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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 4 page paper addresses the issue of dual diagnosis patients and the need that exists for establishing comprehensive treatment programs that address the dualistic nature of their problems. This paper asserts that patients would benefit from the development of such specific services. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
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4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_GSCoexis.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
these patients as being less than satisfactory. In the end, the inability of a single-diagnosis label to reveal the inherently complex nature of the dualistic reality, provides a gap
in medical care that leaves patients as the losers. Therefore, there is indeed a need to develop professional services for those patients suffering from dual-diagnosis in order to fully
address their specific medical and mental health needs. The reality is that there has been a high occurrence of dual disorders
among the mental health and chemically dependent populations (Ries, 2004). "This fact suggests that all persons who present at either doorstep should receive an adequate screening for the other
problem" (Ries, 2004). The problem however is that currently, most of the dual disorder treatment programs focus their efforts on addressing their mentally ill patients, and therefore chemical dependency
issues often get relegated to the proverbial back burner (Ries, 2004). Obviously, this presents a problem in regards to patient care (Ries, 2004).
However, what type of client is appropriate for treatment in a "dual disorder program"? Should a person in recovery from severe alcoholism who then develops an
episode of major depression be treated in this type of program? Or can this person be treated in a primary addiction-oriented program that also provides episodic psychiatric consultation? On the
other hand, does someone with severe, chronic, disabling mental illness, who has infrequent alcohol abuse (not dependence), qualify as dually disordered? Does this person require dual disorder treatment in the
same way as a person with severe mental illness who has daily, dependent alcohol and cocaine intoxication (Ries, 2004)? These are all
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