|
|||||
Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
Lecture
37
INTRODUCTION
AND HISTORY OF COMMUNITY
PSYCHOLOGY
At
least since the appearance
of psychoanalysis, the helping
professions have sought to
alleviate problems
by
one form of therapy or another. Some
approaches have emphasized
insight; others have sought
to change
behavior
more directly. Whatever the
differences in approaches, their
basic common focus has
been on the
individual
who has already developed psychological
problems. By and large, clinical
psychology has been a
psychology
of the individual.
At
the theoretical level, therapists
have long accepted the idea
that all behavior (pathological or
otherwise)
is
a joint product of situational and
personal factors. Yet in
their day-to-day therapeutic efforts,
the
emphasis
of clinicians was generally on one-to-one
therapy of some sort. The
troubled individual
engaged
the
help of an expert, and by this act he or
she submitted to the role of patient.
The clinician treated;
the
patient
responded. However, given
the rate of mental health problems in
the world today, some
have
questioned
whether this general approach is a
reasonable one. For them, a
relatively newer
approach,
community
psychology,
shows
great promise for addressing
mental health problems.
PRINCIPLES
OF COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY
What
"causes" problems?
Problems
develop due to an interaction
over time between the
individual, social setting, and
systems (e.g.,
organizations);
these exert a mutual influence on
each other.
How
are problems
defined?
Problems
can be defined at many levels, but
particular emphasis is placed on
analysis at the level of
the
organization
and the community or
neighborhood.
Where
is community psychology
practiced?
Community
psychology is typically not
practiced in clinics, but rather
out in the field or in the
social
context
of interest.
How
are services
planned?
Rather
than providing services only
for those who seek
help, community psychologists
proactively assess
the
needs and risks in a
community.
What
is the emphasis in community
psychology interventions?
An
emphasis is placed on prevention of
problems rather than
treatment of existing
problems.
Who
is qualified to intervene?
Attempts
are made to share psychology
with others via consultation;
actual interventions are
often carried
out
through self-help programs or
through trained non-psychologists/
HISTORY
Let
us begin by trying to identify
exactly that community psychology is.
Then we can move to those
events
that
gave rise to the movement.
Given above are the
set of principles that characterize
community
psychology,
including assumptions regarding the
causes of problems, the
variety of levels of analysis that
can
be used to define a problem, where
community psychology is practiced,
how services are planned,
the
269
Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
emphasis
on prevention, and the
willingness to "give psychology
away" by consulting with self
help
programs
and non
psychologists.
THE
COMMUNITY PSYCHOLOGY
PERSPECTIVE
Community
psychology has been
described as an approach to mental health that
emphasizes the role
of
environmental
forces in creating and alleviating
problems (Zax & Specter, 1974).
Rappaport (1977) finds
it
more
useful to talk about community psychology
in terms of a perspective than to
attempt a formal
definition.
The major aspects of this
perspective are cultural
relativity, diversity, and
ecology (the fit
between
persons and the
environment).
This
perspective implies several
things.
First,
community psychologists should not be
concerned exclusively with
inadequate environments or
persons.
Rather, they should direct their attention to
the fit between environments
and persons-a fit that
may
or
may not be good.
Second,
community psychologists should emphasize
the creation of alternatives through
identifying and
developing
the resources and strengths
of people and communities. Thus,
the focus is on action directed
toward
the competencies of persons
and environments rather than their
deficits.
Third,
the community psychologist is likely to
believe that differences among people
and communities are
desirable.
Societal resources, therefore, should not be allocated
according to one standard of
competence.
The
community psychologist does not
become identified with a single
social norm or value, but
instead
looks
to the promotion of diversity.
In
Rappaport's (1977) view,
three sets of concerns
define the community
psychology perspective:
human
resource
development, political activity, and
science. In many ways, these
are antagonistic elements.
Political
activists are often impatient
and deride more traditional
clinicians as bringing society
too little too
late.
Clinicians, in turn, often
criticize activists as unprofessional and
overly concerned with
hawking their
own
visions of the world. Both
groups often regard
scientists as too far
removed from real problems
to
know
what is going on in the
world (the "ivory tower"
syndrome).
