This book examines how psychiatrists and mental health workers can facilitate the social inclusion of people with mental health disorders.
This book draws on the accounts of people who have faced the challenge of life with a mental health problem, in order to propose that the guiding principle of mental health practice should revolve around social inclusion and recovery.
This book offers a wide-reaching account of these aspects of social exclusion, of relevance to mental health practitioners and others who wish to understand health inequalities and the wider determinants of mental ill-health"--
Accessibly written, this text will be a valuable resource for courses on mental health, poverty, and social policy across the disciplines of social work, sociology, and health studies at both the graduate and undergraduate level.
Social Inclusion: Its Importance to Mental Health
This book analyses the causes of these barriers and suggests ways of dismantling them. The book is constructed in two parts: the first relates to social inclusion and the second to occupational inclusion.
Working for Inclusion: Making Social Inclusion a Reality for People with Severe Mental Health Problems
The study also builds on the work on social indicators that has already been undertaken by many people at local, national, regional and international levels.
This ambitious reference work focuses on social inclusion in health and social care and offers a good understanding of matters that include or exclude people in society.
This thought-provoking book offers many beneficial features for clinicians and public health professionals: Clinical vignettes are included, designed to make the content accessible to readers who are primarily clinicians and also to ...
Is this the whole story? Are those with severe and enduring mental health problems still living on the edges of society? This book illuminates the complicated reality of people living with mental health problems.