Mental Health Case Study

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Mental illness is documented in Chinese text as going as far back as the first millennium B.C.E. ("Mental Health"). We are only going to be focusing on the Western world of America and Europe. During the last 175 years progress has been made in the way mental illness has been treated and looked at. Mental hospitals throughout history have gone from inhumane to more humane, but we still need to improve the mental health stigma in order to give the mentally ill the help they need.
Historically the conditions at mental hospitals were horrible during the eighteenth century. “Report of the Metropolitan Commissioners in Lunacy to the Lord Chancellor (excerpt), United Kingdom, 1844” talks about the conditions in an asylum at Haverfordwest in 1842. There were 18 patients total, nine males and nine females. As well as the 18 patients, there was a caretaker and his wife, and no other help due to the lack of funds. The
Patients are still being discriminated against and isolated because of their mental illness. I see this all too much in my work. My job is to work with children with developmental and behavioral issues. I work hard with my team to help these children get the help they need to live a productive life with their mental illness. I am their advocate and make sure their voices are heard. I also do not want to see them fall through the cracks of the system. The same goes for every person with mental illness. There are far too many patients who do not know about services like the one I work for, or know how to get the help they need. This brings up the need for medical care to be more affordable and readily available. It is so important to keep improving our mental hospitals and the services provided for patients so we can keep changing mental health for the

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