Challengesforthe21stCentury
THIRDEDITION
Editedby SamuelJ.Rosenberg& JessicaRosenberg
Thirdeditionpublished2018
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ListofContributors
AbouttheEditors
PrefaceSamuelJ RosenbergandJessicaRosenberg
TheRecoveryModelandtheCitizenship:TakingtheNextSteps
W PatrickSullivanandVincentR Starnino
MadResistance/MadAlternatives:DemocratizingMentalHealthCare
JeremyAndersen,EdAltwies,JonahBossewitch,CeliaBrown,KermitCole,SeraDavidow,SaschaAltmanDuBrul,Eric Friedland-Kays,GeliniFontaine,WillHall,ChrisHansen,BradleyLewis,AudreLordeProject,MaryseMitchell-Brody, JacksMcNamara,GinaNikkel,PabloSadler,DavidStark,AdakuUtah,AgustinaVidal,andCheyennaLayneWeber
SpiritualityandRecovery
VincentR StarninoandW PatrickSullivan
EmergingCommunityMentalHealthChallenges
TheChallengesPosedbytheMentalHealthNeedsofToday’sMilitaryService MembersandVeterans
KariL Fletcher,MariannMankowski,andDavidL Albright
TheAsylum,thePrison,andtheFutureofCommunityMentalHealth
TerryA Kupers
Suicide:America’sGrimBellwether
JeaneneHarlick
CommunityMentalHealthandthePsychoSocialEnvironment
MeetingtheMentalHealthChallengesoftheElderBoom
MichaelB Friedman,PaulS Nestadt,LisaFurst,andKimberlyA Williams
ExaminingFourMajorVulnerabilitiesFacedbyFamilies
MelodyHyppolite
MentalIllnessandtheMedia
EmmaE McGinty
AccesstoCommunityMentalHealth
CommunityMentalHealthDisparitiesFacingtheLGBTCommunity:Needsand Solutions
EileenKlein
StructuralCompetenceinaWorldOtherThanOne’sOwn
SamuelJ Rosenberg
InterrogatingInsightandCoerciveCareforPeopleWithPsychosis:Situated PerspectivesfromtheFrontLines
IreneM HurfordandNevJones
BestPracticesinCommunityMentalHealth
Co-occurringSubstanceUseandMentalHealthDisordersfromaSocialJustice Perspective
StephanieSarabia
NeuropsychiatricPerspectivesonCommunityMentalHealth:TheoryandPractice
WilliamH Wilson
FamilyPsychoeducationintheTreatmentofMentalIllness:HistoricalContext, CurrentPracticeandFutureDirections
SarahLynch,NelmaMason,andWilliamMcFarlane
CommunityMentalHealth:SocietalTrendsandPolicyIssues
IntersectingInequalityandEconomicJusticeinMentalHealth:Implicationsfor CommunityMentalHealthPractitioners
JessicaK.Camp
MentalHealthCareintheAffordableCareAct(ACA)Era:HarnessingthePowerof Communities
AngelaWangariWalter,LindaSpragueMartinez,andLuzMarilisLópez
PoliticalEconomyandNeoliberalism:TheirInfluenceonCommunityMentalHealth Practice,Research,andPolicy
CarlI CohenandMichaelM Reinhardt
Glossary Index
Contributors
David L. Albright, PhD, MSW, is the Hill Crest Foundation Endowed Chair in Mental Health at the University of Alabama He is a military veteran and former Research Fellow with both the Department of Veterans Affairs and the RAND Corporation’s Center for Military Health Policy Research. His scholarship primarily focuses on behavioral health promotion and education among military personnel, veterans, their families and communities, and the organizations that support them, with a particular interest in the role of the social environment on mental health and mental illness. Dr. AlbrightservesasthechairfortheCouncilonSocialWorkEducation(CSWE)Military SocialWorktrack.
Ed Altwies, PsyD, is currently the Program Manager for the VNSNY Queens Parachute NYCmobileteamandaninternaltrainerforthosenewlyhiredintotheproject.Overthe course of Parachute NYC’s initial three-year roll-out, he has held multiple positions. For over two years he was a Staff Psychologist on the Early Psychosis Brooklyn team, where he primarily worked alongside peer specialists In this capacity, he participated in over 500 meetings with more than 35 families from a diverse range of cultural backgrounds including Latino and South Asian, with the majority being from the Black Diaspora. Ed also served as a co-trainer with three of the initial Parachute training cohorts. Additionally, he consulted to the Bronx and Queens Parachute teams in developing and transitioningtotheirParachuteclinicalpractices PriortoworkingwithParachuteNYC, Ed completed two years of training at the Institute for Dialogic Practice in Haydenville, MA. Ed has over 10 years ’ experience in the NYC public mental health system in a variety of settings. Before earning his PsyD at Rutgers University, he worked as a Business Consultant and as a Peace Corps volunteer in Togo, West Africa He lives in NewYorkCitywithhispartnerandtwochildren.
Jeremy Andersen is a Senior Clinician and Education Manager at Windhorse Integrative Mental Health in Northampton, Massachussets. Before joining Windhorse, Jeremy worked as a psychotherapist in urban and rural community mental health clinics, as a counselor for a therapeutic afterschool program, and as a Direct Care Worker for people
withdevelopmentaldisabilities.HealsolivedandworkedatKarmeCholingretreatcenter for several months, has served in leadership positions at the Berkeley and Pioneer Valley Shambhala Centers, and is an authorized Meditation Instructor in the Shambhala Buddhist tradition Jeremy has a BA in transpersonal psychology from Burlington College, an MA in integral counseling psychology from the California Institute of Integral Studies, and a CAGS in professional counseling from Union Institute and University.
