prevent others from acquiring it in older age.…
Research ‘case management’ and define the main characteristics of this approach and its differences from other patterns of nursing care.…
With the closing of the large intuitions in the early 1990s and the rise of smaller units being set up within communities, the policy change ideology was for individuals who have a mental illness to live independent lives, and to learn skills to function within society. It was deemed that these vulnerable individual’s faced more risk from staff than what small risk they posed to others. ( k272, Reader, p.138). However if there was a need for intervention then there would be the power to detain that person against their wishes in hospital to ensure their safety and that of others. The Mental Health Act (1983) is the piece of statute law in the United Kingdom which allows this. This act is reviewed and regulated by the Mental Health Act Commission (MHAC). With this change in policy, there has been panic due to perceived risks which are faced by the public from individuals whom suffer mental distress. This has been reinforced by the media. (K272, Unit 14, p.40). These fears which the Public share are firstly exaggerated and are inaccurate with respect to the correlation between mental illness and violence. ( K272, unit 14, p.38, Start et al, 2004, ). Research has shown that self - harm and suicidal risk is much greater, than that of violence to the public, even though the media represents, it differently. (Mind, 2006).…
Emerging from a blend of human services scholars has been a broad history with a defining mission. “The fields of social services, psychology, and counseling have provided the preeminent material to form a new hybrid species: human services” (Harris, Maloney, &Rother, 2004, p.24). In addition, human services for people with a mental illness following the wars, such as World War I and II made an impact on individuals because they came home traumatized and sometimes even homeless. “Authorizing monies for research and demonstration focused on assisting persons with mental illness in the areas of prevention, diagnosis and treatment”(Harris, Maloney, & Rother, 2004, p.26).…
During the Antebellum period in the southern regions of the United States, medical knowledge was primitive. Physicians used methods of healing backed up by little to no scientific research or evidence of true effectiveness. Among these were bleeding and purging, techniques of severing a patient’s skin in order to let the disease escape the body (Fitzgerald 47). Many African Americans had already been diagnosed with a variety of blood disorders, including hemophilia, thus giving them better knowledge of necessary treatments (Ray 3). Slaves coming to the New World from Africa had used herbal remedies in their home countries, which were proven as time went on, to be significantly more effective than the treatments American doctors used. Burdock root, for example, could be used for antibacterial, antifungal, and anti-inflammatory purposes, while Asafetida helped prevent pulmonary illnesses.…
Abstract: The portrayal of psychiatrists in popular movies has been colored by three main stereotypes: the "evil" doctor, the "kooky" doctor, and the "wonderful" doctor. On one level, these depictions represent the understandable ambivalence many people feel toward authority figures who, from time to time, may abuse their power. But on a more primal level, these stereotypes may be related to three archetypes that I call The Vampire, the Fisher King, and The Zaddik. A number of films and television programs are analyzed in light of these archetypes, and their antagonistic relationship to the "mundane". Some implications for the future of psychiatry and the cinema are discussed.…
One common theme found in the mental health care industry is the deficiency of acknowledgement, in terms of overall health status and the well-being of the people involved. The consequence and cause to this is the fact that mental health research is poorly funded and developed due to politics, the economy, and stigma. Even with the limited imbursement given, money is being spent with limited value and accountability (Bhattacharya et all. 2001). Despite all this, mental health is not even considered near to the same degree as importance as physical health, so its neglectfulness results in this area of public health to be poorly studied; hence suffering people who don’t receive treatment to its full potential (World Health Organization, 2003).…
According to NAMI—nearly one in five adults in America experience mental illness. When an organ is damaged, you go to a doctor--so why wouldn’t you do the same for the brain? Mental health is just as important as you physical well-being and should not be ignored or stigmatized. According to the World Health Organization, “Every year about 800,000 people commit suicide every year with suicide being the second leading cause of death among 15-29 year olds”. Yet to this day, many of those individuals are never treated and all of these deaths are completely preventable with proper care, knowledge, and management. It is something we as a modern society can no longer ignore, that mental health is just as essential and important as your physical well-being.…