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Title Decriminalizing mental illness / edited by Katherine Warburton, Stephen M. Stahl
Published Cambridge ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2021
©2021

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Description 1 online resource
Contents Introduction/description of the problem -- Solutions -- Psychopharmacological treatment considerations -- Nonpsychopharmacological treatment considerations -- Criminal justice and social considerations
Balancing the pendulum: rethinking the role of institutionalization in the treatment of serious mental illness / Katherine Warburton and Stephen M. Stahl -- Deinstitutionalization and other factors in the criminalization of persons with serious mental illness and how it is being addressed / H. Richard Lamb and Linda E. Weinberger -- A brief history of the criminalization of mental illness / Joel A. Dvoskin, James L. Knoll, and Mollie Silva -- A social history of psychotic illness / Brendan Daugherty, Katherine Warburton, and Stephen M. Stahl -- Forensic patients in state psychiatric hospitals: 1999-2016 / Amanda Wik, Vera Hollen, and William H. Fisher -- A survey of national trends in psychiatric patients found incompetent to stand trial: reasons for the reinstitutionalization of people with serious mental illness in the United States / Katherine Warburton, Barbara E. McDermott, Anthony Gale, and Stephen M. Stahl -- Forensic psychiatry and mental health in Australia: an overview / Andrew Ellis -- Community forensic psychiatric services in England and Wales / Richard Latham and Hannah Kate Williams -- A longitudinal description of incompetent to stand trial admissions to a state hospital / Barbara E. McDermott, Katherine Warburton, and Chloe Auletta-Young -- Jail diversion: the Miami model / Steven Leifman and Tim Coffey -- Jail diversion: a practical primer / Charles L. Scott -- Principles and practices of risk assessment in mental health jail diversion programs / Sarah L. Desmarais and Evan M. Lowder -- Decriminalization in action: lessons from the Los Angeles model / Kristen Ochoa, Oona Appel, Viet Nguyen, and Elizabeth Kim -- Economics of decriminalizing mental illness: when doing the right thing costs less / Darci Delgado, Ashley M. Breth, Shelley Hill, Katherine Warburton, and Stephen M. Stahl -- Decriminalizing severe mental illness by reducing risk of contact with the criminal justice system, including for forensic patients / Kimberlie Dean, Sara Singh, and Yin-Lan Soon -- The Cal-DSH diversion guidelines / Michael A. Cummings (editor), Charles Scott, Juan Carlos Arguello, Ai-Li W. Arias, Ashley M. Breth, Darci Delgado, Philip D. Harvey, Jonathan M. Meyer, Jennifer O'Day, Megan Pollock, George J. Proctor, Tiffany Rector, Benjamin Rose, Eric Schwartz, Helga Thordarson, Katherine Warburton, and Stephen M. Stahl (academic advisor) -- Decriminalizing mental illness: specialized policing responses / Charles Dempsey, Cameron Quanbeck, Clarissa Bush, and Kelly Kruger -- Dopamine antagonist antipsychotics in diverted forensic populations / Michael A. Cummings, George J. Proctor, and Ai-Li W. Arias -- Monitoring and improving antipsychotic adherence in outpatient forensic diversion programs / Jonathan M. Meyer -- Pharmacological treatment of violence in schizophrenia / Martin T. Strassnig, Vanessa Nascimento, Elizabeth Deckler, and Philip D. Harvey -- Neurocognition and social cognition training as treatments for violence and aggression in people with severe mental illness / Mackenzie T. Jones and Philip D. Harvey -- Examining violence among not guilty by reason of insanity state hospital inpatients across multiple time points: the roles of criminogenic risk factors and psychiatric symptoms / Darci Delgado, Sean M. Mitchell, Robert D. Morgan, and Faith Scanlon -- Criminogenic risk and mental health: a complicated relationship / Robert D. Morgan, Faith Scanlon, and Stephanie A. Van Horn -- Implementation of a specialized treatment program to reduce violence in a forensic population / Susan Velasquez, Andrea Bauchowitz, David Pyo, and Megan Pollock -- From trauma-blind to trauma-informed: rethinking criminalization and the role of trauma in persons with serious mental illness / Helga Thordarson and Tiffany Rector -- The indistinguishables: determining appropriate environments for justice-involved individuals / Sean E. Evans and Shannon M. Bader -- Breaking down long-term chronic aggression within a forensic hospital system / Benjamin Rose, Charles Broderick, Darci Delgado, Rebecca Kornbluh, and Stephen M. Stahl -- Tipping the scales of justice: the role of forensic evaluations in the criminalization of mental illness / Katherine E. McCallum and W. Neil Gowensmith -- Competence to stand trial and criminalization: an overview of the research / Amanda Beltrani and Patricia A. Zapf -- Risk factors for recidivism in individuals receiving community sentences: a systematic review and meta-analysis / Denis Yukhnenko, Nigel Blackwood, and Seena Fazel -- Developing policies for adult sexual minorities with mental health needs in secured settings / Juan Carlos Arguello -- An overview of jail-based competency restoration / Scott E. Kirkorsky, Mary Gable, and Katherine Warburton -- Fixated threat assessment centres: preventing harm and facilitating care in public figure threat cases and those thought to be at risk of lone-actor grievance-fuelled violence / Justin Barry-Walsh, David V. James, and Paul E. Mullen -- Decriminalizing LGBTQ+: reproducing and resisting mental health inequities / Tyler M. Argüello -- Building a therapeutic relationship between probation officers and probationers with serious mental illnesses / Matthew W. Epperson, Leon Sawh, and Sophia P. Sarantakos -- Length of stay for inpatient incompetent to stand trial (IST) patients: importance of clinical and demographic variables / Charles Broderick, Allen Azizian, and Katherine Warburton -- Severe mentally ill patients: our global migrants. neuroethical issues in psychiatry and pharmacology today. a brief manifesto toward the world symposium 2021 / Alberto Carrara
Summary "The history of serious mental illness (SMI) is grim, from a cultural as well as a treatment perspective. The conditions of individuals with psychotic disorders have swung, like a pendulum, from institutional neglect to community neglect and back again over the past several hundred years. At the core of treatment failure is a failure in mental health policy and funding, with the result usually framed as the degree of human institutionalization in jails, prisons and asylums. In the middle of the 19th century, institutions designed to deliver moral treatment were considered the humane answer to care properly for the SMI population. By the mid- 20th century, those same, now overcrowded, institutions were blamed for the horrible conditions of mistreatment of individuals with SMI. Now, as we approach the middle of the 21st century, deinstitutionalization (the answer to the cruel asylums) is purportedly at fault for homelessness, lack of treatment, and criminalization. As the pendulum swings, we are hearing cries to "bring back" the asylums"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on print version record and CIP data provided by publisher; resource not viewed
Subject Forensic psychiatry -- Methods
Mentally ill -- Commitment and detention.
Criminal law -- Methods
Psychoses -- Treatment
Insanity defense.
Forensic Psychiatry -- methods
Commitment of Mentally Ill -- legislation & jurisprudence
Criminal Law -- methods
Institutionalization
Psychotic Disorders -- therapy
Insanity Defense
Commitment of Mentally Ill
Insanity defense
Mentally ill -- Commitment and detention
Psychoses -- Treatment
Form Electronic book
Author Warburton, Katherine D., editor.
Stahl, Stephen M., 1951- editor.
LC no. 2020031749
ISBN 9781108920698
1108920691