JonahBossewitch, PhD, is an educator, technologist, and activist who grew up in New York City. He currently works at the Mental Health Association of New York City as the Director of Software Architecture and Applications. Jonah studied communications at Columbia University and in 2016 defended his doctoral dissertation, Dangerous Gifts: Towards a New Wave of Psychiatric Resistance, which examines significant shifts in the politics of psychiatric resistance and mental health activism He has been organizing around radical mental health issues for over a decade and cares deeply about the environment, social justice and privacy. He has over 15 years of experience as a professional software architect, designer, and developer He is an active free/open source contributor whose technical interests include Linux, Python, and content/learning management and social software. He loves to ride bikes, travel, scuba dive, and play the bass. He earned a master’s in communication and education at Teachers College (2007) andgraduatedfromPrincetonUniversity(1997)withaBAcumlaudeinphilosophyand certificatesincomputerscienceandcognitivestudies Heblogsatalchemicalmusingsorg
CeliaBrown is a longtime leader in the psychiatric movement. She is President of the board of MindFreedom International and promotes choice, alternatives, and human rights in mental health. Celia was instrumental in developing the first peer specialist civil title in the country She is the Regional Advocacy Specialist at the NYC field office of the NYS Office of Mental Health. She provides technical assistance and support to people with psychiatric disabilities. She is a cofounder of the International Network Towards AlternativesandRecovery.SheisafieldschoolgraduateoftheCentertoStudyRecovery in Social Contexts, Nathan Klein Institute Celia is an advisory board member with the Center for Practice Innovations for the New York State Psychiatric Institute Celia has presented nationally and internationally on topics such as self-help, peer counseling, humanrights,trauma,andculturalcompetency.
Jessica K. Camp, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Social Work at the University of Michigan Dearborn Prior to becoming a professor, she worked as an Adult Mental
HealthTherapistfortheDetroit/WayneCountycommunitymentalhealthsystemandis the former coordinator of the Supported Education Program. As an academic, her research uses critical race, critical disability, and intersectional framework to examine national trends in poverty and inequality She is particularly passionate about investigating the specific ways that race, gender, and disability are met with economic andlabormarketdisparities.
Carl I. Cohen is SUNY Distinguished Service Professor and Director of the Division of Geriatric Psychiatry at SUNY Downstate Medical Center He is also the Founding Director of the Center of Excellence for Alzheimer’s Disease at SUNY Downstate and the Geriatric Psychiatry Fellowship Program. He is a graduate of SUNY Buffalo School of Medicine and completed his residency at NYU/Bellevue medical centers. He has authored over 200 articles and three books on topics in mental illness, aging, and social psychiatry HisbooksincludeLiberatoryPsychiatry:Philosophy,Politics,andMentalHealth (Cambridge, 2008) and Schizophrenia Into Later Life: Treatment, Research, and Policy (APPI,2003).Hehasbeentherecipientofover50research,training,andservicegrants. He has received numerous awards and honors including “Educator of the Year” (American Association of Geriatric Psychiatry), “Psychiatrist of the Year” (American AssociationofCommunityPsychiatry), theExemplary PsychiatristAward(NAMI),and listings in “Best Doctors In America,” “Best Doctors in New York,” “Who’s Who in the World,” and “Who’s Who in America.” He was also a recipient of a Geriatric Mental HealthAcademicAwardfromtheNationalInstituteofMentalHealth
Kermit Cole, MFT, was the Founding Editor of the Mad in America webzine. He began workinginresidentialsettingswithpeopleinpsychoticstatesin2002whileparticipating in research on schizophrenia at Harvard inspired, in part, by Bob Whitaker’s “Mad in America” This experience, along with learning the value of working with families (from direct experience as well as the inspiration of Open Dialogue) led Kermit to become licensed as a Marriage and Family Therapist. He and his partner run the Santa Fe Relational Therapy Center, where they work with couples and families seeking alternativewaysofworkingwithmadness
Sera Davidow has been a part of the leadership team for the Western Massachusetts Recovery Learning Community for going on 10 years. In addition, she is a filmmaker (“Beyond the Medical Model” and more), Lead Trainer for the Massachusetts Peer SpecialistCertificationprogram,foundingmemberoftheHearingVoicesUSABoardof Directors,motheroftwo,andwifeofone ShealsoregularlywritesforthewebzineMad
inAmerica.
SaschaAltmanDuBrul is a cofounder of The Icarus Project, the coauthor of Navigatingthe Space Between Brilliance and Madness and the author of Maps to the Other Side: The AdventuresofaBipolarCartographer He is currently the Recovery Specialist and Trainer attheCenterforPracticeInnovationsinNewYorkCity.
KariL.Fletcher, MSW, PhD, LICSW, is an Associate Professor and the coordinator of the Area of Emphasis in Military Practice at the St. Catherine University University of St. Thomas School of Social Work in St Paul, Minnesota She received her PhD in social work from Smith College and her MSW from Widener University. Her scholarship focuses on support systems for military/veteran-connected populations, including clinical practice, higher education, and support outside military-supported settings. Dr. Fletcher’s direct practice experience with military/veteran-connected population spans 18 years and includes affiliations with the VA (as a Clinical Social Worker in Minneapolis, Minnesota, 2000–2010), Vet Center (as an External Consultant in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, 2014–present) and Military OneSource (as a psychotherapist in private practice, 2015–present) She currently serves as the Cochair for the Council on Social WorkEducation(CSWE)MilitarySocialWorktrack
Eric Friedland-Kays is a Senior Clinician and Administrator at Windhorse Integrative Mental Health, in Northampton, MA, where he has worked since 2000. He earned a master’s degree from the School for International Training and has been a psychotherapist for many years trained in intensive psychotherapy, psychosynthesis, and contemplative traditions. He has also been a meditator deeply connected with Vipassana meditation, in the tradition of S. N. Goenka, since the early 1990s.He lives in Western Massachusettswithhiswife,7-year-olddaughter,andtwoCornishRexcats.
