"The ethical implications of involuntary treatment for substance abuse" Essays and Research Papers

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    Donovan Implications

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    without having to produce any further reasons or offer any additional arguments? (a) Explain the argument and/or interpretation in the passage. (30 marks) (b) Do you agree with the idea(s) expressed? Justify your point of view and discuss its implications for understanding religion and human experience. (20 marks) Explain the argument and/or interpretation in the passage. (30 marks) In his essay ‘Can we know God by experience?’ Peter Donovan questions whether it is possible to have direct‚ intuitive

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    Berkeley on Substance

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    modern period‚ published his work Three Dialogues Between Hylas and Philonous‚ as an argument against the idea of material substance. Berkeley demonstrated a form of Subjective Idealism‚ making the claim that there is no mind-independent reality; all that exists are ideas and the minds that perceive them. To Berkeley‚ there is no external world with matter or material substance. In what is referred to as the work’s ‘Master Argument’‚ Berkeley tries to show the inconceivable nature of mind-independent

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    Addiction Treatment

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    By: Anonymous Addiction Treatment This study will explore existing research data and reports from various agencies and journals in order to answer the question: does the length of treatment improve the success of people who are addicted to drugs and/or alcohol? I have chosen several scientific journal articles concerning the relationship between the success rate of substance abusing clients and their length of time spent in treatment. Equal numbers of studies‚ both supporting and not supporting

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    Discrimination and Early Substance Abuse Among The American Indian Children By Pam Palmer This research is about the relationship between perceived discrimination and early substance abuse among 195 American Indian between the fifth and eighth graders that are from three reservations that share in common culture. In the first article the social problem the researchers‚ investigated was the relationship between perceived discrimination and substance abuse among American Indians

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    Substance Related Disorders | By: Kendra Neeley | Substance related disorders are a very common form of disorder which causes severe medical‚ social and psychological problems with the individuals that abuse the substance as well as individuals involved with those individuals. In this paper‚ we will discuss history‚ symptoms‚ influences and treatment. | | Kendra Neeley Substance Related Disorders Substance related disorders are a very common form of disorder which causes severe medical

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    Abuse

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    Psychological Abuse Presented by Psyche Cheung Celia Chan Jason Chan Kris Lee Monday‚ 21 January‚ 13 Abuse harmful‚ injurious‚ or offensive excessive and wrongful misuse of anything Definition • • Psychological Abuse caused by emotional abuse / mental abuse / physical abuse behavior that may result in psychological trauma eg anxiety / chronic depression / post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) happened in the situations of power imbalance abusive relationships / bullying / child abuse / abuse

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    A Woman of Substance

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    TANIA MAJOR: A WOMAN OF SUBSTANCE QUESTION 1: How would you describe Tania Major in terms of locus of control? Why? Locus of control refers to the generalized belief about the amount of control people have over their own lives (McShane & VonGlinow‚ 2000‚ p.191). This concept was originally developed by Julian Rotters in 1954 and is known to be a psychological term. In simpler terms‚ locus of control refers to an individual’s perception about the underlying main causes of events in his/her life

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    Mental Illness and Substance Abuse on Criminal Offenses was a very interesting article and it also brought up some interesting facts. It talks about people who have a mental illness are overrepresented in jails and prisons. In the article it says that these people with these mental illnesses need treatment and not punishment and I think that is so true (4). I work in a prison and most of the prison population is mentally ill. I feel that if they would have given these guys some treatment when they were

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    Treatments

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    The Main Treatment Options Oh‚ shit‚ Ramey‚" was the first thing I said when I walked in the door that morning. He’d been looking bad‚ but now one of his eyes was bugged out – probably twice the size of the other one. I’ve done a lot of reading about this since then. Usually it’s because the fish swims into something sharp‚ probably that ceramic decorative castle I had in there. Ramey’s fins had been disintegrating for a while; over a few months his velvety banner of a tail had succumbed to an

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    Refuse Treatment

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    Legal issues inherent in treatment of sex offenders with the right to refuse mental health treatment is the Fifth Amendment (Adams‚ 1997). The Fifth Amendment give right against self-incrimination and the Fourteen Amendment is regarding the preservation of family integrity (Adams‚ 1997). Some believe mandatory participating is punishment in disguise (Adams‚ 1997). Some mental health treatments can include psychotopic drugs‚ psychosurgery and aversive therapy that could potentially cause irreversible

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