The
scientists, in turn are appalled by
activists and clinicians alike;
both are seen as shockingly
willing to
act
on the basis of invalidated
hunches and lack of data
or, worst of all, without a
viable theory to
guide
them.
However, true societal changes
vis-a-vis mental health will require the
cooperation of each of these
"camps."
For example, scientists must
provide data to support and
direct the efforts of clinicians
and
political
activists, and political activists
must assist with funding
for scientists so that they
can conduct the
research
that is needed. After all,
each camp has the common
goal of improved well-being
and mental
health
for individuals, communities,
and the larger society.
Whatever
else community psychology may be, it is
not a field that emphasizes an
individual disease or
individual
treatment model (Iscoe, 1982). The
focus is preventive rather than curative.
Further, individuals
and
community organizations are encouraged to
take control of and master
their own problems
(via
empowerment)
so that traditional professional intervention
will not be necessary
(Orford, 1992).
CHRONOLOGY
AND CATALYZING EVENTS
In
1955, the U.S. Congress
passed legislation creating the
joint Commission on Mental
Health and Illness.
Its
report encouraged the development of a
community mental health concept and
urged a reduction in the
population
of mental hospitals.' Based on the
premise that psychological distress and
the development of
mental
disorders were influenced by
adverse environmental conditions,
President Kennedy called for
a
"bold
new approach" to prevent
mental
disorder. The so-called Kennedy
Bill of 1963 funded
the
construction
of mental health centers. Their aims
were to promote the early detection of
mental health
problems,
treat acute disorders, and
establish comprehensive delivery
systems of services that
would
prevent
the "warehousing" of chronic patients in
mental hospitals (Bloom,
1973).
270
Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
The
American Psychological Association endorsed
the desirability of community
residents' participating in
all
these decisions (Smith & Hobbs,
1966) and helped focus attention on
the concept of
community
approaches
and participation. A conference
held in 1965 is regarded by many as the
"official" birth of
community
psychology (Zax & Specter, 1974). At
Swampscott, Massachusetts, a group of
psychologists set
out
to review the status of the
field and to plot a future
course of development for the
place of psychology in
the
community mental health movement.
Shortly
after this conference, the Division of
Community Psychology was organized within
the American
Psychological
Association. Soon The
Community Mental Health Journal
and
the American
Journal of
Community
Psychology began
publication. Textbooks began to
appear, including books by
Zax and
Specter
(1974), Heller and Monahan
(1977), Rappaport (1977),
Mann (1978), Heller, Price,
Reinharz,
Riger,
and Wandersman (1984), and
more recently, Orford
(1992), Duffy and Wong
(1996), and Levine
and
Perkins (1997). Reviews
began to appear regularly in
the Annual Review
of Psychology, and
handbooks
have
been published. Courses in community
psychology and programs of
graduate training have
been
established,
and there are even
books now on the history of
community mental health.
To
flesh out the foregoing
chronology, it will be helpful to
pinpoint several issues or
concerns that have
catalyzed
the emergence of community
psychology.
TREATMENT
FACILITIES:
Although
the mental hospital population in the
United States peaked at about 500,000 in
the mid-1950s,
socially
oriented clinicians continued to press
for alternatives to the costly,
inefficient, and often
largely
custodial
hospitalization of patients. Three
factors combined at about this time to
markedly reduce the
population
of mental hospitals: the advent of psychotropic
medications, a more liberal
discharge
philosophy,
and better treatment in mental
hospitals. But as more
patients were being
discharged, often
under
heavy medication, and as patients
who formerly would have
been hospitalized were no
longer
admitted,
the need for better
community treatment and supportive
services became evident. In
some ways a
cause
but in other ways and effect of
these events, the community
philosophy was beginning to
gain a
foothold.
A
problem with many mental hospitals
was their lack of trained
therapists. Regarded by laypersons as
a
realistic
means for solving difficult
emotional problems, hospitalization
itself often created nearly
as many
problems
as it alleviated. Over the
years, mental hospitals (particularly
those run by the states)
too often
became
warehouses or custodial bins. Care was
often marginal and sometimes
downright inhumane. Pro-
fessional
staff was severely lacking in
numbers and sometimes in
quality. Indeed, many still
argue (and
have
demonstrated empirically) that
hospitalization is not an especially
effective treatment strategy.