MichaelB.Friedman, LMSW, was born in 1943 and came of age in the 1950s and 1960s, when America was undergoing a social and cultural revolutions. He studied and taught philosophy for several years, but was quickly drawn to the challenges of mental illness. He worked as a Mental Health Practitioner, Administrator, Government Official (Deputy Commissioner of the NYS OMH), and Advocate for over 40 years before retiringinJuly2010 AtthattimehewasDirectoroftheCenterforPolicyandAdvocacy oftheMentalHealthAssociationofNYC,acenterthathefoundedin2003.Inthatrole healsocofoundedtheGeriatricMentalHealthAllianceofNewYorkand,mostrecently, the Veterans’ Mental Health Coalition of NYC Over the years he has served on numerous planning and advocacy groups at the federal, state, and local levels He
continues to teach health and mental health policy at Columbia University and to write frequently about mental health and about aging. His writings are available at www.mi‐chaelbfriedmancomMichaelisalsoasemiprofessionaljazzpianistandphotographer Lisa Furst, LMSW, MPH, is Director of Education for the Geriatric Mental Health Alliance of New York and the Assistant Vice President of training and quality improvementattheMentalHealthAssociationofNewYorkCity.Sheisthecoauthorof Depressed Older Adults: Education and Screening (Springer, 2010) and numerous articles focused on the behavioral health needs of older adults She has extensive experience working with older adults in community-based settings and in training aging service professionals to identify and meet the needs of older adults living with behavioral health needs.
Will Hall, MA, DiplPW, is a therapist and trainer internationally recognized for his innovative work with psychosis treatment and changing the social response to madness He is host of Madness Radio on KBOO FM in Oregon, author of the Harm Reduction Guide to Coming Off Psychiatric Drugs (available in 15 languages), cofounder of Portland HearingVoices,andapastcocoordinatorofTheIcarusProject Willwastrainedinopen dialogue at the Institute for Dialogic Practice and holds a master’s degree in Arnold Mindell’s process- oriented psychology. A schizophrenia diagnosis survivor who was forciblytreatedinSanFrancisco’sLangleyPorterPsychiatricInstitute,Willhasappeared in several documentary films including Crazywise and HealingVoices, as well as receiving coverage in the New York Times, Newsweek, Forbes, and The Guardian His writing has appeared in the Journal of Best Practices in Mental Health and Oxford University’s TextbookofModernCommunityMentalHealthWork:AnInterdisciplinaryApproachandhis new book is Outside Mental Health: Voices and Visions of Madness. Will is certified in NADA ear acupuncture and is a longtime meditator, yoga practitioner, and dancer www.willhall.net;www.madnessradio.net.
Jeanene Harlick is a former newspaper and current freelance journalist with lived experience of mental health challenges. She left newspaper reporting when her struggles worsened, following years of dehumanizing treatment in residential facilities Her experience with the mental health system spurred Ms Harlick to pursue a master’s degree in social work from 2007–2011, with a focus on clinical practice, but she fell just short of earning the degree owing to the magnitude of her psychological and financial struggles Forced to enter treatment again in 2012, and held there against her will for nearly a year, she continues to try to find a path to better health while simultaneously
workingtoexposemythssurrounding“mentalillness”andtheabuses,prejudices,andillconstrued treatment occurring within the traditional treatment system. In October 2015, Ms Harlick jumped from her apartment roof Since rehabilitation her struggles have increased, due in part to lack of targeted services and support for suicide attempt survivors her current writing project. Ms. Harlick is firmly anti-DSM and proneurodiversity, and writes with the aim of helping others, serving as a check to mainstream media and demolishing widespread conceptions of “mental illness.” You can find more of her work, and contact information, at her website, “A Disordered World”: http://adisorderedworld.com.
Irene M. Hurford, MD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania, and the Program Director for the Psychosis Education, Assessment, Care, and Empowerment (PEACE) program at Horizon House Prior to her current position she led the severe mental illness treatment team at the Philadelphia VA Medical Center. Her clinical and research work focuses on cognition in schizophrenia, treatment of early-episode psychosis, and functional and quality of life improvementsinyoungpeoplewithpsychosis
Melody Hyppolite, PhD, MSW, is an Assistant Professor of Social Work at Ramapo College of New Jersey. She holds an MSW from Spalding University in Louisville, Kentucky, and a PhD from the Kent School of Social Work, University of Louisville. Shehasover10yearsofdirectsocialworkpracticeworkingwithmentallyillchildrenand their families and severely and persistently mentally ill adults in both rural and urban settings. Dr. Hyppolite’s research focuses on child outcomes and the impact of parental characteristics (i.e., parental substance use or parental mental illness) on child behaviors. She has examined parental incarceration in depth to advance the body of literature that examines the impact of mass incarceration in the United States on children and families Additionally, she has research interests around the experiences of parents of children on theautismspectrumandtheemotionalexperienceprecedingandfollowingthediagnosis of their child(ren) with autism. As a social work educator she has taught courses across thecurriculum,includingpractice,theory,andresearch
Nev Jones, PhD, is the Director of the Felton Institute’s Division for Client Centered Outcomes Research in Public Mental Health (CCOR-PMH) in San Francisco, California. A community psychologist and mental health services researcher by training, much of her work focuses on early psychosis, the clinical relevance of links between trauma, structural adversity and psychotic experiences, and sociocultural influences on
recovery from persisting mental health challenges. She identifies as a peer with both personalandfamilyexperienceofpsychosis/schizophrenia.
