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Social workers’ and physicians’ experiences with review panels in British ColumbiaYip, So-han Seraphina 05 1900 (has links)
In British Columbia, individuals with a mental disorder can be hospitalised
against their will under the Mental Health Act (1999), when a physician determines that
"protection of the person or others" is an issue. Involuntary psychiatric hospitalisation
involves a major infringement of an individual's civil liberty. When patients or their
representatives disagree with the treatment teams about their involuntary
hospitalisation, they can apply for an appeal hearing named the review panel under the
Mental Health Act (1999).
From a theoretical perspective, the traditional medical model and the social
constructionist model, which offer different views concerning individuals with mental
illness who are hospitalised against their will, are presented. This theoretical contrast
underscores a major dilemma faced by mental health professionals in fostering client
self-determination, while they are providing services on the principle of beneficent
protection. An empowerment model of social work practice is then described to
illustrate how services can be provided to help mental patients regain a sense of control
over their lives. Concerns about the current legislation regarding involuntary
hospitalisation are also discussed.
To supplement the limited number of studies currently available on review
panels, a quantitative descriptive study was conducted at Riverview Hospital, the only
tertiary psychiatric hospital in British Columbia, surveying the experiences of 39 social
workers and physicians with review panels. A questionnaire consisting of 22 Likerttype
items was used. Four categories were identified: (a) patient-related issues, (b)
effects of review panels on treatment teams, (c) role conflicts, and (d) operational
issues. Despite the apparent lack of formal training, social workers and physicians
generally reported having adequate knowledge of review panels. Social workers and
physicians who were involved more frequently with review panels appeared to have
more positive attitudes towards them. Their training pertaining to the Mental Health
Act was also significantly related to their attitudes. Neither patients nor their families
reportedly had adequate knowledge of the review panel process.
Although some positive effects of review panels were acknowledged, staff
generally had mixed attitudes about review panels. Guided by an empowerment model,
these findings have important implications for social work practice. These include the
need for further professional training, improved communication between health
professionals and legal advocates, education for patients and families, and the support
of patients' collective action, so that review panels can be a more empowering
experience for mental patients.
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A study of patient assault-related injuries in state psychiatric hospitals.Calabro, Karen S. January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Dr. P.H.)--University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, School of Public Health, 2007. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 68-10, Section: B, page: 6595. Adviser: Arch I. Carson. Includes bibliographical references.
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The effect of structured exercise and stuctured reminiscing on agitation and aggression in geriatric psychiatric patients /Smith, Irmhild Wrede. January 1996 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1996. / Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Susan W. Salmond. Dissertation Committee: Marvin Sontag. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 73-87).
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Die rol van die maatskaplike werker in Weskoppies HospitaalViljoen, Margaretha Elisabeth 16 April 2014 (has links)
M.A. (Social Work) / South Africa is a society undergoing major and rapid social change. An understanding of psychiatric services in the psychiatric hospital should also be identified within this context. The needs of the mentally ill and other interested parties will determine the extent of the services that need to be rendered. The social worker as part of the interdisciplinary team in the hospital, must have a clear perception of her professional role in order to render a relevant service. Social work must become more responsive to the consumers' needs and allow itself to be shaped by the context in which it is practised. In this study the role of the social worker in Weskoppies Hospital was identified by means of a descriptive research design with qualitative and quantitative methods of data collection. The qualitative research was done by means of in depth interviews and focus groups with interested parties. The quantitative research was done by means of questionnaires completed by patients of the hospital. A model for the role description of the social worker was derived from a literature study; the view of Lister, as described by the authors Hepworth & Larsen; the view of other authors and the results of the qualitative and quantitative research. The results of the research confirmed a need for social work services in Weskoppies Hospital. The greatest need expressed, was a need for help with material problems, followed by a need for help to be linked with other resources. Although community involvement was emphasised, there still was a need for individual counseling and support. Other important roles were also identified. The model serves as an integrated description of the role of the social worker in the hospital. From the results of the research it was thus possible to convey a clear picture of the role of the social worker in Weskoppies Hospital. Hopefully this will enable the social workers in the hospital to render a better and more understanding service to the patients, hospital and community.
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Social workers’ and physicians’ experiences with review panels in British ColumbiaYip, So-han Seraphina 05 1900 (has links)
In British Columbia, individuals with a mental disorder can be hospitalised
against their will under the Mental Health Act (1999), when a physician determines that
"protection of the person or others" is an issue. Involuntary psychiatric hospitalisation
involves a major infringement of an individual's civil liberty. When patients or their
representatives disagree with the treatment teams about their involuntary
hospitalisation, they can apply for an appeal hearing named the review panel under the
Mental Health Act (1999).
From a theoretical perspective, the traditional medical model and the social
constructionist model, which offer different views concerning individuals with mental
illness who are hospitalised against their will, are presented. This theoretical contrast
underscores a major dilemma faced by mental health professionals in fostering client
self-determination, while they are providing services on the principle of beneficent
protection. An empowerment model of social work practice is then described to
illustrate how services can be provided to help mental patients regain a sense of control
over their lives. Concerns about the current legislation regarding involuntary
hospitalisation are also discussed.
To supplement the limited number of studies currently available on review
panels, a quantitative descriptive study was conducted at Riverview Hospital, the only
tertiary psychiatric hospital in British Columbia, surveying the experiences of 39 social
workers and physicians with review panels. A questionnaire consisting of 22 Likerttype
items was used. Four categories were identified: (a) patient-related issues, (b)
effects of review panels on treatment teams, (c) role conflicts, and (d) operational
issues. Despite the apparent lack of formal training, social workers and physicians
generally reported having adequate knowledge of review panels. Social workers and
physicians who were involved more frequently with review panels appeared to have
more positive attitudes towards them. Their training pertaining to the Mental Health
Act was also significantly related to their attitudes. Neither patients nor their families
reportedly had adequate knowledge of the review panel process.