PERSONNEL
SHORTAGE:
Even
as more clinical psychologists
and psychiatrists were
trained; demands for their
services outstripped
their
increase in numbers. Many of
the newcomers were entering
private practice, and others
were being
diverted
into teaching or research. In
any event, the supply of trained
professionals for service in
hospitals
and
clinics was hardly keeping
pace with the demand. A
number of trends (Albee, 1959,
1968; Arnhoff,
1968)
all seemed to coalesce to
produce critical shortages of hospital
and clinic personnel. To grapple
with
these
shortages, it became imperative that new
sources of personnel be sought, that
more effective use be
made
of professional time, and that new models
of coping with human
problems be developed. Albee
(1959,
1968) predicted that it would be
literally impossible to train enough
mental health professionals to
meet
existing and future needs,
and recommended that prevention be
pursued as a strategy.
QUESTIONS
AROUND PSYCHOTHERAPY:
In
the 1950s, people began to
question not just the
efficiency of psychotherapy but
also its effectiveness.
Some
began to wonder if it was not just
intra psychic factors that
created problems, but the
interaction
between
person and society. At the
same time, because
psychotherapy was expensive
and more and
more
clinicians
and psychiatrists were going
into private practice,
economic factors were pushing therapy
beyond
the
reach of the poor and
disadvantaged. The relationship
between mental illness and social
class had been
documented
by Hollingshead and Redlich
(1958). Now, it seemed,
there was also a
relationship between
social
class and the availability
of psychotherapy.
271
Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
ROLE
OF THE MEDICAL
MODEL:
We
know the widespread role of
the medical model and some of the
discontent with it. The
1960s ushered
in
a climate in which institutional prerogatives
and traditionalist beliefs
came under attack. That
climate
produced
listeners who were more
willing to accept attacks on
traditional views about mental illness. All
of
this
contributed to an increased tendency to
look for the social-community
antecedents of problems in
lining,
rather than internal biological or
psychological etiological agents.
The
general activism of the 1960s
also catalyzed the long-standing
discontent of many clinicians with a
role
that
relegated them to waiting passively
for society's casualties to
walk in the door. Would
not an activist
role
that took mental health services to the
people be more consonant with a
social-community model? If
so,
such a role would also
provide a measure of autonomy from
the dominance of the medical
profession.
We
must not overstate these
developments, however. After
all a major current trend in
clinical psychology
has
been a headlong rush into
private practice. Such
behavior is hardly a rejection of the
medical model or
an
acceptance of the social-community
approach.
THE
ENVIRONMENT:
Another
force that helped shape the community
psychology movement was a greater
awareness of the
importance
of social and environmental
factors in determining people's
behavior and problems.
Poverty,
discrimination,
pollution, and crowding were
being recognized as potent factors.
Providing people with
choices
and enhancing their
well-being required that psychologists
pay attention to these
factors that they
go
beyond a reflexive consideration of the
early childhood determinants of
people's personalities.
The
emotional problems of large numbers of
people may be influenced by poverty, unemployment,
job dis-
crimination,
racism, diminished educational opportunities,
sexism, and other social
factors. Such influences
are
hardly the ones proposed by
psychoanalytic and other theories that
seek answers in internal
dynamics.
To
this point, we have tried to
sketch an overall perspective
and chronology of community
psychology. In
the
process, we have alluded to
several important concepts.
Now we will take a closer
look at some of these
concepts.
THE
CONCEPT OF COMMUNITY MENTAL
HEALTH
The
1955 Joint Commission on Mental
Health and Illness made
several basic recommendations that
set the
tone
for the subsequent development of
community psychology-a tone that still
resonates in accord
with
political
and financial pressures
across the nation. These
recommendations were
(1)
More and better research
into mental health phenomena;
(2)
A broadened definition of who
may provide mental health
services;
(3)
That mental health services should be
made available in the
community;
(4)
That an awareness should be fostered that
mental illness can stem from
social factors (such as
ostracism
and
isolation); and
(5)
That the federal government should
support these recommendations
financially.
