Cover -- Half Title -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Preface -- 1 Invigorating the Role of Culture in Mental Health -- 2 Cultural Beliefs About Mental Health: Gender Ideology, Emotional Suppression, and the Stigmatization of Mental Health -- 3 Cultural Beliefs, Mental Health, and Stigma: A Network Perspective -- 4 Cultural Beliefs and Social Support -- 5 Cultural Beliefs and Professional Services -- 6 Cultural Beliefs and Social Media -- Conclusion: Mental Health in a New Modernity of Disenfranchisement and Risk -- Appendix: Data and Methods -- Index.
Intro -- Contents -- 1 Introduction -- Care rather than Containment -- Morality -- Of course, the Brain is Important -- Making Sense of Things -- Only Us: Labels are for Objects, not People -- A New Ethos -- 2 Events and Consequences -- Wilful Ignorance -- Spectra and Continua -- Cowardice, Sickness and Empathy -- Commonplace Trauma -- 'Prevention is better than Cure' -- Deprivation -- Political Failure -- 3 We are not the Slaves of our Brains -- The Science of the Brain -- The Brain and Genes -- Biological Psychology, is there any other Kind? -- 1.8 Million new Synapses a Second -- The Brain and the Environment -- Deliberately Altering Brain Chemistry -- Interactions -- Psychological Vulnerability -- Inflammation: The new Hot Topic -- A Personal Story -- An Envelope Falls on the Mat -- 4 Making Sense of Things -- Levels of Explanation -- The European Commission Green Paper-'A Multiplicity of Factors' -- The Biopsychosocial Model -- Learning -- We Are All Imperfect Learners -- There Is No 'Normal' and 'Abnormal' Psychology -- A New Account-The Mediating Psychological Processes Model -- We are Shaped by our Thoughts -- Testing This Idea -- 5 Labels are for Products, not People -- A Peculiar Circular Logic -- Why, and How, Do We Diagnose 'Mental Illnesses'? -- The World Health Organization's International Standard Classification of Diseases, Injuries and Causes of Death-ICD-10 -- American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual-DSM-5 -- Reliability -- Validity -- 'Oppositional Defiant Disorder'…Really? -- On Being Sane in Insane Places -- Utility -- What Utility? -- Statistical Relationships are not Diagnoses -- Continua -- Attempts to Define 'Bullshit' -- Our Lives in Context -- Real Experiences but Non-existent Illnesses -- 6 Appreciating the Functions of Diagnoses -- People are Reassured by Diagnoses.
Intro -- Table of Contents -- Series Introduction -- Chapter One: Substances and Mental Illness -- Chapter Two: Drug Use and "Acting Out" -- Chapter Three: Drug Use and "Acting In" -- Chapter Four: Diagnosis and Treatment -- Chapter Five: Suicide and Homelessness -- Further Reading -- Educational Videos -- Series Glossary -- Index -- About the Author -- About the Advisor -- Photo Credits.
Cover -- Dedication -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Concept of Responsibility -- 2.1 Individual Responsibility -- 2.2 Causal Control -- 2.3 Multiple Causes -- 2.4 Moral Luck -- 2.5 Alternative Accounts -- 2.6 Causal versus Moral Responsibility -- 2.7 Summary -- 3 Normative Competence -- 3.1 Outline of a Theory of Action -- 3.2 Cognition and Emotion -- 3.3 Conditions of Responsibility -- 3.4 Excuses -- 3.5 When the Will is Free -- 3.6 Psychopathy -- 3.7 Summary -- 4 Personhood, Personal Identity, and Responsibility -- 4.1 Persons, Sources, and Resources -- 4.2 Theories of Personal Identity -- 4.3 A Pragmatic Conception of Personal Identity -- 4.4 Psychological Disconnectedness and Discontinuity -- 4.5 Responsible Behavior -- 4.6 Character and Action -- 4.7 Summary -- 5 Cognitive Control and Content -- 5.1 Types of Control -- 5.2 Frankfurt and Alternative Possibilities -- 5.3 Reasons for Revising PAP' -- 5.4 Responsibility for Failures -- 5.5 Ability and Time -- 5.6 Remote Causal Control -- 5.7 Responsibility for Consequences -- 5.8 Summary -- 6 The Freedom We Need to Be Responsible -- 6.1 Arguments for Incompatibilism -- 6.2 Two Senses of 'Choice' -- 6.3 Mind and Brain -- 6.4 Two Objections -- 6.5 Libertarianism and Moral Significance -- 6.6 Summary -- 7 Conclusion -- Bibliography -- Index
Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- Chapter 1 -- Mental Health in America: Where Are We Now? Hearing Before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate, One Hundred Fourteenth Congress, Second Session, April 28, 2016( -- Opening Statements -- Opening Statement of Hon. Orrin G. Hatch, a U.S. Senator from Utah, Chairman, Committee on Finance -- Opening Statement of Hon. Ron Wyden, a U.S. Senator from Oregon -- Witnesses -- Statement of Brandon Marshall, Executive Chairman and Co-Founder, Project 375, Chicago, Il -- Statement of Margaret Bennington-Davis, MD, Chief Medical Officer, Health Share of Oregon, Tualatin, OR -- Statement of Doug Thomas, Director, Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health, State of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT -- Statement of Linda Rosenberg, MSW, President and CEO, National Council for Behavioral Health, Washington, DC -- Appendix -- Additional Material Submitted for the Record Prepared Statement of Margaret Bennington-Davis, MD, Chief Medical Officer, Health Share of Oregon -- Medicaid Coordinated Care Organizations: The Promise of Oregon's Health System Transformation -- The Need to Work Upstream: What We Learned from the Adverse Childhood Experiences Study (ACES) -- What the Decision to Move Upstream Means for Mental Health Services -- Moving Upstream for Special Populations: Creating Medical Models for Children in Foster Care and Addicted Mothers -- Designing Health Care Systems That Work for Children in Foster Care -- Project Nurture: Serving Pregnant Women with Substance Use Disorders -- The Importance of Health Coverage to Improving Mental Health in America -- Mental Health System Issues: Levels of Care and Workforce Challenges -- One Size Does Not Fit All: Levels of Care in Community Mental Health -- Provider Workforce Challenges.
