Mental Health Stereotypes

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Per the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, mental health includes our emotional, psychological, and social well-being. For people who do not work with mental illness, I think that they think of people who should be locked up in a mental hospital in a padded room in a strait jacket. Not everyone knows what mental illness is because mental illness has been kept hush hush for so many years. Some families that have mentally ill children think that they need to keep everything that happens with that child secret. But that isn’t the case much anymore. Mental hospitals don’t look like they did many years ago. I work in a CBRF with mentally ill adults, and I have been to the mental health in – patient unit of the Mayo Clinic hospital down …show more content…

I have seen how some people react when one resident has cuts all up and down her arm. People very much judge. My view has always been the same. The mentally ill need to be given the same opportunities as everyone else. It is just like the aging population needs to be given the same chance at quality care too. These people are just like everyone else. Aging is not a simple, straightforward progression through time (Whitbourne, 2). I agree with you. Mental health stereotypes are very real, and many people cannot move past them. Many people think that because it is a stereotype, it must be real. Mental health is not a joke, and sometimes I feel like most people look at mental health that way. Millions of Americans live with various types of mental illness and mental health problems, such as social anxiety, obsessive compulsive disorder, drug addiction, and personality disorders. (Mental health center, 2005) Mental illness is not what it used to be, but many people are stuck in the …show more content…

It is sad that most people think it is for attention but most of the time it is not for attention. I used to work with this one resident who was bipolar. This resident liked chaos in their life. If things were going too well, the client would self - sabotage. The self - sabotaging was not for attention; it was so the client/resident felt like they had control of their life again. Behavior is said to be self-sabotaging when it creates problems and interferes with long-standing goals. (F,

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