Eileen Klein, PhD, LCSW, MS, is an Assistant Professor of Social Work at Ramapo College She earned her MSW from the University of Buffalo, and master’s degree in publichealth and a PhD in clinical social work from NYU. Prior to teaching full time at Ramapo, Dr. Klein worked for over 30 years in public mental health with severely mentally ill clients in both inpatient and outpatient settings. When she worked as the deputy director of inpatient operations, she focused on community reintegration for psychiatric inpatients, reducing stigma for the mentally ill, and affirmative treatment programs for sexual minorities. Dr. Klein’s research interests include the provision of culturally competent care for oppressed and stigmatized populations, understanding how social support improves mental health outcomes, and training social workers to lead interprofessional teams in patient care Dr Klein is one of the founders of the Rainbow Heights Club, a publicly funded advocacy and social support program for LGBT members with mental illness. She has published on community mental health needs of diversepopulations,stigma,andpolicyadvocacy
Terry A. Kupers, MD, MSP, is Institute Professor Emeritus at the Wright Institute, a distinguished life fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and, besides practicing psychiatryathisofficeinOakland,California,heconsultstovariouspublicmentalhealth centers and jail mental health services. He provides expert testimony as well as consultation and staff training in correctional settings regarding the psychological effects of prison conditions including isolated confinement in supermaximum security units, the quality of correctional mental health care, and the effects of sexual abuse in correctional settings. He has served as consultant to the U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, as well as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International Dr Kupers has published extensively, including the books Solitary:TheInsideStoryof SupermaxIsolation and How We Can Abolish It (University of California Press, 2017), Prison Madness: The Mental Health Crisis Behind Bars and What We Must Do About It (1999), and Public Therapy: The Practice of Psychotherapy in the Public Mental Health Clinic (1981) He is coeditorofPrisonMasculinities (2002) He is a contributing editor of CorrectionalMental HealthReport. He received the Exemplary Psychiatrist award from the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) at the American Psychiatric Association meeting in 2005, and the William Rossiter Award from the Forensic Mental Health Association of CaliforniaonMarch18,2009
BradleyLewisMD,PhD,isAssociateProfessoratNewYorkUniversity’sGallatinSchoolof Individualized Study and a practicing psychiatrist. He is affiliated with NYU’s disability studies minor, the Department of Social and Cultural Analysis, and the Department of Psychiatry Lewis writes and teaches at the interface of the humanities, cultural studies, disability studies, medicine, psychiatry, and the arts. His recent books are Narrative Psychiatry: How Stories Shape Clinical Practice and Depression: Integrating Science, Culture, andHumanities.
Luz Marilis López, PhD, MPH, LCSW, is a Clinical Associate Professor at Boston UniversitySchoolofSocialWorkandtheAssociateDirectorofthedualdegreeprogram MSW/MPH. She has 22 years of experience working with individuals with comorbidity trauma/mental health and substance abuse. She facilitates bilingual trauma-informed recoverygroupsandstafftraininginsubstanceabusetreatmentprogramsandcommunity agencies in Massachusetts She serves ethnically diverse communities, primarily Latinos andAfrican-Americans.Shealsoconductsanannualsummerculturalimmersioncourse and research experience in Puerto Rico for MSW students, working with homeless opioid users The students develop assessment skills and gain first-hand experience with outreach and community-based participation, with implications for service provision to Latinos in the continental United States. More recently she is the Co-leader of the Global Health Learning Community at the Boston University Center for Innovation in Health and Social Work. In this initiative the focus of study is on the mental health needsofimmigrants,refugeesanddisplacedpersons,andsurvivorsofwarandsexualand gender-based violence. The goal is to craft culturally responsive trauma and mental health services and develop community-directed programs that promote healing and well-being.
Sarah Lynch, LCSW, is the Program Manager for the Portland Identification and Early Referral (PIER) Program, an early psychosis treatment program at Maine Medical Center. Sarah received her MSW from Columbia University and has since dedicated her careertocommunitymentalhealth.For13yearsshehasworkedwithyoungpeoplewith early symptoms ofpsychosis andtheir families She was the Clinical TeamLeader of the original PIER program and Deputy Director of the RWJF-funded Early Detection and Intervention for the Prevention of Psychosis multisite study. She has been training treatment teams in early intervention in psychosis multidisciplinary treatment and multifamily group psychoeducation for several years Prior to PIER, she worked in a partial hospital program and child ACT team Sarah has published articles about
multifamily groups, community outreach, and early identification of first-episode psychosis.
Mariann Mankowski, PhD, MSW, LICSW, is an Assistant Professor of Social Work at West Virginia University She holds an MSW from the University of Michigan School of Social Work and a PhD from Smith College School of Social Work. Dr. Mankowski has published several articles on issues related to female military service members, aging, and LGBT caregiving. Her most recent research focuses on justice-involved veteran reintegration and aging LGBT veterans Dr Mankowski continues to provide clinical socialworkerservicesatauniversity-basedmentalhealthcenter.
