Title: PREVENTION IN MENTAL HEALTH
1- PREVENTION IN MENTAL HEALTH
2PRESENTER
- ROBERT K. CONYNE, Ph.D.
- PROFESSOR EMERITUS
- COUNSELING PSYCHOLOGIST
- UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
3LEARNING OBJECTIVES
- TO UNDERSTAND MENTAL HEALTH PREVENTION CONCEPTS
- TO DIFFERENTIATE KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS
- TO LEARN A MODEL FOR PREVENTION
4PERFORMANCE OBJECTIVES
- DESCRIBE KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS NEEDED
- KNOW WHAT TO INCLUDE IN PROGRAMS
- IDENTIFY EFEECTIVE PREVENTION PROGRAMS
5Epidemiology Mental Illness
- Adults (under 55)
- 20 of U.S. adults per year (44 million)
- Children/Adolescents
- 20 of 9-17 years old per year (U.S. Surgeon
General)
6SUBSTANCE ABUSE
- 1962 4 MILLION TRIED ILLEGAL DRUGS
- 1999 87.7 MILLION
- USERS OVER AGE 12
- -1979 25.4 MILLION
- -1992 12 MILLION
- -1999 14.8 MILLION
7LITERACY
- 20 MILLION ILLITERATE ADULTS (13)
- 20 MILLION MARGINALLY LITERATE
- -----------------------
- 4 MILLION OF THESE PEOPLE ARE REACHED
8COST OF MENTAL ILLNESS
- 1996
- -DIRECT COST 69 BILLION.
- -INDIRECT COST 78.6 BILLION
- (Surgeon General)
9ONE POPULATION AFRICAN AMERICANS
- POVERTY 1999, 22
- HOMELESS 40 OF HOMELESS POPULATION
- INCARCERATION HALF OF ALL STATE NATIONAL
PRISONERS
10AFRICAN-AMERICANS (CONTD)
- ACCESS 20 FEWER ARE COVERED BY EMPLOYER-BASED
HEALTH INS. - USE ONLY ONE-HALF THAT OF WHITES EMERGENCY USE
HIGH
11INCIDENCE
- TO REDUCE DEVELOPMENT OR RATE OF DEVELOPMENT OF
- NEW CASES OF A DISORDER OR PROBLEM
12TO REDUCE INCIDENCE
- DECREASE
- STRESS EXPLOITATION
- INCREASE
- COPING SKILLS SELF-ESTEEM
- SUPPORT
- (Albee, modified, 1982)
13PRIMARY PREVENTION
- Intentional intervention
- To reduce incidence of
- Adjustment problems in
- Currently normal populations, plus
- Promotion of mental health functioning (Durlak
Wells, 1997)
14DEGREE OF RISK (Institute of Medicine, 1994)
- Universal for all
- Selective Based on risk markers
- Indicated Based on specific risk
- indicators and showing early signs, but no
mental disorder -
-
-
15WHY PRIMARY PREVENTION?
- TOO MANY PROBLEMS/NOT ENOUGH HELPERS
- TOO MUCH AFTER-THE-FACT
- LIMITED REACH
- DE-CONTEXTUALIZED
- STRESSORS/STRENGTHS IGNORED
16PRIMARY PREVENTIVE COUNSELING (Conyne, 2004)
- APPLICATION OF BROAD RANGE OF COUNSELING
- HEALTHY AND/OR AT RISK TARGETS
- TO AVERT FUTURE PROBLEMS AND
- TO PROMOTE GROWTH
17PREVENTIVE COUNSELING PRECEPTS
- BEFORE-THE-FACT
- HEATHY PEOPLE/AT RISK
- DEVELOP COMPETENCE
- REDUCE INCIDENCE
- GROUP AND COMMUNITY FOCUSED
18PRECEPTS (Contd)
- ECOLOGICAL FOCUS
- CULTURALLY VALID
- SOCIAL JUSTICE VALUE
- COLLABORATIVE PROCESS
- EMPOWERING
19PREVENTION SKILL SETS
- Primary prevention perspective
- Personal attributes behaviors
- Ethical skills
- Marketing skills
- Multicultural skills
- Group facilitation skills
20PREVENTION SKILL SET (Contd)
-
- Collaboration skills
- Organizational setting dynamic skills
- Trends political dynamic skills
- Research evaluation skills
- (Conyne, 2004)
21PREVENTIVE COUNSELING MODEL (Conyne, 2004)
- PURPOSIVE STRATEGIES
- TARGETS
- METHODS
22PREVENTIVE COUNSELING MODEL (Contd)
- PURPOSIVE STRATEGIES
- SEEK SYSTEM CHANGE
- SEEK PERSON CHANGE
-
23MODEL (Contd)
- TARGET
- Individual
- Group
- Family
- Organization
- Community
24MODEL (Contd)
- METHODS
- DIRECT Education, Organization
- INDIRECT Consultation, Media
25EFFECTIVE PREVENTION PROGRAMS
- TARGETED
- LIFE TRAJECTORIES CHANGED
- NEW SKILLS EMERGED
26EFFECTIVE PREVENTION PROGRAMS (CONTD)
- SOCIAL SUPPORT DEVELOPED
- NATURAL SUPPORT SYSTEMS IMPROVED
- NEW CASES REDUCED
27 EFFECTIVENESS CRITERIA
- WHATS BEING PREVENTED?
- WHATS BEING PROMOTED?
- IS IT BEFORE-THE-FACT?
- DOES IT INVOLVE HEALTHY AND/OR AT RISK PERSONS?
- IS THERE SYSTEM CHANGE?
28CRITERIA (Contd)
- IS IT FEASIBLE?
- USE EXISTING RESOURCES?
- IS IT COLLABORATIVE?
- STRESSORS STRENGTHS?
- IS THE METHOD SPECIFIED?
- INTERVENOR ROLES?
- ARE THERE RESULTS?
29HAPPY PREVENTION!