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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3 page paper provides an overview of a pre-test/post-test measure utilized to assess the impacts of healthcare reform on psychiatric mental health. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MH11_MHmentpr33.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
secondary purpose; to shift the focus from marginalization of mental health care to normalization by excluding separate language for mental health care. Health care reform, then, has the potential
to transform the national views on psychiatric care and mental health services. Problem Statement Hinshaw & Stier (2008) maintained that
the harsh stigmatization that has followed the concept of mental illness is independent of the specific nature of the impairment or the conditions that are present that meet the diagnostic
criteria. Because of the widespread negative stigma attached to any type of mental illness, self-stigmatization also becomes an extension of the cultural view of individuals with mental illness. When
individuals find that others believe they are flawed for their condition, they often embrace this view, creating a kind of snowball effect that leads to self-devaluation (Hinshaw & Stier, 2008).
From a historical perspective, though, the shift over the past decade has led to a greater degree of public understanding of mental disorders, including policy changes and changes
in terminology that reject past concepts, including ideas of madness and insanity. Recognizing that mental disorders may have genetic, neurobiological and behavioral causes is helpful in legitimizing the application
of methods for treatment that reject dehumanizing treatment modalities (Hinshaw & Cicchetti, 2000). "Self-definition is an essential part of changing the lives of people with a mental illness
diagnosis and choosing a self-description is an element of this" (Campbell, 2006, p. 578). The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act specifically excludes language that would identify
areas of separate services for mental health care or would identify areas where treatment of mental health was considered separate from general medical care (Moran, 2010). Creating parity for
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