In
1963, federal funds were provided to help
in the construction and staffing of
comprehensive mental
health
centers across the United
States. To qualify for these
funds, a
community
mental health center had
to
provide five essential
services:
(1)
Inpatient care;
(2)
Outpatient care;
(3)
Partial hospitalization (for example,
the patient works during
the day but returns to
the hospital at night);
(4)
Round-the-clock emergency service;
and
(5)
Consultation services to a variety of professional,
educational, and service personnel in
the community.
Beyond
these required services, it was
hoped that the mental health centers
would also provide
(1)
Diagnostic services,
(2)
Rehabilitation services,
(3)
Research,
272
Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
(4)
Training, and
(5)
Evaluation.
THE
CONCEPT OF PREVENTION
The
idea of prevention
is
the guiding principle that
has long been at the
heart of public health programs
in
this
country. Basically, the
principle asserts that, in the
long run, preventive
activities will be more
efficient
and
effective than individual treatment
administered after the onset of
diseases or problems (Felner,
Jason,
Moritsugu,
& Farber, 1983). That such
approaches can work is
graphically illustrated by Price,
Cowen,
Lorion,
and Ramos-McKay (1988).
Their book, Fourteen
Ounces
of
Prevention, describes
14 model
prevention
programs for children,
adolescents, or adults. Prevention
programs for adults have
been de-
veloped
and implemented as well.
Primary
Prevention:
This
type of prevention represents
the most radical departure
from the traditional
ways
of
coping with
mental
health problems. The essence of
the notion-of primary
prevention can be seen in
Caplan's (1964)
emphasis
on "counteracting harmful circumstances before
they have had a chance to
produce illness".
Albee
(1986) points out, however, that
the complexity of human
problems often requires
preventive
strategies
that depend on social change
and redistribution of power.
For many in society, this is not a
highly
palatable
prospect. Some examples of
primary prevention include
programs to reduce job
discrimination,
enhance
school curricula, improve housing, teach
parenting skills, and provide
help to children from
single-
parent
homes. Also grouped under this heading
are genetic counseling, Head Start,
prenatal care for
disadvantaged
women, Meals on Wheels, and
school lunch
programs.
Secondary
Prevention:
This
involves programs that promote the
early identification of mental health
problems and prompt
treatment
of problems at an early stage so that
mental disorders do not develop. The
basic idea of secondary
prevention
is
to attack problems while
they are still manageable,
before they become resistant
to
intervention.
Often this approach suggests
the screening of large numbers of people.
These people are not
seeking
help, and they may not
even appear to be at risk.
Such screening may be carried
out by a variety of
community
service personnel, including
physicians, teachers, clergy,
police, court officials, social
workers,
and
others. Early assessment is
followed, of course, by appropriate
referrals.
An
example of secondary prevention is the
early detection and treatment of
those individuals
with
potentially
damaging drinking problems (Alden, 1988).
A further example is the Rochester
Primary Mental
Health
Project pioneered by Emory Cowen, which
began in 1957. The project systematically
screens
primary-grade
children for risk of school
maladjustment. The development of early
detection and
prevention
programs in several states
has been described by Cowen,
Hightower, Johnson, Sarno,
and
Weissberg
(1989).
Tertiary
Prevention:
The
goal of tertiary
prevention is to reduce
the duration and the
negative effects of mental disorders
after
their
occurrence. Thus, tertiary
prevention differs from
primary and secondary
prevention in that its aim is
not
to reduce the rate of new
cases of mental disorder, but to lessen
the effects of mental disorder
once
diagnosed.
A
major focus of many tertiary
programs is rehabilitation. This
can range from increasing
vocational
competence
to enhancing the client's self-concept.
The methods used may be counseling,
job training, and
the
like. Whether the purpose of
a program is to teach better independent
living skills to those with
mental
retardation
or to restore the social
skills of recently discharged patient
with a diagnosis of schizophrenia,
the
goal
is the prevention of additional
problems. Although their
language is a bit different,
tertiary preventive
programs
are not very different
from person-oriented programs
based on a deficit philosophy.
However, it is
273
Clinical
Psychology (PSY401)
VU
important
to remember that all forms of
prevention are distinguished by their
attempts to reduce the rates
of,
or
problems associated with, mental disorder
on a community-wide (or population-wide)
basis.
274
Table of Contents:
|
|||||