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Posts Tagged ‘health care’

Question by the5500: Whats the difference between psychiatric hospital, psychiatric ward, insane asylum, mental hospital and rehab?

Best answer:

Answer by michele
They are different terms for the same place (i.e., inpatient psychiatric and substance abuse treatment). The term “insane asylum”, however, is quite antiquated. “Rehab” is more associated with substance abuse treatment facilities. “Psychiatric/mental hospital” is usually a freestanding facility that is devoted solely to treating psychiatric patients. A “psychiatric ward”, is typically housed within a general med/surg hospital.

Answer by carelesswhisper1015
Not a whole heck of alot when you’re locked up in any one of them…I worked in a capacity of this calibur and believe me, what I say is so…….and at times much worse…..

Advanced Health Care Corp. scraps plans for Hawaii oceanfront rehab center
An Idaho-based nursing and rehabilitation company's plan to build a nearly 50,000-square-foot oceanfront facility at the foot of Hawaii Loa Ridge to serve seniors recovering from surgeries and other conditions was scrapped after the company ran into …
Read more on Pacific Business News (Honolulu) (blog)

Family Time: How imaginative play benefits your child
Just make sure you have plenty of fun supplies on hand, such as glitter, paper, glue, markers, boxes, feathers, sequins or any other trinkets you have on hand. * Use the great outdoors as a playground: Encourage your kids to use the great outdoors as …
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LIBERALISM, MENTAL DISORDERS AND THE MARYLAND MALL SHOOTER
Inside The Washington Post, in the 14th paragraph of the story about O'Malley's “accomplishments” as Maryland governor, the paper informed readers about O'Malley's health care website debacle. “O'Malley said his administration has learned from the …
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Three things to know about the Respect for Communities Act
Advocates, who include the NDP and many members of the medical community, say the sites help curb drug addiction, reduce disease transmission and make neighbouring communities safer. Research suggests that communities around a safe injection sites have …
Read more on iPolitics.ca (subscription)

Question by Mr. Sir: If feminists want equal pay for women?
Then shouldn’t there be pay equity among men first, so it is easier to tell that a woman is getting paid less than all her male colleagues?
@ Jeff- Well men don’t earn the same amount of money as other men. How can we tell that there is true wage disparity between genders if neither gender has a standard wage among themselves?
@ Jiff- Sorry, meant to put Jiff, not Jeff, in the first additional comment.

Best answer:

Answer by Jiffy Ann
well women need the equal
amount of money as men gets

Answer by Empress Luka ルカ
It was “equal pay for equal work,” if you were paying attention.
Just “equal pay period” is Communism.

You don’t need to be a Communist to have equality — just equal opportunity from the starting gate (ensured by taxes to help bring the lower class children to the same starting line. That is: better schools, better health care, etc.) and personal initiative to carry you through, but with some help for those who are physically/mentally handicapped or otherwise disadvantaged.

I am a Liberal and I believe in helping those in need and doing all that you can to aid the larger community. I am not a Communist simply because I recognize that people need some positive reinforcement to keep them going and on track; purely negative reinforcement just creates unrest and misery.

@ The Fall of Man
I can most certainly hold my own.
Like the vast majority liberals, I am from the educated middle class — the level that can both contribute our efforts in the workforce and still afford to help others, as well as realize the importance of doing so, but doesn’t have the degree of greed and selfishness to launch us into the wealthy class.
I am not sure where the conservative idea that “all liberals are stoopid welfare parasites” came from. Most of us are neither rich nor poor. The wealthy/elite, the country/small town bunch, and the rural poor have always tended to gravitate towards conservatism. Liberalism is always strongest in more updated urban areas with lots of educational and working opportunities as well as a thriving middle class.

@ The Fall of Man
So, do you think it fair that people are born into poverty and therefore can’t get a very good education, so that the get lower-paying “un-skilled” jobs and will likely stay poor?
Do you think it fair that because someone is born with a physical/mental disease and disables them from working, they should have to suffer for it?
Eventually, if everything works out the right way, everyone should have an amazing education, complete safety, advanced healthcare, and as much community [moral] support as possible, regardless of what class he/she was born into. Therefore, whether you succeed and fail would become 110% you, not your birth class, not luck, not talent, not your family/parents, not money/resources, etc. Just you. If you hate this idea, it’s probably because you like being lucky and don’t want to have more people to compete with in the workforce — in that case, you are being a petty elitist (thinking that you are by nature better or more deserving than everyone else).
For this to equal starting-ground to be a reality, everyone needs to pitch in. Those with more are just going to have to give a little more. Don’t worry, there’ll still be a hierarchy — just not one dependent on luck and birth, but rather true hard work.
This starts now. If you keep chucking the weight on your descendants, nothing will ever get done. Everyone needs to give some and pledge themselves to the greater good, at least in part, today and every day.

