
Resources
Substance Abuse Topics
Fayette Companies - Training Resources Page
Behavioral Health Recovery Management: www.bhrm.org
Patient Safety Blog: www.patientsafetyblog.com
Mental Health Topics
National Alliance on Mental Illiness (NAMI)
New Freedom Report: www.mentalhealthcommission.gov/reports/reports.htm
Behavioral Health Recovery Management: www.bhrm.org
Books for family members
Get Your Loved One Sober: Alternatives to Nagging, Pleading and Threatening
Robert J. Meyers and Brenda L. Wolfe
2004 by Hazelden
This book offers a compassionate and effective approach that helps spouses, lovers, parents, or children of drugs users or alcoholics improve their own lives while making sobriety a more rewarding option for their loved one. It provides the guidance and tools needed to recognize how you and your loved one interact and how to change negative patterns to achieve happier and healthier results. The intervention is based on the scientifically validated CRAFT (Community Reinforcement Approach and Family Training) model.
The Complete Family Guide to Schizophrenia
Kim T. Mueser, Susan Gingerich
2006 by The Guilford Press
Based on research and experience, Kim Mueser and Susan Gingerich offer ways to deal with depression, psychosis, and other symptoms. The book covers ways to prioritize needs, resolve everyday problems, and encourage loved ones to set life goals. It also offers ways to handle challenges over the course of treatment, such as reducing relapse, making friends and finding work. Issues for parents, children, siblings, and partners are also highlighted. This book is helpful for people dealing with schizophrenia for the first time and those who have dealt with the impact for years.
I am not sick I don't need help!
Xavier Amador
2007 by Vida Press
This book offers practical advice and hope for helping people struggling with mental illness. Topics include the truth about denial of illness, how to help, what works and what doesn't, and information about treatment. Information about the nature and scope of the problem is provided, including the newest research. Practical guidance is also offered about when and how to secure "assisted treatment."
Don’t Call Me Nuts!
Patrick Corrigan and Robert Lundin
2001 Recovery Press
This book first introduces the impact of stigma through a case example representative of different experiences of people with serious mental illness. Specific strategies are then reviewed to facilitate change in the injustice of stigma. This book offers ways to deal with the pain of stigma and how to make the decision to disclose one’s mental illness. Empowered people are presented as the opposite of persons stigmatized with mental illness and strategies that foster empowerment are discussed. Protest, education, and strategies to change society’s reaction to stigma are also discussed.
The Family Intervention Guide to Mental Illness
Bodie Morey & Kim Muser, PhD
2007 by New Harbinger Publications
Helps family members learn to identify early signs of mental illness and how to get treatment. Outlines steps for recognizing, managing, and recovering from mental illness.
Break the Bipolar Cycle
Elizabeth Brondolo, Ph D & Xavier Amador, PhD
2008 by McGraw Hill
Drawing on the latest research in bipolar disorder, stress, and health, this step-by-step guide offers a complete selection of livable, workable solutions to manage bipolar disorder and helps you:
* Identify your symptoms
* Explore your treatment options
* Stabilize your moods
* Sharpen your mind
* Achieve your goals