Clinical Perspective on Today’s Issues – Interim exam 1 (UNIVERSITY OF AMSTERDAM)
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In the Netherlands, the prescribed mental healthcare is captured in quality standards. These standards include recommendations or prescriptions regarding proper treatment. There are several aspects of care:
Each step requires different decisions regarding care. The quality standards can help with the decisions in the treatment and recovery phase. A quality standard outlines what quality care looks like for clinicians and patients for particular conditions. A quality standard is developed independently in a workgroup (e.g. patients, relatives, health professionals). This workgroup collects all information about the subject and based on this, they attempt to reach consensus.
There are three types of information that is used in the workgroup:
There is no hierarchy in this information when it comes to creating quality standards. These quality standards are important because:
Every professional in healthcare should work according to professional standards. However, these standards can be deviated from. The comply or explain principle states that it is acceptable to deviate from this standard when the patient and professional both agree on it and the professional can argue for the decision.
Good quality care at an acceptable cost refers to care that is provided in the right place (1), by the right person (2), efficiently (3) and in good coherence around the patient and his next of kin (4). This requires self-direction (1), self-management (2) and equality of contact (3).
Professional proximity refers to real contact and this is important. Furthermore, it is important to use appropriate diagnostic labels as people do not derive their identity from their complaints (e.g. do not use the term schizophrenics). A counsellor should thus focus on the person and not solely on the diagnostic label. Treatment and support must always be available to enable patients to organize their lives as much as possible as they see fit. This can create independence as soon as possible.
Recovery is not only about the symptoms. It is about the continuation of life after mental health problems or dealing with mental health problems. Recovery involves:
There are several important elements of recovery processes:
Recovery support has to fit within the personal process. This requires looking at the world of the patient (e.g. patient’s life story). This involves:
Experiential expertise refers to the ability to make room for others to recover on the basis of one’s own recovery experience (e.g. former drug addict helping struggling addicts). This can provide people with hope and can be crucial in recovery groups. Experts by experience should be made available and promoted in care.
There are several things a care-provider needs to do when switching to recovery support:
There are several things to do while deploying expertise:
A modern counsellor has several characteristics:
The counsellor can support recovery in several ways:
Eating disorders are psychiatric disorders characterized by disturbed eating behaviours and serious somatic consequences. They can occur at any age but anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa typically start in adolescence or early adulthood.
People with an eating disorder often seek help late because of stigmatization and insufficient awareness of the illness, implying the need for early detection.
For anorexia nervosa, it is necessary to have a specialist psychiatrist who focuses on cognitive changes (1), predisposition (2), trigger factors (3) and psychiatric comorbidity (4). For bulimia nervosa and binge eating disorder, it is necessary to explore periods of time with symptoms of another eating disorder. Specialist somatic diagnostics focuses on the differential diagnosis of malnutrition and the diagnosis of complications of eating disorders.
| AN | BN | BED | AFRID |
Characteristics | Low body weight and disturbed body image. | Regular binge eating and inadequate compensation behaviour. | Regular binge eating without inadequate compensation behaviour. | Insufficient intake of nutrients without a disturbed body image or fear of weight gain. |
Determination of severity | BMI in adults and otherwise BMI percentile (i.e. for children). | Frequency of inadequate compensation behaviour. | Frequency of binge eating. | There is no fixed measurement. |
Genesis and maintenance |
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The self-management theory presupposes the presence of insight, motivation and skills in the patient. However, awareness of the illness may be absent at diagnosis. This complicates the disorder and the consequences. First-step interventions focus on raising awareness between symptoms and complaints and to increase the understanding of the eating disorder. There are several treatments:
Long-term aftercare contacts in anorexia nervosa are necessary because recovery rates are low and relapse rates are high. For recovery, it is essential that the patient becomes active again which can be done through the formation of participation-goals.
This bundle contains all the information needed for the first interim exam for the course "Clinical Perspective on Today's Issues" given at the University of Amsterdam. It contains lecture information, information from the relevant books and all the articles. The following
...This bundle contains all the information needed for the for the course "Clinical Perspective on Today's Issues" given at the University of Amsterdam. It contains lecture information, information from the relevant books and all the articles. The following is included:
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