Chapter 11: Community Mental Health Flashcards

1
Q

what challenges remain in terms of mental health?

A

how to provide services to homeless, changing perception that mental illness is linked to extreme violence, resolving probs of those w/ mental illness who are incarcerated, general public still scared of people w/ mental health concerns

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2
Q

what %age of people are homeless?

A

80% temporarily homeless, 10% episodically homeless, 10% chronically homeless

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3
Q

how many homeless adults have substance use disorders, depression, other co-occurring mental illnesses?

A

1/2

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4
Q

what do successful mental health interventions look like?

A

provision of housing and services they need

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5
Q

what is the relationship btwn mental illness and violence?

A
  • Extreme violence relatively rare in people w/ mental disorders
  • Much of risk attributable to comorbid factors
  • What should be done to prevent violence is unclear due to issues related to individual freedoms, privacy
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6
Q

what is mental illness like in jails and prisons?

A
  • More than ½ of all prison and jail inmates have mental health probs
  • Correctional facilities designed to confine and punish not to treat disease
  • Lack space, adequate number of qualified treatment personnel, and timely access to services
  • Once released back into community, more likely to commit crime if untreated
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7
Q

how can we apply primary, secondary, and tertiary prevention to mental disorders?

A
  • Primary - reduces incidence of mental illness and related probs
  • Secondary - reduces prevalence by shortening duration of episodes
  • Tertiary - treatment and rehabilitation
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8
Q

what is the goal of treatment of mental disorders?

A
  • To reduce symptoms

- To improve personal and social functioning

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9
Q

what is psychopharmacological therapy?

A
  • treatment w/ medications
  • Conditions for which medications exist include: schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression, anxiety, panic disorder, and OCD
  • Other biomedical therapy: ECT
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10
Q

what is psychotherapy?

A
  • treatment through verbal communication
  • Numerous approaches
    Cognitive-behavioural therapy: teach the person who has mental illness adaptive skills in coping w/ their illness
  • Most likely to be successful in less severe cases or when used in conjunction with other approaches
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11
Q

what are the benefits of using technology to treat mental illness?

A

delivers flexible help directly to clients’ living environments, lowers cost to patient, increases privacy of patient, may reduce feelings of coerciveness

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12
Q

what is psychiatric rehabilitation?

A
  • Primary objective is most often recovery rather than cure
  • Psychiatric rehab - current recovery-oriented services
  • Services include: medication, therapy, adaptive skills, changing environment through accommodations @ work/school
  • Practices must be evidence based
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13
Q

what are self-help groups?

A

concerned members of the community who are united by a shared interest, concern, or deficit not shared by other members of the community

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14
Q

what are some challenges facing mental health care?

A
  • Multiple services needed
  • Staff turnover relatively high
  • System is decentralized and fragmented
  • Lack of licensed providers in rural and low-income areas
  • Lack of cultural competence among providers
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15
Q

what was mental health care like befroe WWII?

A
  • Colonial times - people w/ mental illness cared for by families or private caretakers
  • Institutionalization first appeared in 18th century
  • Institutionalization in terms of mental health: being committed to a mental institutions
  • Population growth led to institution growth
  • Harsh treatments and unpleasant conditions
  • This is bc of so many people being put into mental institutions, so they became very crowded
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16
Q

what was mental health care like in the moral treatment era?

A
  • Began in 1972
  • People believed that mental illness was based on moral decay
  • Belief that environmental changes can affect the mind and alter behaviour
  • Move people from settings causing life stressors into rural, peaceful setting
  • Appeared to have success and became widely acceptable
17
Q

what are mental institutions?

A
  • State hospitals = mental institutions
  • Supposed to provide therapeutic environment, based on close personal relationships btwn patients and well-trained staff
  • Deterioration of services occurred as chronic nature of mental illness was discovered, long term or lifetime stays were the norm
  • Max capacities quickly reached, personalized care lost, restraints (cuffs) became more practical, staff turnover high
  • Didn’t account for chronic nature of mental illness
  • A lot of patients would never go home
    1940 - population in mental institutions was ½ million in north america
18
Q

what is electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)?

