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Background on mental illness
Homelessness
Resources for consumers and survivors
Family Resources
Policy and legal issues
Stigma and media
Education




National Institute for Mental Health (NIMH)
Defining mental illness is part of what the National Institute for Mental Health does. The NIMH, an arm of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, describes symptoms, diagnoses and treatments of mental illnesses. It also provides statistics and research papers on mental health issues.

Center for Mental Health Services' Knowledge Exchange Network (KEN)
The Center offers a variety of information about mental health in English and in Spanish. Order free publications, search KEN's referral database, read mental health news and explore links on a variety of mental health-related topics.

Surgeon General's Office
Read the Surgeon General's extensive report summarizing the nation's mental health problem.

World Health Organization
For a global perspective, read the World Health Organization's 2001 annual report, which is devoted to mental health and the widening "treatment gap" around the world. The report cites that more than 40 percent of countries have no mental health policy and 90 percent have no policy that includes children and adolescents.

National Public Radio: Simulations of Mental Illness
This feature story (August 29, 2002) looks at a virtual reality program that allows participants to see and hear the world through the eyes and ears of a person with schizophrenic illness. You can download a multimedia slide show of highlights of a schizophrenic episode.

National Public Radio: The Infinite Mind
This weekly show focuses on the art and science of the human mind, spirit, behavior and mental health. You can access an archive of past episodes that cover themes including mental illness in the family, men and depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and memories of war, teen suicide, and schizophrenia. The program is hosted by former NIMH Director Dr. Fred Goodwin.

PBS: A Brilliant Madness
PBS's American Experience features John Nash, a Nobel Prize-winning mathematician who struggled with mental illness, and the Web site provides a forum for questions and answers on illness and recovery with mental health experts, as well as a history of mental health treatment dating back to 400 b.c.

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Homelessness

More than half of homeless adults have a mental illness, and it's estimated that in California alone there are 50,000 mentally ill people sleeping on the street each night. Many regard homelessness as a consequence of the de-institutionalization of psychiatric hospitals and of a shortage of community-based care.

National Resource Center on Homelessness and Mental Illness
The Center provides fact sheets and publications on homelessness and mental illness.

National Health Care for the Homeless Council: Healing Hands
Download a report published by the Council subtitled "Mental Illness, Chronic Homelessness: An American Disgrace," on the causes and consequences of homelessness and the mentally ill.

Los Angeles Coalition to End Hunger and Homelessness
The coalition's Mental Health Policy Project is working to replicate a Safe Haven facility that provides housing and services to homeless mentally ill people in west Los Angeles and is developing a how-to manual and Web site for other communities to follow.

Coalition on Homelessness in San Francisco
You can find information on San Francisco's mental health system, as well as facts on homeless deaths and substance abuse on the city's streets. Read about the coalition's substance abuse and mental health work and about the group's lobbying efforts for mental health reform.

PATH
The national grant program, Projects Assistance in Transition From Homelessness, funds community-based outreach, mental health, substance abuse, case management and other support services, as well as some housing services. Search the online database for state by state contact information and a list of PATH providers in your county.

PACT
This is an overview of the Program for Assertive Community Treatment, a service-delivery model that many mental health and homeless outreach programs are based on.

Corporation for Supportive Housing (CSH)
This national, non-profit organization assists communities to create and operate quality permanent supportive housing for people who are homeless and also face the challenges of conditions such as mental illness, HIV/AIDS, and chemical dependency. CSH provides technical and financial assistance through their offices and national resource center.

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resources for Consumers and Survivors

There are hundreds of grassroots mental health consumer organizations across the country, and no single organization speaks for all consumers. The term "mental health consumer" isn't even uniformly accepted. Some identify themselves as survivors, others as ex-patients. In the 1970s, a movement of consumers, survivors and ex-patients was born, as they organized early groups, such as the Alliance for the Liberation of Mental Patients, the Insane Liberation Front, and Project Release, meeting in homes and churches to gain better access to services. Many stayed connected nationally through a newsletter called Madness Network News. Soon consumers began running their own support groups and services, and they created co-op housing and drop-in centers. In the mid-1980s, differences in consumer views resulted in the creation of two leading national organizations, the National Mental Health Consumers Association, and the National Association of Mental Patients, the latter of which mostly differentiated itself in by its members' opposition to all forms of involuntary treatment.

National Mental Health Consumers' Self-Help Clearinghouse
This consumer-run national technical assistance center helps connect individuals to self-help and advocacy resources.

California Network of Mental Health Clients
This is the country's first mental health consumer-run state organization in the country. Search its statewide directory of client-run groups, and read legislative action alerts, policy papers, and a calendar of upcoming events.

California Association of Mental Health Patients' Rights Advocates
Access general legal resources and a patient advocacy manual.

California Office of Patients' Rights
Part of Protection and Advocacy Inc. (PAI), the office contracts with the California Department of Mental Health to ensure adherence to mental health laws and the rights of patients. The office has direct advocacy services on-site at four state hospitals, and responds to patients' complaints.

National Empowerment Center: Leaders in Recovery
Laurie Ahern and Daniel Fisher, M.D., Ph.D., co-directors of the National Empowerment Center, share stories of recovery and of their work as advocates.