Although some positive effects of review panels were acknowledged, staff
generally had mixed attitudes about review panels. Guided by an empowerment model,
these findings have important implications for social work practice. These include the
need for further professional training, improved communication between health
professionals and legal advocates, education for patients and families, and the support
of patients' collective action, so that review panels can be a more empowering
experience for mental patients. / Arts, Faculty of / Social Work, School of / Graduate
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The assessment and recognition of childhood abuse among former Patton State Hospital patients by psychiatric social workersCriner, Bonnie A., Young, Hope M. 01 January 1994 (has links)
No description available.
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Las condenadas : an ethnography of sexuality and violence in BoliviaBorda Niño, Adriana Carolina January 2014 (has links)
This is an ethnographic study of discourses and experiences concerning sexual exchanges among kin “who are too closely related to marry each other” (OED), or what in lay language is called “incest”. I investigate the ways in which a certain kind of incest, that between older men and younger women, primarily from different generations, is experienced by women of predominantly rural origin, who have been hospitalized in the major public psychiatric hospital in Bolivia, in Sucre. In this sense, this research is as much a study of incest as it is of psychiatric institutionalization. These experiences will be considered in the context of a wider field of ethnic, class and gender discourses that are produced by medical staff, community organizations, as well as national judicial institutions. The category of 'incest' is problematized in terms of how kinship is constructed, not only as a series of dynamic discourses (as practices whose effect is the production of events) but also as mobile experiences, however socially regulated. With this in mind, I present an account of Andean concepts and treatment of incest, as well as of legal and medical categories. Specifically, I focus on the play between discourses in the context of the psychiatric hospital, the judicial court and the communities of selected inmates. I show how the inmates' experiences of intergenerational incest and sexual violence in general are related to the dominant ethnic, class and gender narratives produced by medical staff, community organizations, and judicial institutions.
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De-institutionalisation of people with mental illness and intellectual disability : the family perspectiveKock, Elizabeth 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil (Sociology and Social Anthropology))--University of Stellenbosch, 2009. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: South Africa has transformed its mental health service provision from in-hospital care to
community-based rehabilitation. Although the idea is sound, the process places the caregiving
families under an immense pressure. The aim of this study was to explore the
impact that the de-institutionalisation process has had on the families as they care for
their child with intellectual disability.
The study was conducted by means of qualitative, unstructured interviews with families
that have had a child de-institutionalised from Alexandra Hospital in the Western Cape.
All of the patients were diagnosed with a dual diagnosis of intellectual disability and
mental illness. Even though the patients were in group-homes or attended a day care
centre, final responsibility for the patients lay with the parents.
Three main themes emerged from the interviews that describe the impact of deinstitutionalisation,
viz. the characteristics of the family member with intellectual
disability (aggressive, abusive and self-destructive behaviour of the patient), the effect
that these characteristics had on the family (marital stress and health risks to the care
giver), and community and resource factors.
The study placed the family central to its environment and discussed the impact deinstitutionalisation
had on its environment as a whole.
It was concluded that the burden that de-institutionalisation places on the families far
exceeded their ability to cope with these circumstances. This status quo could be
improved if adequate resources and skills are given to families prior to de-institutional / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: In Suid-Afrika is geestesgesondheidsorg van hospitaliserende na gemeenskapsgebaseerde
rehabilitasie, omskep. Terwyl hierdie stap wel as lewensvatbaar mag
voorkom, plaas die proses ‘n hewige las op die sorggewende gesin. Die doel van hierdie
studie was om die omvang van die impak hiervan op ‘n gesin met ’n lid met intellektuele
gestremdheid en psiegiatriese siekte, te bepaal – nadat so ‘n pasient uit die inrigting
ontslaan is.
Die ondersoek is uitgevoer by wyse van kwalitatiewe, ongestruktureerde onderhoude met
gesinne wie se lede met die diagnose uitgeplaas is deur die Alexandra Hospitaal in die
Wes-Kaap. Elkeen van die pasïente is gediagnoseer met ernstige intellektuele
gestremdheid, asook bykomende gedragsafwykings. Ten spyte van die feit dat die
betrokke pasïente deur groepshuise of dagsorg eenhede versorg word, bly hulle hul ouers
se verantwoordelikheid.
Drie temas het ontstaan wat die impak van ontslag uit die inrigting omskryf, te wete die
karaktertrekke van die gestremde gesinslid (aggressie, misbruikende en vernielsugtige
gedrag van die pasïent), die effek van hierdie karaktertrekke op die gesin (stres op die
huwelik en potensiële gesondheidsrisiko wat dit vir die versorger inhou), en die
gemeenskap en ondersteunende faktore.
Tydens die ondersoek is die gesin sentraal geplaas ten opsigte van die omgewing. Die
impak van ontslag van die gediagnoseerde pasïent uit die inrigting op die omgewing as
geheel, word bespreek.
Daar is tot die slotsom gekom dat die vermoë van die gesin wat die las moet dra as
gevolg van die ontslag, ver oorspan word. Hierdie toedrag van sake sou egter verlig kon
word indien toereikende hulpbronne en vaardighede aan sulke gesinne beskikbaar gestel
word alvorens so ‘n pasïent ontslaan is.
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