Hospital & community psychiatry
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Hosp Community Psychiatry · Dec 1991
The relationship of crowding and aggressive behavior on a psychiatric intensive care unit.
During a 25-week period, all incidents of aggressive behavior in a 19-bed psychiatric acute care unit were systematically recorded using the Staff Observation Aggression Scale. Forty-seven of the 163 patients admitted to the unit were aggressive on 119 occasions. ⋯ The patients were predominantly aggressive without visible provocation or were provoked by staff's denying a request. An increased number of patients on the ward significantly increased the likelihood of aggressive behavior, especially by patients with schizophrenia or schizophreniform disorder.
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Hosp Community Psychiatry · Oct 1991
ReviewHomicidal maniacs and narcissistic parasites: stigmatization of mentally ill persons in the movies.
The portrayal of mentally ill persons in movies and television programs has an important and underestimated influence on public perceptions of their condition and care. Movie stereotypes that contribute to the stigmatization of mentally ill persons include the mental patient as rebellious free spirit, homicidal maniac, seductress, enlightened member of society, narcissistic parasite, and zoo specimen. The authors suggest that mental health professionals can fight this source of stigma by increasing their collaboration with patient advocacy groups in monitoring negative portrayals of mentally ill people, using public information campaigns such as Mental Illness Awareness Week to call attention to the process of stigmatization, and supporting accurate dramatic and documentary depictions of mental illness.
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Hosp Community Psychiatry · Aug 1991
ReviewStrategies for integrating public mental health services.
Practical solutions to the issues troubling public mental health systems must be developed within the constraints of existing political structures. A key enabling factor is the inclusion of a broad range of reimbursable mental health benefits within health insurance. However, services cannot be improved without the development of viable frameworks for organizing effective service delivery; such strategies include assertive community treatment, capitation approaches, strong local mental health authorities, and reimbursement structures that achieve key objectives. The author discusses examples of the four strategies and argues for their better integration.