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Christian Resource and Devotionals

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  I wanted to share a resource with you that I use regularly to seek direction and advice for any topic ranging from managing people and businesses to parenthood, marriage, and managing money.  Click  here  to go to the Oneplace.com page.  It has been a blessing in my life and hope it will be for you too.

Mental Healthcare and Policy: The Bureaucracy of Noble Intent

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  The Bureaucracy of Noble Intent In 1840, activist Dorthea Dix was compelled in her fight to improve the quality of life and living conditions of those with mental illness.    After lobbying for more than 40 years, Dix successfully persuaded the U.S. government to fund the building of 32 state psychiatric hospitals.    Hence the institutional inpatient care model was born, a laudable change indeed.    By the mid-1960s, community-based mental health care became largely a global movement due to the decline in the living conditions in over-crowded and underfunded state hospitals and asylums, also a laudable change.   Let’s take a critical look at the implementation of both care models to determine the possible root causes of long-term failure in the mental health policies and care models.    Below are a list of the pros and cons for each care model as well as the criticisms that occurred over time.     Institutional Inpatient Men...

Mental Health: Prevalence and Healthcare Policy

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  Prevalence and Healthcare Policy The hard truth is that mental illness occurrences are significantly higher than what is reported by research studies.    The Surgeon General expresses that very few people in a population are untouched by mental illness either directly or indirectly in their lifetime.    More importantly, mental illness is often the underlying cause of many other healthcare-related events. Limited access to mental health care  and the  laws governing the privacy rights of those who have mental illness  make the known prevalence challenging to ascertain.    Therefore, the research offering such information is likely only a small percentage of what the reality is.    The mental health sector does not report to the CDC, watchdog for epidemics.    There is no single agency tasked with overseeing the state of mental health in America.    Below are statistics based on what was known at the time r...

Mental Healthcare in the United States: A Review of Our History

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  A Review of Our History The history of mental illness in the United States illustrates how our understanding of mental illness and trends in treating mental health influence both our attitude toward mental illness and national policy governing mental healthcare. For centuries many cultures viewed serious mental illnesses as a religious problem, religious punishment, or even demonic possession. Hippocrates was an early pioneer in treating mental illness in the 5th century B.C. Rather than pointing to religious and paranormal causes, Hippocrates directed his attention toward changing the patient's environment or occupation and administering oral treatments as medication. Despite his work, the belief that the mentally ill were demonically possessed continued into the 18th century in the U.S. The belief surrounding possession and mental illness led to the unhygienic and degrading confinement of people with serious mental illnesses until the early 19th century. The work of activist/lo...