Empowerment.
by Edwards, Douglas J.
Mental healthcare consumers have become a strong constituency,
advocating for their rights and prompting changes in behavioral
healthcare services. But this wasn't always the case. When mental
healthcare was delivered mostly in institutions, patients with severe
mental illnesses had virtually no hope for productive lives in the
community. They were not empowered to make their own care decisions and
were subject to questionable "treatments." Some people
admitted to psychiatric hospitals were never allowed to leave, even in
death. Tens of thousands died while patients at state hospitals and were
buried on the grounds.
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Today empowered mental healthcare consumers are remembering those
that came before them by restoring these patient cemeteries, many of
which have been abandoned, forgotten, and not properly maintained.
Consumers also are playing an important role in building a national
memorial to honor the patients buried at psychiatric hospitals across
the nation, as Larry Fricks explains on page 12.
And who would have thought 50 years ago that mental healthcare
consumers would become important players on the national scene. But
that's now the case, with NAMI and Mental Health America serving as
powerful lobbying groups on Capitol Hill. Consumers are even trying to
attract the attention of presidential candidates; the National Coalition
of Mental Health Consumer/Survivor Organizations is a cosponsor of a
presidential debate scheduled to be in New Hampshire next month.
Yet as odd as it sounds, one area in which consumers need to make
more progress is the behavioral healthcare workforce. Drs. Lori Ashcraft
and William Anthony explain on page 10 why they believe many behavioral
healthcare professionals hide their own mental illnesses from coworkers.
They are not talking about mental health consumers who join the
behavioral healthcare workforce to share their experiences with fellow
consumers (i.e., "peers"). Instead, Lori and Bill are talking
about employees "on the other side of the desk," who they
argue face stigma and shame even in behavioral healthcare environments.
I urge you to read their article and let us know how you think this
situation can be changed.
Douglas J. Edwards
Editor-in-Chief
dedwards@vendomegrp.com
COPYRIGHT 2007 Vendome Group
LLC Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
Copyright 2007, Gale Group. All rights
reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.
NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.