Linda Sprague Martinez, PhD, is an Assistant Professor of Macropractice at the Boston University School of Social Work, and a Research Fellow with the Center for Promise. She holds a PhD in social policy from the Heller School for Management and Social Policy at Brandeis University Dr Sprague Martinez is interested in how assets can be recognized and leveraged by communities to tackle inequity. Her recent work includes directing a youth-led community health assessment in five U.S. cities for the Center for Promise,andacommunity-engagedstudyexploringtransnationalism,culture,andhealth amongBrazilianandDominicanimmigrantsinMassachusetts,whichisfundedtheNIH Office of Behavioral and Social Sciences Research and supported by the National InstituteonMinorityHealthandHealthDisparities.Dr.SpragueMartinezhasexpertise in urban health; community, student, and youth engaged research; photovoice; communityassessmentandmobilization;andqualitativeresearchmethodsandanalyses
Nelma Mason, RN-BC, is a graduate of the University of Southern Maine School of Nursingwithmorethan30yearsofexperience.Shehasworkedalmostexclusivelyinthe area of mental health/psychiatric nursing and has been certified by ANCC as a psychiatric and mental health nurse since 1988 She has worked across the spectrum of mentalhealthservice settings. She was employed at Maine Medical Center in the PIER programandcofacilitatedapsychoeducationmultifamilygroup.Shewasfirsttrainedasa facilitator in 2000 while working for an agency providing residential and support services topeoplewithpersistentandseverementalillness
WilliamMcFarlane,MDreceivedhisMDfromColumbiaUniversity,CollegeofPhysicians and Surgeons, and completed his residency and fellowship at Albert Einstein College of Medicine.HewasChiefoftheDepartmentofPsychiatryandDirectoroftheCenterfor Psychiatric Research at Maine Medical Center in Portland, Maine He is a Professor at Tufts University School of Medicine He now runs the PIER Training Institute, where
hetrainssitesaroundthecountrystartingearlypsychosisprograms.Hisareasofresearch and practice include family psychoeducation and other psychosocial interventions for severepsychiatricdisorders,aswellaspioneeringeffortsintheareaofearlydetectionand interventionofpsychoticdisordersinyouthandyoungadults
EmmaE.McGinty, PhD, MS, is an Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Management andMentalHealthattheJohnsHopkinsBloombergSchoolofPublicHealth,whereshe alsoservesasCo-deputyDirectoroftheCenterforMentalHealthandAddictionPolicy Research SheholdsaPhDfromtheJohnsHopkinsBloombergSchoolofPublicHealth and an MS from Columbia University. At Johns Hopkins, Dr. McGinty conducts mentalhealthandsubstanceuseservicesandpolicyresearch.Oneofherprimaryresearch interests is how news media coverage influences public attitudes and support for policy, and she has published multiple articles on the role of news media coverage of mental illness and substance use disorders in public stigma and support for expanding behavioral healthservices.
JacksMcNamaraisaqueerwriter,artist,activist,andhealerbasedinSantaFe,NewMexico. Cofounder of the Icarus Project and coauthor of Navigating the Space Between Brilliance andMadness,JackshasfacilitatedworkshopsandperformedpoetryacrossNorthAmerica andEurope.Apainteranddesigner,theircreationshavebeenshownacrosstheU.S.and Canada. Jacks was a 2012 Lambda Literary Fellow and has authored five zines, most recently So Many Ways to Be Beautiful. Their first book of poetry and painting, Inbetweenland, was released in 2013 by Deviant Type Press Jacks’s life and art are the subjectofthedocumentaryfilmCrookedBeauty.
MaryseMitchell-Brody is a radical social worker striving for healing justice and community wellness. They are the Development Coordinator and Ally Liaison of the Icarus Project. A lifelong New Yorker, Maryse has spent the past 15+ years doing healing and harm reduction work with groups such as the Rock Dove Collective and the National CoalitionofAnti-ViolencePrograms.MarysenowdividestheirtimebetweenNewYork City, where many of their loved ones and their facilitation and psychotherapy practices arelocated,andNorthCarolina,wheretheylivewiththeirpartnerJeff,theirdogSmoky, andtoomanyhouseplants
Paul S. Nestadt, MD, is a Fellow in the Psychiatric Epidemiology Program at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of Mental Health, and is the Supervising Psychiatrist for the Johns Hopkins Anxiety Clinic Within Johns Hopkins, heiscorefacultyonthesuicideworkgroupandatraineeintheCenterforMentalHealth
and Addiction Policy Research. Dr. Nestadt received his BS from Brandeis University and his MD from New York Medical College, and he completed his psychiatric residency training at Johns Hopkins Hospital He is the former National Chairman of PsychSIGN, the medical student branch of the American Psychiatric Association, and is currently the Resident/Fellow Chair for the Maryland Psychiatric Society. He serves as Managing Editor of the Johns Hopkins Psychiatry Guide and has written several chapters in prominent textbooks, including the JohnsHopkinsInternalMedicineBoardReview and Kaplan and Sadock’s Comprehensive Textbook of Psychiatry He is a prominent lecturer for medical and public health students, residents, and interns, teaching courses on psychopharmacology, psychiatric assessment, mood, and anxiety disorders. Dr. Nestadt’s researchinterestscenteronsuicideriskevaluationandmeansrestriction,withaparticular focusontheroleoffirearmpracticesandpolicies
GinaNikkel is the President and CEO of the Foundation for Excellence in Mental Health Care,acommunityfoundationthatmatchesthepassionofprivatephilanthropywiththe world’s best researchers and programs to bring recovery practices to every community. Also an Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Oregon Health and Sciences University, Gina served as Executive Director of the Association of Oregon Community Mental Health Programs for 11 years before taking the helm of EXCELLENCE. She has worked extensively in mental health and addictions policy, leadership and management, health care financing, and political advocacy. As a Community Mental Health Therapist, Adolescent Program Director, and Clinical Supervisor, she brings experience in all aspects of community mental health. Gina’s public service includes two terms as a Tillamook County Commissioner and vice president of the Association of Oregon Counties. She has a BA in theater and dance, an MS in counseling from Portland State University, and a PhD in education, focusing on social public policy and leadership,fromtheUniversityofOregon.
