Encouraging Coordination of Psychiatric Services for Children and Parents With Concurrent Mental Health Problems

2012 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Robson ◽  
K. Gingell
2008 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 172-180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Glenn Roberts ◽  
Eluned Dorkins ◽  
James Wooldridge ◽  
Elaine Hewis

Choice, responsibility, recovery and social inclusion are concepts guiding the ‘modernisation’ and redesign of psychiatric services. Each has its advocates and detractors, and at the deep end of mental health/psychiatric practice they all interact. In the context of severe mental health problems choice and social inclusion are often deeply compromised; they are additionally difficult to access when someone is detained and significant aspects of personal responsibility have been temporarily taken over by others. One view is that you cannot recover while others are in control. We disagree and believe that it is possible to work in a recovery-oriented way in all service settings. This series of articles represents a collaborative dialogue between providers and consumers of compulsory psychiatric services and expert commentators. We worked together, reflecting on the literature and our own professional and personal experience to better understand how choice can be worked with as a support for personal recovery even in circumstances of psychiatric detention. We were particularly interested to consider whether and how detention and compulsion could be routes to personal recovery. We offer both the process of our co-working and our specific findings as part of a continuing dialogue on these difficult issues.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pia H. Bülow ◽  
Daniel Persson Thunqvist ◽  
Elisabet Cedersund

Spelling it out for the children’s sake – Family intervention as professional practiceThis article presents an analysis of 21 video-recorded family intervention sessions with children and parents in families where one or both parents are diagnosed with mental illness. The starting point for such family interventions is awareness of the risks that children run due to parental mental illness, e.g. development of mental health problems of their own. Previous studies have shown that openness about parents’ mental problems can reduce such risks. Family-intervention sessions are developed to assist children and their parents to talk about mental illness and related difficulties. Based on a dialogical and micro-sociological perspective, our objective is to analyse family-intervention sessions as professional practice and to illuminate various communicative means used by social workers to support children and parents in their talk about parents’ mental illness and its meaning for the children and the family. The analysis shows how professional practice is formed based on how the social workers solve communicative challenges in conversations with families about mental health problems: to create and maintain family support as a child-focused process; creating and maintaining family support as a child-focused process; spelling out parents’ mental problems; and confirming and normalizing.


PEDIATRICS ◽  
1949 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 113-113
Author(s):  
HENRY H. WORK

As another evidence of the emergence of psychiatry from the hospital and the new concept of its role in society, this book offers an excellent integration of mental health theory and practices in their relation to a multitude of social problems. Prompted, apparently, by the advances of psychiatry during the war period and including a thorough study of the mental health problems of the veteran, this book is a compendium of modern resources in the field with some thoughts on the varying usefulness of their application. The first part deals with the lessons of the war itself and contains, in addition to a chapter on the psychiatric services in the armed forces and the emergency measure for dealing with the veteran, an excellent chapter on "The Psychiatric Disabilities of War: Dynamics and Motivation."


1978 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 361-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Allodi ◽  
J. Dukszta

Reportedly, the People's Republic of China has made great progress in health care services, particularly at preventive, primary and community levels. Information on their psychiatric services is still scarce. A group of 12 health professionals visited the country for three weeks in July 1977. This paper provides a description and an analysis of the network of mental health services using a sample of one mental hospital, six general hospitals and a number of health units in cities, factories and communes. The basic principles of policy and administration are those of a collective socialism with strong central guidelines and considerable local administrative initiative. Admissions to the mental hospital in Shanghai reveal that 83% are young acute schizophrenic cases and very few are neurotic or non-psychotic. This distribution stands in great contrast with admissions to mental hospitals in the West, as is the case in Canada, where schizophrenics represent only 12% of all first admissions to mental hospitals and non-psychotic or minor conditions amount to two-thirds. An impressionistic survey of Chinese traditional medicine rooms in general hospitals revealed that a good proportion of their cases (60-70%) are diagnosed as suffering from minor organic or vague organic conditions without evidence of organic pathology and which in the West would be considered as neurotic or psychosomatic conditions. Outside the institutions, in the communes of the rural and urban areas behavioural, interpersonal and family problems are not defined specifically as mental health problems, but handled within the moral and political ideology prevalent in the country. None of the general hospitals visited had a psychiatric unit, but every patient in every hospital or health unit in the cities and countryside received a combination of traditional Chinese medicine (herbal preparations, acupuncture and moxibustion) besides the Western or modern type of treatment. Officially mental illness is not considered a major problem and it is given very low priority in medical school curricula or in the planning of health services. It is concluded that psychiatric services in China are concerned primarily with cases of psychosis and severe neurosis, that neuroses are viewed as general health problems, and personality and behaviour disorders are considered social or community matters.


2005 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 83-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mimi Copty ◽  
David L Whitford

AbstractObjectives: To determine the extent of mental health services provided in the community in one Irish health board area. To examine the influence of postgraduate mental health training of GPs on provision of mental health services.Method: Questionnaire and focus group methods were employed to determine views on mental health service provision. Data analysis was with parametric and non-parametric tests of association including student's t and chi-squared tests. Thematic analysis of the focus groups was carried out.Results: Twenty-five per cent of patients attending general practice have mental health problems and over 95% of these problems are dealt with in primary care. Only 32% of GPs had received postgraduate training in psychological therapies. GPs with postgraduate training in psychological therapies were more likely to estimate a higher proportion of their patient population with mental health problems and less likely to refer to psychiatric services. A need for support from other health care professionals in primary care was also identified.Conclusion: The majority of patients with mental health problems are treated in primary care. Further training of GPs and increased resources would improve mental health care in primary care and lead to fewer referrals to psychiatric services.


2001 ◽  
Vol 7 (5) ◽  
pp. 328-334 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dora Kohen

The need for specific psychiatric services for women has been debated by many practitioners involved in care delivery and management of women with differing degrees of mental health problems.


2000 ◽  
Vol 42 (01) ◽  
pp. 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen R Zubrick ◽  
Jennifer J Kurinczuk ◽  
Brett M C McDermott ◽  
Robert S McKelvey ◽  
Sven R Silburn ◽  
...  

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