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13 pages in length. Mental health spans myriad components of the overall healthcare field. The extent to which knowledge and application of mental health guidelines is lacking in some areas is both grand and far-reaching; that patients are not receiving even fundamental attention under the auspices of mental health care speaks to an industry-wide breakdown. Nowhere is this failure more apparent than within the walls of many nursing homes. Bibliography lists 20 sources.
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13 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCProdAudM.rtf
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far-reaching; that patients are not receiving even fundamental attention of care and hygiene under the auspices of mental health care speaks to an industry-wide breakdown (Thompson, 1997). Nowhere is
this failure more apparent than within the walls of many nursing homes. II. THE PROBLEM Laurie Kaye Abrahams Mama Might Be Better
Off Dead: the Failure of Health Care in Urban America is an eye-opening look at the inadequacies and absurdities of the United States health care system. While it touches
on myriad topics, it also delves deeply into the fundamental structure of what has come to be heralded as one of the worlds most ill-equipped methods of care for a
significant number of people: Americas current nursing home system. In doing so, she points to a number of examples of how the system not only fails the very people
it is suppose to help, but it actually makes their lives that much more difficult (Abraham, 1993). Abrahams (1993) concepts are useful, relevant and quite timely with regard to
current health care policies of contemporary nursing homes and the urgent need for change. Indeed, government leaders have long talked about making significant changes to the existing system but
have not yet covered too much ground where modifications are concerned. This is particularly pertinent to the mental health aspect of nursing homes, inasmuch as myriad facilities admit to
the inability to provide anything more than basic care for those who suffer with, for example, dementia. "Although respondents emphasize the salience of care that keeps the resident comfortable,
most were not highly confident in their ability to read and understand pain experiences of end-stage dementia residents, and many expressed problems managing pain control with these terminal residents" (Moss
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