Return to community : building support systems for people with psychiatric disabilities

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

Return to community : building support systems for people with psychiatric disabilities

Paul J. Carling ; foreword by Jacqueline Parrish

Guilford Press, c1995

  • : pbk

Available at  / 6 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 323-338) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Provides a comprehensive, practical approach to fully integrating people with serious mental illnesses into the community. Drawing from a range of resources, including mental health consumers and their families, this pathbreaking work lays the groundwork for a critical rethinking of how we view people labeled "mentally ill". Defining "community integration," the author examines current and past approaches to meeting the needs of people with psychiatric disabilities, demonstrating how they have been inadequate. Carling then maps out a pioneering paradigm for community integration, which consists of an active partnership among mental health professionals, community leaders, policy makers, families, neighbors, employers, and realtors. Describing ways to prepare the community to organize for change, the book discusses the need to first address the pervasive nature of stigma, which is reflected at every level of society. Drawing from his own extensive experience, as well as from firsthand observations of model programs in place throughout the U.S., Canada, Europe, and Australia, the author offers detailed guidance for organizing a program of action in mental health systems and in local communities.

Table of Contents

Introduction I. Redefining the Needs of Mental Health Consumers 1. Community Integration: The Challenge to Traditional Mental Health Services 2. Foundations for a New Approach 3. Mental Health Consumers and the Consumer Self-Help Movement II. Organizing for Community Change 4. Preparing for Organizing 5. Strategies for Change III. Achieving Community Integration 6. Revamping Established Support Systems: Mental Heatlh Systems and Higher Education 7. Improving Access to, Preserving, and Developing Housing 8. Creating Employment Opportunities 9. Promoting Social Integration IV. Empowering Consumers and Their Families 10. Sharing Power with Consumers 11. Involving Families as Partners in the Process of Change Conclusion: Future Challenges and New Directions

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