Preview

AMHCA: Definition Of Mental Health And Crisis Counseling

Better Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1743 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
AMHCA: Definition Of Mental Health And Crisis Counseling
Diana Schimenti
Ms. Reillo
English IV
17 February 2015
Mental Health/Crisis Counseling
Section 1

In 1976, the AMHCA, American Mental Health Counseling Association
, committed to

promoting and establishing professional mental health counselors. Also, in 1976 group of community mental health and private counselors founded the AMHCA as a professional association for a newly emerging group of counselors who said that their practice was “mental health” counseling. By 1979, the founders of AMHCA organized four major key mechanisms to define the new profession. The major keys are to identify a definition of mental health counseling, setting standards for education and training and a code of professional ethics, creating a national credentialing system, and start a professional journal which includes research
…show more content…
Now, people are more understanding and science is answering the hard questions of why someone is that way. Most people aren’t sent to insane asylums anymore to hide and die, now they are sent to rehab and given daily medication and therapy skills to help them get on with their day to day lives. Although there are still some people we deem as crazy due to their mental illnesses, for the most part the world has become more understanding to those

in which we don’t know what they are going through. Year by year our view on the world on psychology changes more and more and it is changing for the better. Now we have history and books and our electronics now a days that help us move forward in our world of knowledge.
Mental health counseling has become a huge part in our lives and I believe that it will continue to grow as our years go on. I believe this because everyday we hear new stories in the news of
“psycho killers”, people who kill because they have a mental illness ,like schizophrenia, that affects their judgement on their day to day lifestyle and because of that they do irrational things. In order to become a mental health counselor, there are certain training that they need
…show more content…
I would make a great crisis counselor because sadly I know crisis way to well. I honestly can not tell you what my strengths are, the only strength I have is that I have become accustomed to tragedy. The type of crisis counseling I want to get into for domestic violence/ rape victims, people who self harm, people with eating disorders, people who want to give up on life. Unfortunately I know all of these topics way to well, but that is what makes this profession great for me. Ever since I was younger, all I ever wanted to do is help and support people who need it, and once I’ve been through my own issues I realized that these people who we are paying to help us have no clue what they are talking about. When I become a counselor, not only can I show them that recovery is possible but I can also be there for them more than any other therapist or counselor could. This is something I want to do for the emotional benefits for my clients, not for the personal benefits for myself. The only thing I can without messing up horribly, is helping people. Over the summer I created a blog originally meant for myself to complain and vent, however, even though I started off negative the end of my posts would

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    I expect a great deal from the Clinical Mental Health Counseling Program, I expect that this program will turn me into he best psychologist that I can possibly be. I expect that it will be difficult and challenging however, not impossible. I know that it will test my dedication to the field of psychology. I also expect that I will not only be better academically, but I will have formed lasting professional relationships with my teachers and future colleagues.…

    • 794 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    ethical autobiography

    • 4707 Words
    • 19 Pages

    This paper looks at, reflects upon and evaluates the elements from my life that have influenced, challenged, and developed some of my morals, ethics and values. By using my past life experiences. I will explore how my upbringing impacts my role as a professional counselor in training, focusing on those in recovery and dealing with disaster related trauma; and how I can use these experiences to become a better human being and develop better professional relationships with future clients.…

    • 4707 Words
    • 19 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    and suffering that is involved. Without being depended on, they feel alone, inadequate, insecure and…

    • 95 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    in society. They are likely to be psychologically damaged for the rest of their lives, suffering…

    • 1804 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    society today, often showing those with a mental illness as the “bad guy”, these concerns expressed in…

    • 589 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Preparing for my day as professional mental health counselor takes time. When I am leaving work at the end of a busy day, I always take the time to look at my schedule for the next day. The first thing I do to prepare for my job the next day is to look at my schedule to see with whom I will be meeting with, and the time schedule for my first and last appointment. I familiarize myself with the clients I will be working with, and pull each clients file to refresh myself on our last session. This is necessary for me to prepare for the appointment. It is important for me to be prepared and show my client that I am in tune to what is going on with them. I used to do all this first thing in the morning but I have found that it works better for me if I do it at the end of my day. My being prepared helps me to give the client my full attention and helps the client to gain confidence in my abilities. It helps personalize the session between me, as the counselor, and them as the client.…