@ The Fall of Man
Fine, I’ll try to make it simple so you can understand me.
I said it before and I can say it again: Liberals do not “steal people’s money.”
We give our aid, surplus derived from OUR OWN sweat and blood, to the disadvantaged and expect others to help as well. Everyone needs to pay their fair share. If I can be a good person and a part of the community, you can too.
I believe in some hierarchy, but hierarchy based off of hard work, determination, and mutual respect — not luck. If, growing up, you had loving parents, received a quality education, lived in a safe area, got medical treatment when you needed it, had no physical/mental disorders, had a roof over your head, weren’t pressured into drugs/alcohol/gangs while you were too young to know those were bad ideas, weren’t abused or bullied, weren’t threatened with violence into intentionally get lower grades, and/or didn’t face prejudice, you were VERY LUCKY. Many many people never got those privileges and, therefore, couldn’t have gotten into the same place you are in now no matter how hard they worked. And sometimes those people need a little extra help.

Alpharetta mom educates community on growing teen drug abuse
Alpharetta resident Kate Boccia, founder of H.O.P.E, (Helping to Open People's Eyes), an organization working to alert parents to drug problems by offering resources, said that today's opiates are easily available in most high schools. "If a kid has …
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Is Decriminalization the Best Approach to Vermont's, and Nation's, Drug Abuse
… to drug abuse and addiction. This is a great milestone itself, but his proposed increases in funding for treatment programs will only do so much to fight the state's drug abuse crisis. To seriously reduce the harms of drug abuse, Gov. … Fourteen …
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Cumberland County treatment court addresses the issue of drugs, their effect
“What I think Cumberland County has done a good job with for a long time is recognizing that simply putting folks like that in jail doesn't do anything to break the cycle of addiction, substance abuse and criminal behavior,” he said. “We've gotten a …
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New substance abuse treatment resources focus on teens
Resources to help parents, health care providers, and substance abuse treatment specialists treat teens struggling with drug abuse, as well as identify and interact with those who might be at risk, were released today by the National Institute on Drug …
Read more on National Institutes of Health (press release)

State senate forms committee to study drug addiction, treatment
The Senate formed its own special committee Thursday to study drug addiction and treatment options with a focus on addressing what Senate President Therese Murray described as an epidemic of opiate addiction in Massachusetts. email print. By Matt …
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Sen. Flanagan to chair panel studying addiction treatment
BOSTON – In response to rising levels of drug addiction, the Senate on Thursday passed an order to create a special committee to study the application of Section 35 and drug addiction treatment options in the state, and Sen. Jennifer Flanagan will …
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The Existential Elephant in the 'Christian Persecution' Room
A Middle East and Islam specialist, he is a Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center and an associate fellow at the Middle East Forum. Ibrahim's dual-background—born and raised in the U.S. by Coptic Egyptian parents born and raised in the …
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A special board should regulate HMOs
HMOs deliver health care services through their networks of physicians, laboratories/diagnostic centers, and hospitals. Health insurance companies merely …. They shun doctors who tend to order tests that use expensive diagnostic machines, or …
Read more on BusinessWorld Online Edition

Question by NAT: far fetched ideas for – improving the prison system – any of it worth reading?
IMPROVING THE PRISON SYSTEM
An overview of concepts for improving the prison system!

PRISON – place where criminals are confined: a secure place where somebody is confined as punishment for a crime or while waiting to stand trial

A slogan for a prison system of the future – “time in here is spent getting ready for a new future life of success, freedom, independence and satisfaction on the outside as a free American citizen!”

