Community mental health journal
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Community Ment Health J · Apr 2010
Integrating wellness, recovery, and self-management for mental health consumers.
Three distinct, yet interrelated, terms-wellness, recovery, and self-management-have received increasing attention in the research, consumer, and provider communities. This article traces the origins of these terms, seeking to understand how they apply, individually and in conjunction with one another to mental health consumers. Each shares a common perspective that is health-centered rather than disease-centered and that emphasizes the role of consumers as opposed to professional providers as the central determinants of health and well-being. Developing approaches combining elements of each construct may hold promise for improving the overall health and well-being of persons with serious mental disorders.
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Our primary goal in community psychiatry is to satisfy the service needs of a bounded population for whose mental health we have accepted responsibility and accountability. We base our programs on public health practice models: These direct us to focus on segments of our population which are currently exposed to harmful biopsycho-social factors that increase their risk of becoming mentally ill. We focus on preventing psychosocial problems or their consequences by reducing their population rates: either the incidence of new cases (primary prevention), the prevalence of all existing cases (secondary prevention), and the rates of residual disability (tertiary prevention). ⋯ We also reach out to assist non-professional caregiving individuals and organizations, especially those who provide mutual help to fellow sufferers. In our latest work we are currently identifying harmful practices in our caregiving systems that actually harm those people whom we are trying to help. We are in the process of developing methods for reducing this system-generated damage.
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Community Ment Health J · Oct 1999
Case ReportsA model program for the treatment of mentally ill offenders in the community.
There is a new and growing interest among community mental health providers and administrators in the area of correctional psychiatry. From a column in Psychiatric Times to committees and task forces in APA and the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law, increased attention is being paid to the great need for the treatment of mentally ill offenders. ⋯ Several barriers to treatment faced by this population will be identified, including double stigma, lack of family/social support, comorbidity, adjustment problems, and boundary issues. Case vignettes designed to illustrate key points will be included.
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Community Ment Health J · Oct 1996
ReviewMental health services for rural elderly: innovative service strategies.
This paper reviews issues in planning and delivering mental health services to rural dwelling elderly. First, comparative data on the prevalence of mental illness among rural elderly, and the availability and accessibility of mental health services in rural areas are presented to provide a basis for subsequent discussion. Next, several strategies for improving the development and delivery of geriatric mental health services to rural areas are discussed. These include: increasing the number and quality of rural mental health providers; adapting or developing diagnostic techniques to improve case identification among rural elderly; providing culturally sensitive mental health services; strengthening informal and formal care linkages in rural communities; developing innovative service delivery models building upon the strengths of rural settings; and emphasizing fluidity as well as continuity in treatment models.