Judi Chamberlin: On Our Own
Read an excerpt from former mental health patient Judi Chamberlin's 1978 book, a benchmark in the history of the consumer movement.

National Empowerment Center: Consumer/Survivor History Project
To address the lack of survivor voices in the histories already written about mental health history, the National Empowerment Center is collecting former patients' firsthand accounts, as well as artifacts such as graffiti on seclusion room walls, patient art, patient diaries, and correspondence.

California Memorial Project
Consumer groups are working to restore cemeteries at state institutions to honor people with mental illness who lived and died in state hospitals.

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Family Resources

Family members of consumers are often affected too, as they work to understand mental illness and help their loved ones through treatment and recovery. A "family movement" also dates back to the 1970s. It sprang out of a lack of available services and the past tendency of the mental health establishment to blame parents for the mental illness of their children. Family advocates today are a powerful lobby for mental health legislation and funding, as well as a strong voice for the expansion of community-based services.

National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI)
What started out as a small cadre of families in Wisconsin in 1979 has grown into a more than 200,000-member-strong organization today advocating for persons with severe and persistent mental illness. NAMI heads up its own policy institute and also operates family groups for self-help and education through its network of state and local affiliates, organized in an online database. Its Web site also includes facts and figures on mental illness and treatment. You can subscribe to NAMI's electronic Stigma Alerts and its E-News.

National Mental Health Association (NMHA)
The NMHA is the country's oldest mental health awareness and advocacy organization.

Federation of Families for Children's Mental Health
This national parent-run organization focuses on the needs of children and youth with emotional, behavioral or mental disorders and their families. Its Web site features a directory of local chapters and tip sheets on how parents can get involved in policy work.

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Policy and Legal Issues

Use these resources to stay informed on federal and state level policy issues.

President's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health
This new commission was created to formulate an action plan for the president to improve the mental health service system in the United States. Influence the reform recommendations -- watch the commission's Web site for callouts for public comment.

California Department of Mental Health
Access information on state health laws and regulations, community mental health services, and state hospitals.

The Carter Center Mental Health Proram
This advocacy program focuses on mental health policy issues relating to reducing stigma and discrimination, achieving equity for mental health care comparable to other health care and increasing awareness about mental health and illness.

Lantermin-Petris-Short Act
Read the section of the California Welfare and Institutions Code -- which led to the deinstitutionalization of people who have a mental illness -- that outlines patients' rights and the conditions under which people can be treated involuntarily in the state of California.

The Little Hoover Commission
California's independent oversight agency that investigates state government operations reported on the state of the mental health system in "Being There: Making a Commitment to Mental Health." Download the 2000 report and watch for the commission's biennial statement, which will include updates of mental health reform efforts, to be released in January 2003.

The Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
Check out federal legislative updates and alerts by the national legal advocacy group's site.

Mental Health Association of California
The association tracks breaking news on state legislation related to mental health and provides online reports.

Donaldson v. O'Connor
The 1975 U.S. Supreme Court case, involving a Florida state hospital patient who complained he had been kept in custody against his will for nearly 15 years, was a landmark case establishing the civil rights of the mentally ill.

Reise v. St. Mary's Hospital and Medical Center
The 1987 California State Court Appeals case, involving schizophrenic patient Eleanor Riese, who refused medication after voluntarily seeking hospitalization, was a benchmark ruling establishing the right to refuse treatment.

Other Court Rulings
Review other historic U.S. Supreme Court decisions related to mental health. volved in policy work.

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Stigma and the Media

The media is the public's primary source of information about mental illness, according to a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation survey, and yet movies, television and newspapers too often reinforce stereotypes of people with mental illness, rather than dispel them.

National Stigma Clearinghouse: Anti-Stigma Homepage
The National Stigma Clearinghouse tracks negative stereotypes of mental illnesses in news, advertising and entertainment and provides information, including a sample letter to the editor, to fight discrimination and stigma. The clearinghouse also posts examples of "positive visibility."

Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR)
Published online by FAIR, the article "Mindless and Deadly" looks at media hype of mental illness and violence.

MadNation
This is a webzine on social justice and human rights in mental health.

Pennsylvania State University Public Broadcasting: Erase the Stigma
This project of WPSU was designed to raise awareness of and encourage dialogue about mental illnesses and its impact on Central Pennsylvania. Read or listen to a series of commentaries produced and delivered by consumers, family members, and mental health professionals.

Columbia Journalism Review: Covering Mental Health
This resource guide for reporters and editors produced by the Columbia Journalism Review includes a list of leading experts in mental health.

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Education

Mental Health Education and Workforce Development Initiative, College of Extended Learning, San Francisco State University
This program provides mental health education in four key areas: teacher education (preschool - postgraduate), public education to raise awareness and reduce stigma, supported education for college students with mental disabilities, and workforce development for mental health/human services careers.

Center for Mental Health in Schools at UCLA
The Center approaches mental health and psychosocial concerns from the broad perspective of addressing barriers to learning and promoting healthy development. Specific attention is given policies and strategies that can counter fragmentation and enhance collaboration between school and community programs.

The Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation
CABF is a parent-led, not-for-profit, web-based membership organization of families raising children diagnosed with, or at risk for, early-onset bipolar disorder.

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