Alternatives to the hospital for acute psychiatric treatment

Bibliographic Information

Alternatives to the hospital for acute psychiatric treatment

edited by Richard Warner

(Clinical practice, no. 32)

American Psychiatric Press, c1995

1st ed

Available at  / 7 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Because of the increased focus on managed care there is a growing demand for alternatives to psychiatric hospital treatment. In Alternatives to the Hospital for Acute Psychiatric Care, a range of acute nonhospital treatment programs from the United states and abroad are described, including locked- and open-door, voluntary and involuntary, public and private, and nontraditional and strictly medical settings. Alternatives to the Hospital for Acute Psychiatric Care describes various cost-effective alternatives to psychiatric hospital care and provides specific details for mental health administrators to evaluate the usefulness and feasibility of the various models for their own mental health care setting.

Table of Contents

Programs in the Mainstream. Cedar House: a noncoercive hospital alternative in Boulder, Colorado. The Vancouver experience. Crossing place, Washington, DC. The progress foundation, San Francisco. Northwest evaluation and treatment center, Seattle: alternative to hospital for involuntarily detained patients. Acute hospital alternatives in the Netherlands: crisis intervention centers by. Innovative and Nontraditional Programs. The Soteria Project: the first generation American alternatives to psychiatric hospitalization. The pilot project "soteria berne": clinical experiences and results. Burch house, Inc., Bethlehem, New Hampshire: history and description. The Windhorse program for recovery. Can Interdependent Mutual Support Function as an alternative to hospitalization? the Santa Clara County clustered apartment project. Treating acutely ill psychotic patients in private home. The crisis home program of Dane County. Postscript: from patient management to risk management. Index.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Related Books: 1-1 of 1

Details

Page Top