We must convince the Senate members that the mental health issues people experience can affect the prevention and treatment of various physical diseases. If there are any…
H. H. Holmes was born in Gilmanton, New Hampshire to a privileged, methodist family, his original name being Herman Webster Mudgett. Herman was deemed an intellectual at an early age, expressing interest in medicine. After he graduated highschool at age 16, he went straight to medical school, where he began to steal deceased bodies and used the bodies to make false insurance claims and even experimenting on them. Later when he graduated he moved to Chicago under the false alias Henry H.…
As Social Workers, we need to be aware of the affect the DSM has on all vulnerable populations. Being aware of these types of fads will help us be skeptical when we diagnose people. Diagnosing mental illness is not something to take lightly because it can follow a person throughout their entire life and negatively affect…
In my opinion, the most pressing ethical concern in using the DSM-5 as a diagnostic tool is relying too heavily on the results given and not really listening to the patient. This could lead the therapist to a diagnosis that is not based on what the patient is actually suffering from by not looking at the whole picture. Before a clinician can help someone, they must know what they are suffering from. They must also be careful not to place a label on someone that can lead to them being stigmatized and jeopardizing their recovery (Whitbourne & Halgin, 2013). Using the manual could result in being diagnosed incorrectly. That could lead to not being treated properly leaving a patient feeling more helpless. There is a lot of controversy in depending on the manual, and hope that the next one will concentrate on the cause instead of just the symptoms (Whitbourne & Halgin, 2013).…
There are numerous symptoms that overlay between different illnesses in DSM group listings. The clinician’s individual explanations may lead to misdiagnosis amongst one of these two illnesses if the clinician trusts only on info collected in the clinical situation. For example obsessive-compulsive disorder, an anxiety disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder, a personality disorder has numerous indications in common. In this circumstance, a clinician could grasp a deceptive analysis in this…
Mental illnesses are more readily labeled today than at any other time in history. Following this heightened awareness; substance abuse disorder has been established in the Diagnostic and Statistics Manual, 5th edition (DSM-5) as its own diagnostic category. The DSM-5 is a diagnostic tool employed by healthcare professionals in the procedure of determining the proper diagnosis as well as the course of treatment for individuals suffering from mental health disorders. Each year, thousands of people remain untreated as a result of their drug or alcohol use. Due to the stigma surrounding addiction, hesitation to fully disclose the substances that contribute to the symptoms experienced by a patient can cause a dual diagnosis to be difficult…
Over one million British people died every year during the Victorian Era to one of the many fatal diseases that you could have caught. This topic is about the diseases that many British people caught in the Victorian era. Some were fatal some were bearable. Some had cures as others didn’t. It was different back then because they did not have cures for things like the flu, now days we do. There were many of very bad diseases out there and many of them were deadly.…
Another example is the Rethink Mental Illness campaign which aimed at raising awareness of mental illnesses. Mental illness is often referred to as the ‘silent epidemic’, with a lot of people affected by conditions such as depression and anxiety. The metal health foundation runs campaigns related to this issue, for example in 2009, a national campaign was raised for awareness about the impacts of fear and anxiety. Due to its adverse affects on society, mental illnesses are a cause for much ill health.…
A major problem that needs to solved is the stigmatization of mental illness and related treatments for mental illness. This problem needs to be solved faster than ever because the number of people diagnosed with mental illnesses such as depression is growing but the way mental illnesses are portrayed is not changing. We need to work towards bettering this mental health system for future generations because the way it has been functioning is not working.…
It is also important (if in the persons best interest) that they know what their diagnosis is and what their likely symptom’s could be this is very important in helping someone to manage and prepare and also feel a sense of control / independence.…
Treatments in the past have been eliminated after extensive research proved that they didn’t work. Though progress has been made, there is still a lot our society needs to work on. There is still discrimination against mental illness occurring today. There are many people invalidating their mental illnesses, claiming that they’re either just “lazy” or “dumb. The modern-day media is also to blame for this. Violent perpetrators are occasionally portrayed as mentally ill, which causes the public to perceive other mentally ill people as “crazy” or “weird”. We may have gotten better in terms of treatment and social acceptability, but understanding mental illness is the next thing we need to work…
Nowadays you see that kind of thing everywhere you go. You see it all over television commercials. Some announcer reads a bunch of common symptoms of many different illnesses or disorders and relates them back to one of them. Then thousands of Americans think they have it, go to the doctor to get diagnosed, and are told they do have this thing. The reality is that between eighty five and ninety percent of those people are perfectly healthy, when it comes to psychological disorders anyway. According to the National Institute for Mental Health, 1 in 3 Americans is diagnosed with some kind of psychological illness or disorder. This number is equivalent to 32.4% of Americans, or over 75 million people. Does this number seem too high? That’s because it is. The most common diagnoses in psychology today are ADHD, PTSD, Depression, and Bipolar Disorder. Each one of these disorders has their own varying degrees of severity and prevalence in the US. Each one of these is also diagnosed more than it should be by psychiatrists and clinical psychologists each day.…
Misdiagnosis has always been a significant medical issue, however, it gets very little attention. The United States Institute of Medicine reports that 5% of adults seeking medical care every year will be misdiagnosed (Neergaard, 2015). That is a very large amount, considering the sheer number of adults that seek patient care every year, that’s not even including pediatric cases. So why is this issue getting very little attention? The reason is a majority of misdiagnosis goes undetected and causes no harm. Only those that cause death or dismemberment gets media attention and are handled through litigation. So why even focus on this issue? Simple, every single patient matter. I still believe that most of us are in this field because it’s a calling…
Employees in the health care system manage a wide variety of health issues and diseases. This course has provided you the opportunity to take a broad look at many of these health issues. The next step is for you to look at how disease trends will influence the delivery of health care in the future.…
Although DSM is used by psychiatrists and psychologist worldwide, it has been criticized. Psychologists view the DSM as a very valuable source which has the potential for misuse. When using the DSM criteria, the following things need to be considered: “whether it improves clinical decision making and whether it enhances the clinical outcome for people with psychological disorders.” (Rathus,…