"Forensic psychology of mentally ill" Essays and Research Papers

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    Deinstitutionalization of the Mentally Ill 1. In my article deinstitutionalization bought on some positive effects by lowering health cost‚ but negative consequences came into the community also. Bringing into effect such things as Medicare and Medicaid‚ and the establishment of the Community Health Centers. This began to make it easier for the mentally ill to be able to get the help and rehabilitation that was needed rather than just being placed in mental institutions and left alone. “For

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    The Psychologist JoAnna A. De Leon May 19‚ 2010 CJ233: Introduction to Forensic Psychology INSTRUCTOR: Janice Walton To determine the mental status and competency of an individual‚ one must spend time to question and study the person‚ definitely spend more than 10 minutes with the patient. Many laws have been established and put into place to protect the young‚ the old‚ the innocent and the mentally ill. Trial competence is different from being criminally responsible for your actions

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    twenty-three defendants were accused of crimes against humanity‚ focusing on medical experiments done to prisoners of war (Staff). A prime example‚ was the starvation of the mentally and physically handicapped‚ coined as “useless eaters‚” it became official policy of the state after the prolonged exposure to Nazi hate campaigns against the mentally and physically

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    The mentally ill is over-represented in the criminal justice system when compared with the larger United States population. People with mental illness are incarcerated approximately 8 times more frequently than they are admitted to state mental hospitals‚ and are incarcerated for significantly longer time than other inmates (Ascher-Svanum‚ Nyhuis‚ Faries‚ Ball‚ & Kinon‚ 2010). This has been linked to an increased danger to themselves‚ other inmates and persons employed in the prison system. Effectively

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    Was Hilter Mentally Ill

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    Was Hitler mentally ill? There is a great deal of debate on whether Adolf Hitler might have been mentally ill. Several books were written on this issue and one of them‚ The Medical Casebook of Adolf Hitler by Leonard L. Heston‚ MD‚ and Renate Heston‚ RN‚ suggested that Hitler did not suffer from bipolar‚ schizophrenic‚ paranoid schizophrenic or Parkinson’s disease. He was diagnosed as a chronic addict to amphetamine and barbiturate. The authors offered numerous clues to this addiction. Hilter

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    Dr. Kirkbride‚ advocate of the tenets of Moral Treatment‚ foresaw a treatment facility that was idealistic in grandeur and architecture where he hoped to create a place of healing for the mentally ill. With plenty of fresh air and open spaces‚ “these asylums replaced cruder methods of coping with the mentally ill‚ such as confining them to prisons or poorhouses where they were often abused and their special needs were rarely met” (“Kirkbride Buildings”‚ 2001-2012). Sadly‚ his humanitarian movement

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    According to Nagaraja D‚ 2008 an individual suffering from mental illness is entitled with the same dignity and respectable behaviour as any other human being. Just because a person is mentally ill does not make him worthless. A mentally ill persons rights flow from the basic right to life as in Article 21 of the constitution which includes right to living accomodation ‚ food water medical treatment education‚ acceptable livelihood‚ income and compatible life‚ right to privacy‚ speedy trial‚ information

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    The article I chose to read on the deinstitutionalization of the mentally ill was entitled: “Victimization of the Mentally Ill: An Unintended Consequence of Deinstitutionalization”. According to this article‚ one issue the deinstitutionalization brought about that affected communities was the increased number of displaced‚ homeless‚ mentally ill patients. Because so many of these patients are left untreated‚ they are unable to cope in a normal society‚ often causing these deinstitutionalized patients

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    Wainwright (477 U.S. 399 (1986)) that executing the insane is unconstitutional. However‚ if an inmate’s mental competency has been restored‚ he or she can then be executed.  Inmates who are intellectually disabled (mentally retarded) also cannot be executed.  Inmates who are mentally ill‚ but not insane‚ have no such exemption. Being in the mental health field for

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    Stigmatization within the mentally ill population has improved significantly over the centuries. However‚ there is still much to do to continue our efforts of improvement in this area. In order for society to understand stigmas‚ we must first understand how they were created. Stigmatizations began with the unjust and inhuman conditions in which society treated and looked upon the mentally ill. In 2017‚ Ray wrote‚ in the 6th century BCE‚ Ancient Greeks and Romans believed that human behavior and

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