MichaelM.ReinhardtreceivedhismedicaldegreefromSt.George’sUniversityofMedicine in 2009. He completed his residency in psychiatry at SUNY Downstate Medical Center from 2009–2013, where he served as Chief resident during his final year Dr Reinhardt worked as the Member in Training Deputy Representative and Representative to the APA Assembly for Area II (New York State). Dr. Reinhardt received a Recognition AwardforhisservicetotheProjectforPsychiatricOutreachtotheHomelessin2012andthe Distinguished Resident Service Award from SUNY Downstate Department of Psychiatry in 2013 He completed fellowship in geriatric psychiatry at SUNY Downstate
Medical Center, where he now serves as Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Associate Director of the Geriatric Psychiatry Fellowship Program, and Associate Director of the NYS Department of Health-Funded Center of Excellence for Alzheimer’s Disease at SUNY Downstate Medical Center His present academic interests include late-life psychotic disorders, the use of technology in geriatric mental health care, and the utility ofpharmacogenetictestinginelderswithmentalhealthconcerns.InDecember2015,he and his mentor, Dr. Carl Cohen, received designation from NY State as a Center of Excellence for Alzheimer’s Disease a 5-year, 235 million-dollar grant from the DepartmentofHealth.
Stephanie Sarabia, PhD, LCSW, LCADC, is a licensed Clinical Social Worker and a licensed Clinical Alcohol and Drug Counselor with over 20 years ’ experience working in agency and community settings with people in recovery from mental health and substance use disorders She received her PhD from New York University and is currently an Assistant Professor of Social Work and convener of the substance abuse minor and BSW program at Ramapo College of New Jersey. Dr. Sarabia’s scholarship interests include risk and protective factors of substance use among adolescents, the role of parents in marijuana prevention, research-informed interventions, and substance use among midlife women. She has also presented nationally and published on the topics of creative and innovative teaching approaches that engage students to becoming lifelong learners. Dr. Sarabia is also trained in motivational interviewing, cognitive behavioral treatment(CBT),andscreening,briefintervention,andreferraltotreatment(SBIRT)
David Stark is a Peer Educator and a Peer Counselor at Windhorse Integrative Mental Health in Northampton, Massachusetts. An account of his time as a Windhorse client was published by Springer in 2000 as “Sanity Recovered” in Housecalls: Psychosocial Interventions in the Home He is currently a graduate student in the community mental health and clinical mental health counseling program at Southern New Hampshire University.
VincentR.Starnino,PhD,LCSW,isanAssistantProfessoratIndianaUniversitySchoolof Social Work Dr Starnino’s scholarship focuses on the role of spirituality in the recovery process for people experiencing mental health-related issues, with specific foci on severe mental illness and trauma. He has experience conducting research on innovative and holistic mental health practice approaches and is currently the lead investigator for a study testing the effectiveness of spiritually related group intervention for veterans with PTSD (called “Search for Meaning”) Dr Starnino conducted previous intervention
research on a widely used mental health recovery program (Wellness Recovery Action Planning), as well as research on spiritual assessment and the spiritual developmental process of people with severe mental illness in the context of recovery He has several publicationsonthesetopics
W. Patrick Sullivan, PhD , serves as Professor at the Indiana University School of Social Work and Director of the Center for Social Health and Well-Being. He was also the Director of the Indiana Division of Mental Health and Addiction from 1994–1998. While earning a PhD at the University of Kansas, Sullivan helped develop the strengths model of social work practice, and has extended the model in mental health and addictions treatment and policy. He has over 85 professional publications on a diverse range of topics. He received the Distinguished Hoosier Award from Governor Frank O’Bannonin1997andearnedtheSagamoreoftheWabash,thehighestcivilianawardin Indiana, from Governor Joseph Kernan in 2004 for his work in mental health and addictions. In 2004 he was awarded the University of Kansas School of Social Welfare Outstanding Alumni Award. While at Indiana University has won 11 awards for teaching and the IUPUI Glen Irwin Experience Excellence Award for Community Service
AdakuUtah hails from Nigeria and is an award-winning liberation educator and organizer, healer, and performance ritual artist committed to healing and liberation within oppressed communities. For over 10 years, her work has centered on movements for radical social change, with a focus on gender, sexuality, race, youth, and healing justice She is the Founder and Director of Harriet’s Apothecary, a healing village led by Black CisWomenandQueerandTransfolkscommittedtolivingoutHarrietTubman’slegacy of liberation in our tissues and our lineage. She is also the Founder of BeatBox Botanicals, a local sliding-scale, love-centered, and community-inspired plant medicine and healing practice. Adaku has taught, organized, created sacred healing spaces, and performedbothnationallyandinternationallyasaSocialChangeInitiativesCoordinator, rape crisis counselor, youth organizer, intuitive healer, advocate against gender-based violence, dancer, liberation trainer, sex education teacher, herbalist, sexual violence organizing educator, and board member for several organizations including Yale University, Chicago Foundation for Women, the Illinois Caucus for Adolescent Health, Black Lives Matter, Students Active for Ending Rape (SAFER), Lincoln Center, Brooklyn Museum, Sadie Nash Leadership Project, and more Her greatest desire is to embody the sacredness and wholeness of love and support herself, humanity, and our
larger ecosystem in garnering and using our tools of love, healing, and liberation to fashionjustandsustainablerealities.
Angela Wangari Walter, PhD, MPH, MSW is an Assistant Professor of Public Health in the College of Health Sciences at the University of Massachusetts Lowell Dr Walter is a health services researcher primarily focused on the prevention and treatment of alcohol and drug use disorders and co-occurring diagnoses including Hepatitis C, HIV/AIDS, and mental illness. Dr. Walter’s work aims to advance science and practice in ways that willredressracialandethnicinequitiesintheaccesstoandqualityofhealthcareservices Her research uses community-based participatory approaches to improve access, quality, and effectiveness of health services, particularly for vulnerable and underserved populations.She has a strong background in health care delivery systems and in developing and implementing systems of care for complex populations Dr Walter has conducted large-scale federally and state-funded research for at-risk and vulnerable populations using qualitative and quantitative methods. Her research has been supported by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the Deborah Munroe Noonan Memorial Research Fund, and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) Dr Walter teaches graduate-level courses in health policy and management, innovations in health care delivery systems, and public health program planninganddevelopment.
