Empowering People with Severe Mental Illness: A Practical GuideOxford University Press, 8 set 2005 - 368 pagine The concept of empowerment has become increasingly popular with mental health professionals. But while it is a frequently cited goal in the helping professions, empowerment is often nothing more than a buzzword that lacks specificity and grounding in real-world applications. Consequently, little practical guidance exists demonstrating how to achieve it in specific instances with specific groups of people. This book is the first professional guide that operationalizes the theory of empowerment, outlines the conditions under which it is likely to occur, and applies a practical model for working with people with severe mental illness. In this unique and thoroughly researched volume, Donald Linhorst analyzes the conditions that facilitate empowerment and provides the framework necessary to bolster this historically powerless population's access to the material and cultural resources they need to regain control of their lives. Chapters illustrate how to foster empowerment in treatment planning, housing selection, organizational decision making, mental health service planning and policy making, employment, participation in research and evaluation, and consumer provision of mental health and support services. Case studies from a public psychiatric hospital and a community mental health agency illustrate each of the seven areas and present evidence of the model's efficacy. Finally, the book maps out the roles that service providers, administrators, policy makers, advocacy groups, researchers, and clients can play in the empowerment process. Checklists, step-by-step instructions, historical overviews, and vivid examples make this a valuable teaching tool, planning guide, and everyday reference for mental health professionals seeking an innovative and evidence-based approach to working with their clients with severe mental illness. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 60
Pagina x
... coercion that continue to exist in the United States. Chapter 4 presents the conditions for empowerment that are applied in subsequent chapters. In Chapters 5 through 11, I apply the conditions for empowerment to seven activities that ...
... coercion that continue to exist in the United States. Chapter 4 presents the conditions for empowerment that are applied in subsequent chapters. In Chapters 5 through 11, I apply the conditions for empowerment to seven activities that ...
Pagina xiii
... Coercion, and Empowerment 40 Conditions for Empowerment 65 Empowerment Through Treatment Planning 88 Empowerment Through Housing 110 Empowerment Through Organizational Decision Making 141 Empowerment Through Planning and Policy Making ...
... Coercion, and Empowerment 40 Conditions for Empowerment 65 Empowerment Through Treatment Planning 88 Empowerment Through Housing 110 Empowerment Through Organizational Decision Making 141 Empowerment Through Planning and Policy Making ...
Pagina 21
... coercive. Institutionalization of the insane perse implied coercion, as it was often effected against the will and wish of the patient'' (p. 216). In addition, ''To supplant mechanical restraint by attendants would necessitate larger ...
... coercive. Institutionalization of the insane perse implied coercion, as it was often effected against the will and wish of the patient'' (p. 216). In addition, ''To supplant mechanical restraint by attendants would necessitate larger ...
Pagina 37
... coercion, or staff convenience. Furthermore, it stated that the use of restraints was not treatment and should be used only as a last resort as a safety intervention. In recent years, both the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of ...
... coercion, or staff convenience. Furthermore, it stated that the use of restraints was not treatment and should be used only as a last resort as a safety intervention. In recent years, both the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of ...
Pagina 39
... us in the past. We have been belittled, ignored, lied to. We have no reason to trust professionals, and many reasons to fear them. (p. xiv) 3 Individual Rights, Coercion, and Empowerment Beginning in the 1960s, 39 A History of ...
... us in the past. We have been belittled, ignored, lied to. We have no reason to trust professionals, and many reasons to fear them. (p. xiv) 3 Individual Rights, Coercion, and Empowerment Beginning in the 1960s, 39 A History of ...
Sommario
12 | |
40 | |
4 Conditions for Empowerment | 65 |
5 Empowerment Through Treatment Planning | 88 |
6 Empowerment Through Housing | 110 |
7 Empowerment Through Organizational Decision Making | 141 |
8 Empowerment Through Planning and Policy Making | 167 |
9 Empowerment Through Employment | 203 |
10 Empowerment Through Research | 243 |
11 Empowerment Through Service Provision | 269 |
12 Creating and Living Empowered Lives | 299 |
References | 313 |
Index | 345 |
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Empowering People with Severe Mental Illness: A Practical Guide Donald M. Linhorst Anteprima limitata - 2005 |
Empowering People with Severe Mental Illness: A Practical Guide Donald M. Linhorst Anteprima limitata - 2005 |
Empowering People with Severe Mental Illness: A Practical Guide Donald M. Linhorst Anteprima limitata - 2006 |
Parole e frasi comuni
activities advocacy groups asylums benefits BJC-BH boarding homes choices civil commitment client participation clients and staff coercion concrete incentives condition for empowerment consumer council consumer-providers consumer-run programs deinstitutionalization develop disabilities disincentives employers employment empowering evaluation example federal GlenMaye Grob groups and consumer-run housing identified improve increase individuals involuntary commitment involvement Linhorst living MDMH meaningful participation meaningfully participate Medicaid ment mental health agencies mental health authorities mental health consumers mental health courts mental health organizations mental health professionals mental health services mental health system mutual support groups mutual trust nonconsumer opportunities organizational decision outcomes outpatient commitment patients person with mental Petrila planning and policy potential promote psychiatric hospitals psychiatric rehabilitation Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal psychiatric symptoms research process residents sanism service providers severe mental illness skills social SSDI stigma structures and processes sumer support services traditional mental health treatment planning trust and respect
Riferimenti a questo libro
Comprehensive Handbook of Social Work and Social Welfare, Social Work Practice Anteprima limitata - 2008 |