A
  • electric shock treatment
  • introduced as a response to large staff case load
  • When you give someone ECT, you put leather restraints and electrodes on their head and the zap you w/ large dose of electrical current
  • Used when patients are suicidal
  • Used to control people who were becoming too hard to handle bc of overcrowding
  • After 6 months, people would go back to normal
19
Q

what are lobotomies?

A
  • separating 2 halves of the brain, can’t be undone
  • Patients were a vegetable, not capable of complex emotions
  • Very inhumane, not a good way to control people w/ mental illness
  • Once they had a lobotomy they were easier to handle and wouldn’t cause any problems
20
Q

what helped to make releasing ppl back in to the community easier?

A
  • new medications in the 1950s
  • Chlorpromazine: first and most famous antipsychotic drug, introduced in 1954, brand name: thorazine
  • Neuroleptic drugs: family of drugs that reduce nervous activity
  • Chemical straight jacket: drug that controls a patients behaviour
  • Subdues patients behaviour, most popular ways when people were coming out of mental institutions and released into society
21
Q

what is the national institute of mental health (NIMH)?

A
  • Established in 1946 after WWII
  • To foster and aid research related to cause, diagnosis, and treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders
  • To provide training and award fellowships and grants for work in mental health
  • To aid in the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders
22
Q

what is deinstitutionalization?

A
  • discharging of thousands of patients from mental hospitals

- Began in the 50s

23
Q

deinstitutionalization was propelled by 4 factors:

A
  1. Economics: it was expensive to keep everyone in the mental institutions
  2. Idealism: keeping poor people live in the facilities isn’t the right thing to do
  3. Legal considerations: is it within the bounds of the law for us to be holding these people against their will in these mental institutions?
  4. Antipsychotic drugs: made deinstitutionalization more doable
    - Some drugs had bad side effects
    - Ex. tardive dyskinesia: is actually an irreversible condition, causes involuntary and abnormal movements of the following body parts: tongue, mouth, arms, and legs, resulted from long-term use
24
Q

what are the 5 core services of community mental health centres?

A

inpatient care, outpatient services, 24-hour-a-day emergency care, day treatment or other partial hospitalization services, consultation and education

25
Q

what is transinstitutionalization and what is the problem with it?

A
  • transferring patients from one public health institution to another
  • when people are in a mental institution for so long they were so old and put directly into an old folks home
26
Q

what are mensheds?

A

men come together to get social support from their peers which offsets depression

27
Q

what is mental health?

A

emotional and social wellbeing, including one’s psychological resources to deal with the day to day problems of life

28
Q

what is mental illness?

A

collective term for all diagnosable mental disorders

29
Q

what are mental disorders?

A

health conditions that are characterized by alterations in thinking, mood, or behaviour

30
Q

Adults w/ good mental health able to:

A

function under adversity, change or adapt to changes around them, maintain control over their tension and anxiety, find more satisfaction in giving than receiving show consideration for others, curb hate and guilt, love others

31
Q

what is the DSM?

A
  • diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders
  • Published by APA
  • Most influential book in mental health
  • Classifies disorders based on behavioural signs and symptoms rather than definitive tests or measurements of brain or another body system
  • Challenges to diagnosis include comorbidity and lack of cultural competence
32
Q

what are some causes of mental disorders?

A

poor prenatal care, postnatal environment, genetics, environmental factors, brain function impairment, substance abuse, maladaptive family functioning, stress, PTSD

33
Q

what is stress?

A

one’s psychological and physiological response to stressors

34
Q

WHEN You respond to a stressor, you go through 3 stages (General Adaptation Syndrome):

A
  1. Stage of alarm
  2. Stage of resistance
  3. Stage of exhaustion
    aka fight or flight
35
Q

Why was the Community Support Program considered a novel approach to helping people with mental
disorders?

A
  • first recognition that probs of ppl w/ chronic mental illness are social welfare probs
  • most ppl w/ chronic mental illness prefer life in a community than an institution
36
Q

What legal and practical concerns limit society’s options for dealing with the potential for serious violence among people who have mental illness?

A
  • legally, authorities can act to prevent potential violence only when someone voluntarily seeks assistance or has made frank threats
  • many times ppl w/ severe mental illness don’t seek treatment voluntary, are often marginalized unemployed, poor, abuse drugs/alcohol