Timeline
Main Ethical Issues
Deinstitutionalization
Types of Mental Illnesses
Case Studies
100
Hippocrates' view of mental illness
What is a disturbed physiology in which drugs could help.
100
Name one of the main 4 ethical issues in dealing with mental health.
What is (any of the following) the concept of mental health, the autonomy of patients, conflicts of interest, or aversion therapy.
100
Designed to fix this approach
What is the "asylum-based" approach
100
What category is social anxiety disorder under?
What is anxiety disorders.
100
Helping Lilly overcome her guilt as she is asking so that she can not feel guilty about committing suicide is what point of view?
What is autonomy
200
Middle ages view of the mentally ill
What is they were possessed by demons.
200
Which main ethical issue involved people thinking mental heath patients were possessed by demons?
What is the concept of mental health
200
Explain deinstitutionalization
What is the closing of many mental hospitals in the mid 1960s due to terrible conditions, the effort to fix this approach to care, give better care to mental health patients in smaller facilities, etc.
200
What category is alcoholism under?
What is impulse control and addiction disorders
200
The first case study, Amy, had this disorder.
What is anorexia nervousa.
300
She spent 40 years in the 1840s establishing 32 psychiatric hospitals in the U.S.
Who is Dorothea Dix
300
Describe the "medical model"
What is the “medical model” explains the organic cause of the abnormal behavior and implies that the individual is not responsible for their behaviors associated with their disorder
300
Describe the treatment of patients in early mental health hospitals (i.e. Bedlam).
What is terrible treatment, harsh punishment, using the patients for entertainment, etc.
300
Name one personality disorder.
What is (any of the following) antisocial personality disorder, obsessive-compulsive personality disorder, or paranoid personality disorder.
300
Attempting to treat Lilly's depression, perhaps having Lilly committed as dangerous to herself is seen as what point of view?
What is Utilitarian.
400
The time period when deinstitutionalization began
What is the mid 1960s
400
Explain why the mental health patient having their own autonomy is controversial.
What is are they mentally healthy enough to make decisions that could affect their own health and well-being, and possibly their entire lives.
400
Describe some positives of deinstitutionalization.
What is good outcomes from community-based programs, advances in patients’ friendships, adaptive behaviors, and their satisfaction
400
Which type of disorders involves disordered awareness and thinking, as well as hallucinations and delusions?
What is psychotic disorders
400
This is the percentage of people that anorexia nervousa effects in the population.
What is 0.1%-1%.
500
The act that President Harry Truman signed
What is The National Health Act
500
What is ECT?
What is electroconvulsive therapy and it is used on depressed patients. It entails mild but uncomfortable electric shocks that have several advantages over chemical and pharmacological stimuli.
500
Describe some negatives of deinstitutionalization.
What is some lack in health care (vaccinations, routine screenings, etc.), many patients unable to hold a job so they end up in poverty, great responsibilities on families to care for their loved ones
500
Describe what a mood disorder involves.
What is these disorders, also called affective disorders, involve persistent feelings of sadness or periods of feeling overly happy, or fluctuations from extreme happiness to extreme sadness.
500
What is a Paternalism point of view?
What is an action taken to benefit a person and done for the welfare of that person, but against his or her will.