Support with Mental Health Services
- Anthonio von swagger
- Jun 29, 2023
- 3 min read
Updated: Apr 3
I have written an article about the lack of services beyond the Mental Health Community in Government Facilities and the affects it has on individuals who cope with the disease in its various forms. It is my intention to give readers and listeners a first hand account and experience from the perspective of the afflicted with hopes of changing the narrative, finding solutions and making the necessary changes in the way Mental Health is depicted through research and law. I can not promise your editors, readers or listeners that I am the best person to present an article on this topic for your quarterly issue however I can guarantee that I will give an honest and open perspective.
Support from family, friends and programs that assist consumers with Mental Specialties is important when conducting business pertaining to assistance and the needs of the participants involved.
The United States and Governing facilities, public housing, law enforcement agencies and state appointed programs that are mandated for private and public service paucity the empathy, training, agents, resources and knowledge for the
implementation and liability of laws and bylaws that protect, assist and educate the public and its consumers of mental health services.

The collective governmental statue, standards, regulations and procedures for mental health do not extend or provide assistance, intentness or resources beyond jurisdiction and decretum of the appointed facilities of health and care. Communities that provide contractual housing, leasing and agreements through Grant's and funding are not equipped with the staff, training or resources to provide residents educational material or procedures regarding the occupants coping with mental health or the consumers of outpatient care onsite aid and appeal. It is not a violation of the law to introduce information to renters encouraging positive exchanges when possibility encountering these situations in or outside of the neighborhood. A community should be the safest and most trusting place to live for individuals with mental specialties.
Representatives and employees of these programs, facilities and housing are not adhering erudition adequate with the essential needs of the impaired on an individual or collective basis.
County facilities that offer government services are occupied by untrained workers and not public serving servers which conflicts with the basic laws and principles that are in accordance with the ADA.
These understaffed and overworked conditions are reflected on the public and accompanied by the lack of morality, compassion and empathy required to assist individuals in dire need.
There is no systematic approach to remedy the curriculum of mental health as a composite yet the consensus remains categorical in accost, proposal and succor.
State and government agencies normalize the austerity of Mental health therefore depriving individuals with special needs safe and decorous services.

The importance of support in these facilities is detrimental to the health and assistance necessary to ensure individuals that cope with mental specialties receive the proper support and services daily.
It is imperative that support is a primary focus as it is a grueling challenge when applying for state and government resources and assistance without the proper protocols or support system in place.
Family and friends should become familiar with doctors, appointments and legalities. An individual with Mental Specialties may become overwhelmed and potentially becoming a disturbance.
The public must continue to hold these facilities accountable and give those with Mental Specialties the support needed for positive transitions in situations involving the public and business.
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