Mental health legislation is essential for protecting the rights of people with mental disorders, who comprise a vulnerable section of society. This module provides information to help guide the development of mental health legislation. The module begins by setting out the activities that are required before legislation is formulated. The content of legislation is then described, including substantive provisions for specific mental health legislation and legislation impacting on mental health. Process issues in mental health legislation are then outlined, including drafting procedures, consult
Front cover -- Contents -- Standards of practice for psychiatric-mental health nursing -- Front matter -- Foundations of mental health care six edition -- Copyright page -- Dedication -- Reviewers -- To the instructor -- Threads and advisory board -- To the student -- Table of contents -- 1 The history of mental health care -- Objectives -- Key terms -- Early years -- Primitive societies -- Greece and rome -- Middle ages -- Dark ages -- Superstitions, witches, and hunters -- The renaissance -- The reformation -- Seventeenth century -- Eighteenth century -- Nineteenth-century united states
Intro -- SOCIAL DETERMINANTSAND MENTAL HEALTH -- PUBLIC HEALTH IN THE 21ST CENTURY -- CONTENTS -- ABOUT THE AUTHORS -- PREFACE -- Chapter 1. FOREWORD: INTRODUCTION TO THE BOOK -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 2. THE SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF MENTAL HEALTH: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE -- THE SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF HEALTH -- STRATEGIES AND INTERVENTIONS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 3. THE PRESENT AND FUTURE IMPORTANCE OF SOCIAL DETERMINANTS, ASPECTS OF POLITICAL IMPLEMENTATION FOR SWITZERLAND -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 4. PSYCHO-SOCIAL DETERMINANTS OF MENTAL HEALTH -- SOCIAL DETERMINANTS -- Economics -- Behavior/Lifestyle -- Biology/ Genetics -- Environment -- Social Networks -- PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORIES WHICH CONTRIBUTE TO DETERMINANTS OF MENTAL HEALTH -- A. Behavioral Perspectives -- B. Psychoanalytic Perspective -- C. Behavioral/Genetic Perspective -- Untitled -- E. Erik Erikson's Psychosocial Crises -- F. Carl Jung's Passage toward Maturity -- G. Selective Optimization with Compensation -- H. Life-Span Developmental Approach -- SUMMARY -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 5. DISCRIMINATION AND MENTAL HEALTH -- ABSTRACT -- INTRODUCTION -- DISCRIMINATION DEFINED AS INTERACTIVE ACTION -- DISCRIMINATION OF OLDER PEOPLE -- DISCRIMINATION AND MENTAL HEALTH -- STUDIES ON DISCRIMINATION IN THE HEALTH SERVICE -- CONCLUSION -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 6. SOCIAL CAPITAL AND MENTAL HEALTH EXPLORING THE IMPACT OF INDIVIDUAL AND COMMUNITY SOCIAL CAPITAL ON MENTAL HEALTH STATUS IN SPAIN -- INTRODUCTION -- Mental Health -- What is Social Capital? -- Exploring the Health-Social Capital Binomial -- DATA AND VARIABLES -- Outcome Variables: Mental Health Status Indicators -- Explanatory Variables -- EMPIRICAL MODEL -- RESULTS -- Mental Health Risk Propensity -- Probability of Poor Mental Health -- CONCLUSION -- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS -- REFERENCES -- Chapter 7. SOCIAL PARTICIPATION AND MENTAL HEALTH.
Recovery, Mental Health and Inequality- Front Cover; Recovery, Mental Health and Inequality; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; List of tables; Acknowledgements; Chapter 1: What recovery? Whose recovery? Recovery as a disputed approach; Introduction; What recovery?; Whose recovery?; Central inquiries and method; Recovery from what to where?; Possible social forces impinging on Chinese service users' recovery journeys; Overview of the book; Chapter 2: Exploring social inequalities with the Capabilities Approach and Intersectionality Analysis; Introduction; A critical realist exploration.
