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Insane Consequences - How the Mental Health Industry Fails the Mentally Ill (Paperback)
Loot Price: R421
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Insane Consequences - How the Mental Health Industry Fails the Mentally Ill (Paperback)
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Loot Price R421
Discovery Miles 4 210
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This well-researched and highly critical examination of the state
of our mental health system by the industry's most relentless
critic presents a new and controversial explanation as to why--in
spite of spending $147 billion annually--140,000 seriously mentally
ill are homeless, 390,000 are incarcerated, and even educated,
tenacious, and caring people can't get treatment for their mentally
ill loved ones. DJ Jaffe blames the mental health industry and the
government for shunning the 10 million adults who are the most
seriously mentally ill--mainly those who suffer from schizophrenia
and severe bipolar disorder--and, instead, working to improve
"mental wellness" in 43 million others, many of whom are barely
symptomatic. Using industry and government documents, scientific
journals, and anecdotes from his thirty years of advocacy, Jaffe
documents the insane consequences of these industry-driven
policies: psychiatric hospitals for the seriously ill are still
being closed; involuntary commitment criteria are being narrowed to
the point where laws now require violence rather than prevent it;
the public is endangered; and the mentally ill and their families
are forced to suffer. Insane Consequences proposes smart,
compassionate, affordable, and sweeping reforms designed to send
the most seriously ill to the head of the line for services rather
than to jails, shelters, prisons, and morgues. It lays out a road
map to spend less on mental "health" and more on mental
"illness"--replace mission creep with mission control and return
the mental health system to a focus on the most seriously ill. It
is not money that is lacking; it's leadership. This book is a
must-read for anyone who works in the mental health industry or
cares about the mentally ill, violence, homelessness,
incarceration, or public policy.
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