KimberlyA.Williams,MSSW,istheCEOandPresidentoftheMentalHealthAssociation ofNew YorkCity (MHA-NYC) She is alsoChair ofthe NationalCoalition on Mental Health and Aging and an adjunct lecturer at Columbia University School of Social Work. Ms. Williams serves on a number of advisory and planning committees including the New York State Interagency Geriatric Mental Health and Chemical Dependence Planning Council and the NYS Health Community Advisory Committee She is the authorofnumerouspublicationsongeriatricmentalhealthandonmentalhealthpolicy.
WilliamH.Wilson,MD,isProfessorofPsychiatryatOregonHealthandScienceUniversity in Portland, Oregon. He received his undergraduate education at Brown University, graduated from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, and completed specialtytraininginpsychiatryattheUniversityofWisconsin–Madison Hehasbeenthe principal investigator of NIMH-funded studies focusing on the pharmacological treatment of schizophrenia. He is a distinguished life fellow of the American Psychiatric Association and has received the Exemplary Psychiatrist Award from the National Alliance on Mental Illness, the Mental Health Award of Excellence from the State of
Oregon, and the Nancy Roeske Certificate of Excellence in Medical Student Education. His practice and teaching focus on person-centered adult psychiatry, flexibly integrating psychopharmacology, psychotherapy, and social planning Interests outside psychiatry includesocialjustice,theenvironment,animalwelfare,andtheperformingarts
Preface
CommunityMentalHealth:Challengesforthe21stCentury
Thirdedition
SamuelJ.RosenbergandJessicaRosenberg
The third edition of CommunityMentalHealth:Challengesforthe21stCentury soars into new territory It is bold, includes important and original new voices, is accessible, and is innovative. The text is relevant for students and practitioners from across disciplines. This book is a resource for students preparing to become mental health professionals, for individuals currently working as practitioners in community mental health settings, for educators, and for policy planners and advocates engaged in the evaluation and development ofhumanservices.
In this edition, we have retained and built upon all the features that made the earlier editions so successful. Our text distinguishes itself in the field because it is comprehensive, multidisciplinary, and original Our contributors are top scholars in their respective fields of nursing, social work, psychology, psychiatry, public health, policy, mental health counseling, and family therapy. We also present the voices of psychiatric survivors and leaders in new movements to democratize mental health care. The book is national in scope, with contributions from people who live and work in urban and rural areas and who explore regional challenges in community mental health provision that exist at the intersection of individual circumstances and preferences and the sociocultural and political context in which welive.Thisbookfocusesonmacrostructures,yetwithinthechaptersthereaderwillfindthe voices of those with lived experience who are moving community mental health in new directions Over three-quarters of the chapters are new and all of the chapters have been updated to reflect emerging trends and research. We think that readers will enjoy the inclusion of diverse perspectives from multiple disciplines and geographic locales on topics andissuesthatarecarefullyselectedtoreflectimportanttrendsandissuesinthefield
When we wrote the second edition, it was during the period known as the “Great
Recession,”andweexaminedcommunitymentalhealththroughthelensofsocial,economic, and personal recovery. As the nation struggled to pull itself out of the harshest period of economic contraction since the Great Depression, we provided an analysis of the impact of the recession of community mental health services and program provision We delved deeply into the concept of recovery both at the societal level of program planning and service provisionandattheindividuallevel.
This edition is influenced by a new set of social conditions. Our thinking about recovery hasevolvedandmatured Inthisbook,wemovebeyondourearliermodelofrecoveryandwe argue for a mental health system guided by principles of citizenship and democracy. At the sametime,weareawarethatweareenteringanewpoliticalarenawheretheviabilityofmany things is now being called into question. For example, as this book was being written, the nationwasinauguratinganewpresidentwhohadvowedtoendtheAffordableCareAct We are uncertain about the commitment to mental health provision by the new administration We don’t know what the future will hold for the funding of community mental health services, nor do we know what the political will to support such initiatives will be. We have seenanewchillingeffectdominateournation,wehaveseenariseinhatecrimes,andwelive inaworldwhereviolenceandintolerancearepotentforces Forthisreason,weorganizedthis book around the concept of social justice. It is more important than it ever has been before that we, as leaders and stakeholders in the development and provision of mental health care, hold social justice and freedom from fear of reprisal for being different as central and core valuesthatinformourwork
Thebookisdividedintosixparts.PartI,entitled“RecoveryandBeyond,”iscomprisedof three new chapters. This part sets the stage for the overarching themes of the book: social justice, intersectionality, and an expanded definition of “ recovery. ” In the first chapter, entitled “The Recovery Model and the Citizenship: Taking the Next Steps,” W Patrick Sullivan and Vincent R. Starnino, two leading experts in recovery, lay out a model in which theyforcefullyarguethatrecoverymustbepositionedbeyondthepersonalandlocatedwithin a social and political context. Recovery is broadened beyond a focus on individual recovery and includes a call for mental health services to transform It identifies “coercive practices” and affirms the primacy of citizenship as the right of those using services to have an equal voice in the treatment. Chapter 2, “Mad Resistance/Mad Alternatives: Democratizing Mental Health Care,” is a very special chapter. It is collaboratively authored by a group that includes practitioners, academics, and community leaders The chapter explicates the historical and theoretical perspectives that shape mental health care reform and provides
several examples of new movements in mental health care. As such, this is a unique chapter thatillustratesprogramsthatarebasedonmadresistanceandalternativemodelsofcare.The partisroundedoutwiththethirdchapter,entitled“SpiritualityandRecovery,”byVincentR Starnino and W Patrick Sullivan This chapter delves into important questions that are not often tackled about the role of religion and spirituality in recovery. Should religion and spirituality be addressed in treatment or left alone? Readers will be intrigued and engaged by thiswell-writtenandinformativechapter.
