scholarly journals Mental health systems compared: Great Britain, Norway, Canada, and the United States

2007 ◽  
Vol 61 (9) ◽  
pp. 839-839
Author(s):  
J. J F Soares
CNS Spectrums ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-172
Author(s):  
Amanda Beltrani ◽  
Patricia A. Zapf

Beginning in the 1960s, a steady decline in the number of inpatient psychiatric beds has occurred across the United States, primarily as a result of stricter civil commitment criteria and a societal movement toward deinstitutionalization. Concomitant with this decrease in psychiatric beds has been a steady increase in the number of mentally ill individuals who are arrested and processed through the criminal justice system as defendants. One consequence of this has been an explosion in the number of defendants referred for evaluations of their present mental state—adjudicative competence—and subsequently found incompetent and ordered to complete a period of competency restoration. This has resulted in forensic mental health systems that are overwhelmed by the demand for services and that are unable to meet the needs of these defendants in a timely manner. In many states, lawsuits have been brought by defendants who have had their liberties restricted as a result of lengthy confinements in jail awaiting forensic services. The stress on state-wide forensic systems has become so widespread that this has reached the level of a near-national crisis. Many states and national organizations are currently attempting to study these issues and develop creative strategies for relieving this overburdening of forensic mental health systems nationwide. The purpose of this article is to review the current state of the research on competence to stand trial and to highlight those issues that might be relevant to the issue of criminalization of individuals with mental illness in the United States.


Author(s):  
Donald W. Winnicott ◽  
Anna Freud ◽  
Willie Hoffer ◽  
Edward Glover

In this review Winnicott concludes that the work is excellent for those interested in child psychiatry and in the roots of mental health and mental disorder. He believes that the volumes contain important contributions to every aspect of dynamic psychology and its practice. Winnicott recommends Anna Freud’s contribution to a symposium on aggression, August Aichhorn on female juvenile delinquents, and articles by René A. Spitz, on observations of infants deprived of natural human relationships. He asserts that the volumes provide a valuable link between psychoanalysis in the United States and in Great Britain and Holland.


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