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A Psychosocial Approach to Deinstitutionalization

Psychiatric Services, 1988
1308 December 1988 Vol. 39 No. 12 Hospital and Community Psychiatry ways bead to the terminal condition. This dimension is based on exposure to information and may be modified by education. The relative distinctiveness of the dimensions obtained in this analysis suggest that the questionname used in this study could be used to measure attitudes toward ...
Paula Hargreaves   +1 more
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Deinstitutionalization and the rise of violence

CNS Spectrums, 2015
The deinstitutionalization of individuals with serious mental illness was driven by 4 factors: public revelations regarding the state of public mental hospitals, the introduction of antipsychotic medications, the introduction of federal programs to fund patients who had been discharged, and civil libertarian lawyers.
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Deinstitutionalization: A new scenario

The journal of mental health administration, 1987
Deinstitutionalization appears to be an issue that is still pretty much up in the air. The public, courts, and state hospital administrators agree that large state, warehouse-like facilities are inadequate. The appropriate mental health delivery system for each state and the communities within each state need careful planning and implementation to be ...
Margaret E. Goodwin, James R. Lee
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Deinstitutionalization:

Home Health Care Services Quarterly, 1979
Whether a retarded child can be cared for at home depends primarily on the ability of his or her family to function as primary caretakers. Not surprisingly, then, the rate at which retarded children are deinstitutionalized is being slowed by this country's failure to emphasize programs that are supportive of these children's families.
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Ethics of Deinstitutionalization

2010
This chapter analyses ethical drivers of the deinstitutionalization process in psychiatry over the past 50 years in different European countries and highlights typical ethical dilemmas of current community psychiatry. Specific attention is paid to issues of the revolving door patient, rehabilitation and recovery, assertive outreach models and coercive ...
Dirk Claassen, Stefan Priebe
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The Biopsychosocial Legacy of Deinstitutionalization

Psychiatric Services, 1993
The growth of homelessness as a problem affecting the long-term mentally ill patient population attests to the fact that many individuals fail to be served by mental health agencies in this era of deinstitutionalization (1). Even those who are on agency rolls often receive far less than adequate and sensitive care (2). Thus it is hardly surprising that
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A Conceptual Approach to Deinstitutionalization

Psychiatric Services, 1978
Many serious problems in deinstitutionalization result from conceptual oversights or confusion. Understanding deinstitutionalization as a process and a philosophy, as well as a fact, permits planning that will accommodate the variety of patient populations that are the products of the deinstitutionalization movement. The role and possible contributions
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A proposal for the deinstitutionalization of patients

Health Care Management Review, 1983
Outpatient treatment of cancer patients, often medically and psychologically sound, results in great savings for insurers but increased out-of-pocket expenses to patients. If insurers were to reimburse for nonmedical out-of-pocket costs as well as medical, this disincentive to deinstitutionalization would be removed.
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Documenting the Failure of Deinstitutionalization

Psychiatry: Interpersonal and Biological Processes, 2010
(2010). Documenting the Failure of Deinstitutionalization. Psychiatry: Vol. 73, No. 2, pp. 122-124.
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