Mental Health Research Paper

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Feasibility Essay “The guilt I felt for having a mental illness was horrible. I prayed for a broken bone that would heal in six weeks. But that never happened. I was cursed with an illness that nobody could see and nobody knew much about.” Andy Behrman’s statement about there being a lack of knowledge about mental illness is one that some suffering from a mental illness had also mentioned. In addition to there being a lack of knowing about mental health, patients apart of studies that follow the experience attempting to get help also vented about the bars from getting help. Accessibility issues, distance from the mental health centers, a lack of qualified professionals mental health specialists were on that list. A number of the issues listed …show more content…

Research also showed that those who live in rural and urban areas smoke more have lower income rates, are not as healthy; they exercise less, and are prone to be more obese than compared to those who live in suburban areas. Regardless of the people who live there it was still noted that hospitals that are sensitive to cultural and local variations in rural and urban areas be preserved because of accessibility issues and the towns distance from the other towns. It was said that those who live in urban and rural areas fare worse than those in suburban areas. The death rate is higher because of some of the town residences suffering from chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), unintentional injuries, urban areas included homicide. Both rural and urban had suicide as contribution to the high death rate. Only a small percentage of doctors are at a facility in the rural United States even though rural American is one fourth of the population. Even with all the odds in rural and urban America, services such as walk-in mental health clinics have been very efficient. The use of these walk in clinics has reduced if not obliterated a long wait time and made getting help fast and

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