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Deinstitutionalization of the Developmentally Disabled

Social Work, 1983
Rights Act of 1978 (P.L. 95-602).1 Briefly, the term "developmental dis ability" refers to a severe, chronic handicap that is characterized by permanent deficits in cognitive and adaptive functioning.2 Specific dis abling conditions include mental re tardation, epilepsy, cerebral palsy, autism, dyslexia, deafness, blindness, learning disability, or any
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Homelessness and the implementation of deinstitutionalization

New Directions for Mental Health Services, 1986
AbstractThe implementation of deinstitutionalizartion reflects deeply held negative attitudes about chronically mentally ill persons and has contributed to the large numbers of psychiatrically disabled indiutduals on our city streets.
Ellen L. Bassuk, H. Richard Lamb
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Does deinstitutionalization cause criminalization? The penrose hypothesis.

JAMA psychiatry, 2015
WhenLionelPenrosepublishedhis study,“MentalDiseaseand Crime:Outlineof aComparativeStudyofEuropeanStatistics”1 75years ago,hehadnowayofknowing thathis researchwould still be the subject of interest, and even controversy, in major psychiatric journals 3 ...
H. Lamb
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Testing the limits of deinstitutionalization

Psychiatric Services, 1995
From 1978 to 1993, under favorable administrative and political conditions and protected by a court-ordered consent decree, a comprehensive community-based mental health system was established in western Massachusetts that entirely replaced Northampton State Hospital.
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Transinstitutionalization, not Deinstitutionalization

Contemporary Psychology: A Journal of Reviews, 1987
Originally published in Contemporary Psychology: APA Review of Books, 1987, Vol 32(11), 974. Reviews the book, The Transfer of Care: Psychiatric Deinstitutionalization and its Aftermath by Phil Brown (1985). The author's plan of the text is well articulated.
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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: 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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Social Environment and Mental Illness: The Progress and Paradox of Deinstitutionalization

, 2016
Purpose Reexamination and reinterpretation of the process of deinstitutionalization of public mental hospital inpatients. Methodology/approach A comprehensive review of related research is presented and lessons learned for the sociology of mental ...
R. Schutt
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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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