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Title: THE DILEMMA OF FEDERAL MENTAL HEALTH POLICY
RADICAL REFORM OR INCREMENTAL CHANGE?
By: Gerald N. Grob, Howard H. Goldman
Format: Hardback

List price: £58.00
Our price: £52.20
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ISBN 10: 0813539587
ISBN 13: 9780813539584
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-3 weeks.
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Publisher: RUTGERS UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pub. date: 16 November, 2006
Series: Critical Issues in Health and Medicine Series
Pages: 232
Description: Traces how an ever-changing coalition of mental health experts, patients' rights activists, and politicians envisioned the community-based system of psychiatric services. This work shows how policies shifted emphasis from radical reform to incremental change.
Synopsis: Severe and persistent mental illnesses are among the most pressing health and social problems in contemporary America. Recent estimates suggest that more than three million people in the U.S. have disabling mental disorders. The direct and indirect costs of their care exceed 180 billion dollars nationwide each year. Effective treatments and services exist, but many such individuals do not have access to these services because of limitations in mental health and social policies. For nearly two centuries Americans have grappled with the question of how to serve individuals with severe disorders. During the second half of the twentieth century, mental health policy advocates reacted against institutional care, claiming that community care and treatment would improve the lives of people with mental disorders. Once the exclusive province of state governments, the federal government moved into this policy arena after World War II. Policies ranged from those focused on mental disorders, to those that focused more broadly on health and social welfare. In this book, Gerald N. Grob and Howard H.Goldman trace how an ever-changing coalition of mental health experts, patients' rights activists, and politicians envisioned this community-based system of psychiatric services. The authors show how policies shifted emphasis from radical reform to incremental change. Many have benefited from this shift, but many are left without the care they require.
Publication: US
Imprint: Rutgers University Press
Returns: Returnable
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