    • 2058 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Madness A Bipolar life

    • 1750 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Entering the taboo world of mental illness, stigmatized as the crazy and psychotic by decades of…

    • 1750 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Best Essays

    Parry, Manon. (2010) From a Patient 's Perspective: Clifford Whittingham Beers ' Work to Reform Mental Health Services. American Journal of Public Health, 100(12). 2356-7.…

    • 1995 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    This on the other hand was because they did not know a lot about them and their conditions because of a lack of research. Because of the amount of research gained, The Mental Health Act of 1946 gave grants in order to build new treatment facilities and clinics to help the mentally disabled. Because of that, more people learned that the mentally disabled do not affect them in any harmful way intentionally. Discoveries of new technology and the more information we have of the human anatomy helped them evolve since some studies show what can cause mental disabilities (The Treatment of the Mentally Handicapped During the Great Depression). And still to this day they are now being noticed as everyday people and not…

    • 814 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Military Culture

    • 2021 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Mikaela Barnett Chaltas, The School of Professional Counseling, Lindsey Wilson College. Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Mikaela Barnett Chaltas, Ashland, Kentucky campus. Email: mikaela_barnett@yahoo.com…

    • 2021 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Counseling is my PASSION! I’ve always been that friend or person that people come to with their problems. Everyone trusted me because I was like a vault. No matter what I was told, it never went any further. I have always been very empathetic and understanding listener. I enjoyed hearing other’s problems, not because I wanted to see them in pain, but because I knew that was their way of connecting with me. I decided to follow my passion-helping people. Since then, my life has changed. I am a cordial, professional, and through individual able to plan, organize, and prioritize work in order to look after her clients in accordance with high quality standards and deadlines. A strong passion for working professionally in the counseling field.…

    • 501 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    History of Counseling

    • 1115 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Counseling is a relatively new profession which has transformed over time from treating mental illnesses to providing educational guidance to counseling with a variety of specializations. Pistole summarizes by stating that counselors, now, aim to, “contribute to the vitality and vigor and to the soundness in body, mind, spirit, and social connection that sustains well-being, and so is considered, by our society, to be health” (2001). However, this was not always the case. National events such as the industrial revolution, World War I & II, the Community Mental Health Centers Act of 1963, the formation of the American Mental Health Counselors Association (AMHCA) in 1978 and in field professionals have shaped the field of counseling (Smith, 1995 & Pistole, 2001). Frank Parsons, Jessie Davies, and Clifford Beers were early pioneers of the counseling profession and were part of establishing the counseling profession (Pistole, 2001).The counseling profession has undergone many changes within the previous three decades that have strengthened counseling’s focus on individual needs over the lifespan which encompass wellness, resilience and prevention as key philosophies.…

    • 1115 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Best Essays

    The Released

    • 2137 Words
    • 9 Pages

    America’s prisons have become a dumping ground for the mentally ill because non-prison treatment facilities are unavailable or unaffordable. PBS Frontlines documentary, The New Asylum, “goes deep inside Ohio’s state prison system to explore the complex and growing issue of mentally ill prisoners. With unprecedented access to prison therapy sessions, mental health treatment meetings, crisis wards, and prison disciplinary tribunals…” Five years later in 2005 film makers Karen O’Connor and Miri Navasky went back to the Ohio state prison to make a documentary, The Released, that uncovers what happens to the mentally ill when they are released. The Released shows that even though the mentally ill are being treated in the prisons, because they have no stable environment to go to and no way to take care of themselves, once released the inmates soon end up back in prison or homeless.…

    • 2137 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Best Essays
  • Good Essays

    From overcrowding, various forms of violence, enforced solitude, lack of privacy, concerns about the future, and inadequate health services in prisons its no secret that the mentally ill are mistreated and have fallen through the cracks…

    • 857 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The understanding of mental illness today since the early 1900s has changed significantly. In the 1900s, people still had no real understanding of what caused mental illnesses, let alone how to treat the disease. The disease was feared and was seen as incurable. Mentally ill patients would be sent to asylums, and as a form of treatment they were tortured. Until in the later 1900s, it was discovered that certain factors and drug therapy could be a treatment to cure the mentally ill. Today there are various forms of treatment and treatment settings for the different mental illnesses that help to benefit the patients’ condition.…

    • 744 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays