Mental Illness Essay

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    Mental illnesses affect one in five adults per year. Many of those who are affected may be aware of their illness or illnesses and have sought treatment for them. However, others may not be aware of their altered mental state which means that they are left untreated. This is evident in Macbeth’s case. He presented signs of a mental illness, such as avoidance, being easily startled, hallucinating, and having aggressive outbursts, but was not diagnosed which led to no treatment of the problem. Although

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    needs of all people with mental illness cannot be met. In an ideal world, everyone would have access to affordable mental health care with plenty of high quality treatment options. However, given the basic economic problem of resource scarcity, this is simply not possible, and the quantity/quality of mental health services must be forgone as a result. If the population of people who require services is split into those with severe mental illness and those mild mental illness, which population of people

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    In 2014, suicide rates rose to 42,773 in the US alone, nearly a 50% increase since 1999. Since then, the numbers have continued rising, even with the greater awareness brought to mental illness through social media. One contributing factor to this pandemic is the inaccurate portrayals of depression and anxiety disorders within modern media. The trend of romanticizing suicide and tragedy is traced back to as far as Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, where two star-crossed lovers chose to die over living

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    According to What Is Mental Illness, Mental illness is defined as a health condition that involves changes in thinking, emotion, or behavior (Parekh America Psychiatric Association). Mental illness can be caused by genetic, psychological, or environmental factors. As stated in NAMI: National Alliance on Mental Illness, “Approximately 1 in 5 adults in the U.S.—43.8 million, or 18.5%—experiences mental illness in a given year. Approximately 1 in 25 adults in the U.S.—9.8 million, or 4.0%—experiences

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    This week is Mental Illness Awareness Week and this year's theme is stigma. The Stigma-Free initiative encourages us to educate others about mental illness, to see the person and not the diagnosis, and to take action on mental health. Despite all the initiatives to reduce stigma, it continues to discourage and shame many from getting help. October also happens to be ADHD Awareness Month. Although plenty of adults struggle with symptoms of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), which has

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    I have read an article called "Mental Illness: The New Cancer." this articles the writer told us three sad stories about how Mental Illness has killed people he loved. First is about his brother: His brother studied music. Creative and ambitious, he dreamed of becoming a professional musician, but he became a homeless person instead. He struggles to separate what is real from what is not real. Second is his girlfriend. She was a psychology student; innocence, enthusiasm for life. Now, she is delusional

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    term mental illness refers to a range of condition and disorders that affect your emotions, thinking, and behaviors. Mental illnesses are commonly seen worldwide and affect many people. Statistics say that “nearly one in five (19 percent) U.S. adults experience some form of mental illness”(Psychiatry.org). There are many theories as to what causes these types of illnesses all of which mainly involve heredity, trauma, environmental stressors, and biology. Although our knowledge on mental illness has

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    Prisoners have a higher rate of mental illness than the community. Two point six percent to five point four percent of the adult population has a major mental illness. Sixteen percent of the incarcerated population has a mental illness and twenty-three point six of women in state prisons has a mental illness. The most common illnesses that women prisoners deal with are depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, substance abuse, personality disorders, and thought disorders. Women inmates used the

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    Since the earlier time periods, mental illnesses were viewed as being “religious punishment or demonic possession”. Mental illness was seen to be a religious or personal problem in Egyptian, Indian, Greek, and Roman societies. “In the ancient world cultures, a well-known belief was that mental illness was ‘the result of supernatural phenomena’” (History Cooperative). To be mentally ill was uncommon, and with lack of knowledge of the mental effects it played, treatments were not well thought out.

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    Conversations regarding mental health can often be a difficult topic to discuss openly. The Huffington Post provided readers with the opportunity to understand mental illness and intersectionality in the article, 4 Black Women Writers Get Honest About Mental Illness and Race. This article provides a different perspective on mental health as it looks at mental illness through the intersectionality of race and gender. In the article, four black women participate in an interview to discuss their experience

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