Psychiatric medication

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    Do you know someone who suffers from schizophrenia? If you answered this question with, “yes” then you may know a lot about what I am about to tell you. If you answered, “no” than this essay can benefit you by informing you about the cause and treatments for schizophrenia. It will also give you statistical facts and impact that schizophrenia can have one a person. Schizophrenia is a brain disease where a person lacks the ability to think normally and may see illusions. The 1930s were…

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    Mental Health Disorders

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    reported mental illnesses have skyrocketed tremendously. Robert Glover, the executive director of the National Association of State Mental Health Program Director, states that “Without federal support, states haven 't been able to afford to keep their psychiatric hospitals open. States have closed 10% of their hospital beds from 2009 to 2012”(Szabo 2). With the recent incline…

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    Ill In Prisons

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    The number of incarcerated inmates who suffer from some form of mental illness is at a rise. There is a wide range of questions about the treatment of the mentally ill in the justice system and wether prisons are a suitable place for the mentally ill. When a person commits a crime or breaks the law, they are usually taken into custody and sent to jail or prison without being evaluated properly. Instead of being sent to a hospital or a mental health facility to receive the proper treatments,…

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    Kesey’s references to Christ seem more blatant as McMurphy’s actions start to become similar to the actions of Christ. Chief Bromden, the narrator of Kesey’s novel, is enrolled in the hospital as deaf and dumb. In his whole tenure at the psychiatric ward, the chief did not say one word, and the nurses and patients did not think twice about the possibility of him ever speaking. At first, McMurphy tries to converse with the majestic Indian, but to no avail. One of the patients, Billy Bibbit,…

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    Unsung Heroes of Psychiatric Wards The cliche phrase ‘don 't judge a book by its cover’ has been around for generations. Who would have guessed that one of America’s most loved movie stars and sex icons, Marilyn Monroe, had depression and a form of schizophrenia? In One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest, Ken Kesey proves that people with mental illness should not be frowned upon because they do not fit in with the rest of the cookie-cutter society. Kesey uses a realist approach to make people…

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    A once connected community of rich relations among one another and constant interaction with numerous people throughout the day has simply transformed into a consumption of screens, gadgets and isolation. A sharp decrease in social connectedness over the past 20 years has alarmed scientists at Duke University that describe social connectedness as a crucial factor in the way that humans were designed to function. The toll it takes on humans is the drastic increase in vulnerability to mental…

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    Patch Adams Reflection

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    young man named Hunter Adams admits himself into a psychiatric hospital. While he is there he learns that he has a passion for helping people with humor. He also gets the nickname Patch while there when talking to a patient. The movie shows that doctors should not be walking around the hospitals like they are above everyone else. That doctors should befriend the nurses and focus on patients and not the disease. When Patch Adams was in the psychiatric hospital he learned to look past the…

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    “Girl, Interrupted” by Susanna Kaysen is based on a true story about the author, who spent time at a mental institution called McLean Hospital in the late 1960’s. Throughout the book the author writes about her experiences at the hospital and the people she encountered while she was there. While Susanna Kaysen encountered many people at McLean, none played a major role in the conflict that arises in the book, which is Susanna being sent to the institution and having to face her mental illness.…

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    tell stories even though at first they are not aware of how long they have been out of this world, Dr. Sayer give them a new hope , Leonard learn to fall in love with Paula and do what he loves to do using his hands, art. But to find out that the medication is not enough to wake them up permanently , after a while they all come back to their old conditions. Although Dr. Sayer didn't stop to look for a cure but at the same time he…

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    One of the major themes in the book, Girl, Interrupted by Susanna Kaysen, is the overlap of freedom and captivity. An example of this is how at McLean Hospital the patients are ‘free’ from the pressures of society, like judgement and responsibility. However, on page 47, Kaysen writes that, “Freedom was the price of privacy,” describing how the mentally ill were only able to get privacy by giving up their freedom. This is visited again on page 94, when she says that, “In a strange way we were…

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