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Culture and the Restructuring of Community Mental Health (Hardcover, Annotated edition)
Loot Price: R2,197
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Culture and the Restructuring of Community Mental Health (Hardcover, Annotated edition)
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Examining the issues of treatment, organizational planning, and
research, this multidimensional study offers a critique of both the
theoretical and programmatic aspects of providing mental health
services to traditionally underserved populations. Focusing on
minority groups, the book uses the case of Hispanics to illustrate
the largely unaddressed need for services that are relevant to
social groups with diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds.
Vega and Murphy maintain that the present service system is
socially insensitive, that mental health services in the United
States were never designed to serve a multicultural population, and
that, in general, those who dominate the current mental health
system from administrator-clinicians to bureaucrats and politicians
do not know how to direct their services to minority groups.
Calling for fundamental reconceptualization and change, the book
argues for community-based planning and intervention as an
enlightened and necessary alternative, and provides a detailed
description of such a program in terms of both philosophy and
method. The eight chapters offer a reassessment based on
understanding not only the rationale for these necessary services,
but also the important philosophical and pragmatic issues that have
resulted in the current, inadequate system; they provide the new
thinking necessary to reframe the objectives of mental health
services for cultural minorities. The early chapters explore some
of the critical junctures in the community mental health movement
between 1946 and 1981, the development of theory in the movement's
early days, and the thrust of community-based intervention--the
culture-specific methodology that has not been well-understood or
implemented. Chapters 4 and 5 focus on the relationship between
medicalization and the degradation of culture and on the
reconceptualization of knowledge, order, illness, and intervention.
The last three chapters analyze an example of community-based
intervention in operation, and citizen involvement and the
political aspects of community-based policies are reviewed. This
timely discussion of the requirements for a socially responsible
and community-based services delivery program lays the theoretical
foundation for a future public mental health system. As such, it
will prove invaluable and important reading for advanced
undergraduate and graduate students in the health and human
services areas, including social work, clinical psychology, and
medical sociology; it also has much to offer professional
administrators and planners. Culture and the Restructuring of
Community Mental Health has been designed to meet the needs of both
academics and practitioners.
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