Representation, primarily understood as 'presence' or 'appearance' with an implied visual component, is a critical concept in the cultural milieu. Conceived as images, performances, and imitations, representations propagate through various media: films, television, photographs, advertisements, and other forms of popular culture. As such, representations of mental illness perform a pivotal role in framing perceptions about the mentally ill. These representations influence and shape public perceptions about the illness. This essay aims to analyze how mental illness is perceived, represented, and treated in popular culture and medical discourses. In so doing, the essay lays bare the ideologies and the symbolic codes that undergird these representations and the consequent stigma confronted by the mentally ill. Taking these cues, the essay close reads popular representations of mental illness in movies, newspapers, advertisements, comics, and paintings and the articulation of stereotyped images of the mentally ill in a medical discourse which externalize madness in distorted physiognomic features. In so doing, the essay exposes the negative implications of these representations on the personal and social lives of the mentally ill and negotiates the significance of personal accounts of mental illness experience as a means of reclaiming their identity.
Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- 1 Introduction: Community Safety and Mental Disorder -- 2 Justification for Compulsory Detention -- 3 Doctors, Social Workers and Relatives -- 4 Control in the Community -- 5 Policing the Mentally Disordered -- 6 Appropriate Adults and Mentally Disordered Suspects in Police Stations -- 7 Diversion: its Place in the Scheme of Things -- 8 Dual Diagnosis and Control -- 9 Psychiatric Services and Treatability -- References -- Index.
Intro -- U.S. MENTAL HEALTH WORK FORCE AND THE STATE OF THE MENTAL HEALTH SYSTEM A PRIMER AND PERSPECTIVES -- Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data -- Contents -- Preface -- Chapter 1 The Mental Health Workforce: A Primer -- Summary -- Introduction -- Mental Health Workforce Definition: No Consensus -- Mental Health Workforce Overview -- Licensure Requirements -- Degree -- Supervised Practice -- Exam -- Scope of Practice -- Mental Health Workforce Size -- Mental Health Workforce Annual Wages -- Conclusion -- Appendix A. Mental Health Professional Shortage Areas (MHPSA) Definition -- Appendix B. Additional Resources -- Psychiatrists -- Psychologists -- Social Workers -- Advanced Practice Psychiatric Nurses -- Marriage and Family Therapists -- End Notes -- Chapter 2 Statement of Pamela S. Hyde, Administrator, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. Hearing on ''Assessing the State of America's Mental Health System'' -- The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) -- Prevalence of Behavioral Health Conditions and Treatment -- Mental Health Financing -- Advancements and Trends in Behavioral Health -- Community-Based Care -- Integration -- Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (MHPAEA) -- Affordable Care Act -- Moving Forward -- Parity -- Reaching Youth and Young Adults -- National Dialogue -- Conclusion -- End Notes -- Chapter 3 Testimony of Thomas Insel, Director, National Institute of Mental Health. Hearing on ''Assessing the State of America's Mental Health System'' -- Public Health Burden of Mental Illness -- Delays in Receiving Treatment-and the Consequences -- How Nimh Is Addressing This Public Health Challenge -- Preemption: The Future of Mental Health Research -- End Notes.
Front Cover -- Global Mental Health and Neuroethics -- Copyright -- Contents -- Contributors -- Foreword -- 1 Introduction -- Section A: Conceptual issues -- 2 Moving beyond scientism and skepticism -- Introduction -- Global mental health and neuroethics -- What is psychiatric disorder? -- What causes mental illness? -- Interventions for mental disorders and well-being -- Conclusion -- References -- 3 Finding a word for it: An ordinary language philosophical perspective on the role of values-based practice as a partner ... -- Values-based practice and ordinary language philosophy -- A forced choice exercise -- An overview of values-based practice -- Roots of values-based practice in ordinary language philosophy -- Values-based practice in bodily health -- Mrs. Jones' Knee -- Values-based practice in mental health -- Simon the seer -- Values in Simon's story -- Values in psychiatric diagnosis -- Third interpretation: Visible values = diverse values -- Fact-plus-value: A conceptual framework for global mental health and neuroethics -- A fact-plus-value medical model -- Challenges of reconciliation -- Challenges of demarcation -- Values-based practice: A practical resource for global mental health and neuroethics -- Challenges of social inclusion and empowerment -- Challenges arising from the social determinants of disease -- Challenges of neuroethics exemplified in individual and global enhancement -- Conclusions -- Acknowledgment -- References -- Further reading -- 4 Welfarist psychiatry goes global -- Introduction -- Welfarist psychiatry -- Welfarist responses to global mental health challenges -- Inadequacy of the Western psychiatric model -- Neo-colonialism -- Avoiding prejudicial and harmful forms of psychiatry globally -- Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References.