Adult Mental Health
Adult Mental Health
Adult Mental Health
unemployment and poverty. In her opinion, government intervention should never substitute
social work action. Hill is outstanding in the history of social work since she rejected donations.
She believed in an intervention that could change the altitudes of poor people and this
contributed greatly in the development of social work (Rengasamy, n.d.).
Without any doubt, Mary Ellen Richmond also influenced the development of social
work. It is significant to note that the current social work need diagnosis and research before care
provision. However, it was Richmond who introduced the methodology and content of diagnosis
during early 1910. Richmond developed the principle that concentrates on the person within her
or his condition. According to Rengasamy (n.d.), her popular circle diagram envisioned the
communication of client and environment, whereby she explained treatment measures on the
basis of reducing the prevalence of disorder. Through her methodology to exploration, Richmond
gave social work clients a voice for the first moment. In this case, she unlocked a new and
productive area of social research which is up to now a foundation of social work (Murdach,
2011).
Consequently, the historical context of adult mental health focuses on the psychological
and behavioral features of individual people, rather than on conditions in society as whole. This
is because, most of the interventions and approaches were implemented with mental health
orientation towards tackling mental disorders. For history, therapists and social workers created
change by including their clients in order to limit and provide solutions for their mental illness.
Nonetheless, psychoanalysts and counselors had certain limitations that oversimplified their
process of tacking adult mental health. In other words, they based their interventions on simple
assumptions by framing problems in solvable forms (Dulmus and Sowers, 2012).
References
Dulmus, C. N., & Sowers, K. M. (Eds.). (2012). the profession of social work: Guided by
history, led by evidence. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
Grant, J. E., & Potenza, M. N. (2010). Young adult mental health. Oxford: Oxford University
Press.
Murdach, A. D. (2011). Mary Richmond and the image of social work. Social Work, 56(1), 92
94. Retrieved from the Walden Library databases.
Rengasamy, S. (n.d.). Understanding history through historical phases. In History of social
welfare/social
work (pp.
59). Retrieved
September
7,
2015,
from
http://www.scribd.com/doc/14826079/History-of-Social-Work
Zarit, S. H., & Zarit, J. M. (2006). Mental disorders in older adults: Fundamentals of assessment
and treatment. New York: Guilford.