ASSORTMENT OF INFORMATION ABOUT PRISON –
THERE ARE 7 MILLION AMERICANS ADULTS IN THE AMERICAN PRISON SYSTEM!
That’s 7,000,000 people incarcerated in the American prison system!
“Prison environments are replete with aggressive behaviors, and people learn from watching others acting aggressively to get what they want,” Dvoskin
“The current design of prison systems don’t work,” said criminal justice expert Joel Dvoskin, PhD, of the University of Arizona. “Overly punitive approaches used on violent, angry criminals only provide a breeding ground for more anger and more violence.”
Applying behavior modification and social learning principles can work in corrections, he said. “For example, systematic reinforcement of pro-social behaviors is a powerful and effective way to change behavior, but it has never been used as a cornerstone of corrections,” he said.
Also, punishment can be effective in changing behavior, but it only works in the short term and immediately after the unwanted behavior happens, he said. While there is a place for punishment, it should be used in psychologically informed and effective ways. However, punishment should not be one-size-fits-all, Dvoskin said.
Decreasing prison populations needs to be more of a priority, Dvoskin said. “This can be done by paying more attention to those with the highest risk of violent behavior rather than focusing on lesser crimes, such as minor drug offenses.”
Rising prison population an undeclared national crisis
criminology and psychology has provided an in-depth explanation for the link between self-control and why people get into crime.
Deterrence is often a stated goal of criminal sentencing guidelines, but there is debate about whether the threat of punishment actually discourages people from committing crimes.
In light of the recent California prison riot that ravaged a prison and injured 175 inmates, when a fight broke out between Hispanic and Black gangs, at what point does prison reform become a priority in this country?
While government action is needed for true reform of the criminal justice system, psychologists have been and will continue to do the work that keeps incarceration rates from rising. For this reason, when the opportunity for deep-seated reform finally arrives, psychology’s voice will be critical to that process.
If a prison cap is set, it could lead to the early release of tons of thousands of prisoners in California, because there are thousands too many in the system now. A lawyer for the plaintiffs suggested that if 8,000 prisoners were set for early release, within a short period of time, 6,000 new prisoners could take their place because of the State’s inadequate medical system and non-existent rehabilitation.
It is even worse throughout the rest of California’s 32 other prisons, which make up the second-largest system in the nation after the federal Bureau of Prisons. Despite a vow from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) to cut the prison population, it has surged in recent months to more than 173,000, the worst overcrowding in the country, costing taxpayers more than $ 8 billion a year. More of those inmates return to prison because the state has the nation’s highest recidivism rate.
Mental illness also plagues prisons. A 1997 Justice Dept. study found that about 16% of the prison population suffers from mental illness. And although all jails and prisons are required by law to have personnel trained to treat such problems, adequate care for the mentally ill seems to be almost non-existent. Many critics also accuse prison psychiatrists of failing to recognize mental illness, especially in minorities. Statistics seem to confirm such accusations, as 23% of white state prisoners are deemed mentally ill as compared to 14% of blacks. Regardless of racial disparity, however, it seems that most mentally ill prisoners fail to receive the professional treatment they require.
America’s prison system is failing. Inhumane labor practices, pathetic health care, and discriminatory disenfranchisement are taking their toll on our prisons and, perhaps more importantly, our society as a whole. Our ‘war on crime’ is slowly becoming a corporate takeover of the lower classes of American society, and we’re all sharing the costs. America has once again emerged as a world leader, but this time, it’s for our outrageous human rights violations under the pretense of “law and order.” As many critics have pointed out, a new

Best answer:

Answer by “Moments of a Demigod”
It makes sense and you did throw out some good ideas. Most of the people in the prison system are in need of therapy for mental illnesses and anger issues. These people do need to be taught self control and how to be productive citizens, but they have bigger problems that need to be dealt with. They need to quit grouping people in for drug charges with murders and they need to prevention programs to keep people out of prison in the first place. Unfortunately if you go to prison you shouldn’t have the same rights as everyone else. It is an incentive not to be sent there to begin with.

The Narconon Lesson: It's Never Too Late
Although Hubbard had earlier founded the controversial Church of Scientology, Narconon insists that it is an independent, secular program which “provides legitimate drug education and rehabilitation,” even though Scientology donations have and continue …
Read more on City Watch

Chiara de Blasio tells all. Should your teen?
But on Christmas Eve, the 19-year-old did something else: She bared her soul on YouTube about her history of depression and substance abuse. …. "My guess is that being of service to others in need is a critical part of her healing and recovery," he said.
Read more on Arizona Daily Sun

Challenges to Ohio lethal injection drugs not new
Ohio's Department of Rehabilitation and Correction plans to use a dose of midazolam, a sedative, combined with hydromorphone, a painkiller, to put McGuire to death. The combination of drugs Ohio intends to use has never been used in a U.S. execution.
Read more on Arizona Daily Sun