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Not Found (#404) - StudentShare. https://studentshare.org/nursing/1794509-tidal-model-of-mental-health-recovery.
Discussion
Most professionals claim that they usually rely on the evidence so that they can address the needs of mentally ill people in an effective manner. However, stories are regarded as the most valuable way of gathering evidence from mentally ill people. For example, most medical professionals such as nurses or psychologists usually neglect stories and instead rely on what a person says or what they notice in order for them to make their own judgments. In this case, they normally rely on evidence from counting, ratings, and when they make observations from frame diagnostic abstractions (Barker & Buchanan, 2003). The concept of Mental Health Nursing has been popularized in the past 35 years. However, this concept is still regarded as a myth despite its wide popularity.
Studies reveal that Mental Health Nursing is a field that does not serve any significant purpose. This means that not all people embrace the concept in their daily undertakings (Barker & Buchanan-Barker, 2003). In this case, research reveals that the concept does not allow nurses, psychologists, and psychiatrists to address the needs of the ill people, their families, and their society. On the other hand, Phil reveals that the concept of mental nursing was established by physicians over a century ago to help them devise effective ways of supporting the people who suffered from asylums (2003). However, in the recent past, psychiatry has advanced thereby allowing the nursing practice to take a professional direction.
In the modern world, the role of the nurse is still regarded as the one that nurses used to practice over a century ago. In this case, the role of nurses was to keep people safe, manage the hospital’s social and physical environment, and to administer mental treatment to people. However, though this may seem like a harsh assessment, it is true that many services that are offered in medical institutions can survive even when some gaps prevail. However, if the services that nurses offer are eliminated, the services that are offered in medical institutions risk collapse. Today, most nurses are in possession of university degrees while others have completed supplementary training thereby qualifying them to offer different types of therapies or even to administer psychiatric drugs (Phil, 2011). In this perspective, therefore, it is evident that nurses may soon take up the roles that are associated with other disciplines such as psychology or medicine.
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