Part II of the book is “Emerging Community Mental Health Challenges,” and is comprised of three new chapters. The first of these, Chapter 4, is about one of the most important areas in community mental health: the treatment needs of our military veterans and their families. Entitled “The Challenges Posed by the Mental Health Needs of Today’s Military Service Members and Veterans,” the chapter gives an excellent overview of veteran mental health care The authors, Kari L Fletcher, Mariann Mankowski, and David L Albright,arewellknownandrecognizedasleadersintheresearchandprovisionofservicesto military members and veterans. The chapter is very relevant for practitioners and includes case examples that illustrate the complex issues that military veterans contend with Issues of gender,sexualorientation,violence,age,andphysicalinjuriesarediscussed Readersseekinga comprehensive discussion of the practice and policy concerns associated with mental health careofmilitaryservicemembersandveteranswillfindithere.Thesecondchapterinthispart is entitled “The Asylum, the Prison, and the Future of Community Mental Health.” It examines the troubling reality that a vast number of persons with serious mental illness are incarcerated.Theauthor,TerryA.Kupers,isprofessoremeritusattheWrightInstituteanda distinguished life fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. His contribution to this book is outstanding and readers will benefit from the depth of his knowledge and analysis. The final chapter in this part is entitled “Suicide: America’s Grim Bellwether” and is authored by Jeanene Harlick. This is an extremely evocative and moving examination of suicideinAmerica.JeaneneHarlickisanexcellentwriterandbrilliantthinkerwhoprovidesa first-personaccountofherstruggleswithdepression,hersuicideattempt,andherexperiences as a survivor Her account is personal, reflective, and analytical It is an amazing chapter that addressesataboosubjectfromapersonalperspectiveandthroughasocioeconomiclens This isachapteryouwillnotfindanywhereelseandweareveryproudtoincludeitinthisbook.
Part III of the book, “Community Mental Health and the PsychoSocial Environment,” contains three chapters The first of these three chapters is “Meeting the Mental Health Challenges of the Elder Boom” by Michael B Friedman, Paul S Nestadt, Lisa Furst, and
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A Matter of tomorrow. An Alfra production. Produced in association with MGM TV. 60 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Medical Center) © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 25Feb70; LP43286.
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The Combatants. An Alfra production. Produced in association with MGM TV. 60 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Medical Center) © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 18Mar70; LP43289.
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The V. D. story. An Alfra production. Produced in association with MGM TV. 60 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Medical Center) © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 25Mar70; LP43290.
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Emergency in Ward E. An Alfra production. Produced in association with MGM TV. 60 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Medical Center) © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 8Oct69; LP43296.
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Thousands and thousands of miles. An Alfra production. Produced in association with MGM TV. 60 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Medical Center) © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 12Nov69; LP43300.
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Exits and entrances: show biz in a lively era. Time Life Video. Made by Morrie Roizman. 20 min., sd., videotape in cassette. (The March of time, 1935–1951) NM: compilation, new narration & editorial revision. © Time, Inc.; 15Sep72; LP43309.
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I don’t want to sell Babe. A production of Xerox Films. 20 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Come over to my house) Appl. au.: John H. Secondari Productions. © Xerox Corporation; 20Apr72; LP43313.
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The Murder machine. 90 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Shaft) Based on characters created by Ernest Tidyman. © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 19Feb74; LP43318.
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Winter kill. An Andy Griffith Enterprises production. Produced in association with MGM TV. 98 min., sd., color, 16 mm. © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 15Apr74; LP43320.
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The Idol maker. An Alfra production. Produced in association with MGM TV. 60 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Medical Center) © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 13Oct71; LP43333.
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The Martyr. An Alfra production. Produced in association with MGM TV. 60 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Medical Center) © Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Inc.; 10Nov71; LP43337.
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The Dryden file. Produced in association with Milbaker Productions & Motivision, Ltd. 28 min., sd., color, 16 mm. © Milbaker Productions; 26Oct73; LP43349.
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Who says I can’t ride a rainbow. A Jerry Hammer production. 85 min., sd., color, 16 mm. © Equine Films, Inc.; 18Nov71 (in notice: 1970); LP43350.
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Three tough guys. 92 min., sd., color, 35 mm. © Produzioni DeLaurentiis Intermaco, S. P. A.; 31Dec73; LP43351.
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Fall of Troy. CBS News. 30 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (You are there) © Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.; 6Nov71; LP43361.
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Harriet Tubman and the Underground Railroad. CBS News. 30 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (You are there) © Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.; 25Sep71; LP43362.
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Ordeal of a President. CBS News. 30 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (You are there) © Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.; 8Sep71; LP43363.
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The Record ride for the pony express. CBS News. 30 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (You are there) © Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.; 2Oct71; LP43367.
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Columbus and Isabella. CBS News. 30 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (You are there) © Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc.; 27Nov71; LP43368.
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The Great Gatsby. A David Merrick production. 142 min., sd., color, 35 mm., Panavision. Based on the novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald. © Newdon Company; 6Mar74; LP43372.
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Conrack. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation. 106 min., sd., color, 35 mm., Panavision. From the book The Water is wide, by Pat Conroy. © Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation; 5Mar74; LP43373.
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Suspended. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in cooperation with Universal Studios. 26 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Adam 12) © Adam 12 Productions; 18Feb73 (in notice: 1972); LP43378.
LP43379.
Killing ground. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 26 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Adam 12) © Adam 12 Productions; 4Feb73 (in notice: 1972); LP43379.
LP43380.
Citizen’s arrest — 484. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 26 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Adam 12) © Adam 12 Productions; 21Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43380.
LP43381. Showdown at the end of the world. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: McCloud) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 5Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43381.
LP43382.
The Million dollar roundup. 106 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: McCloud) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 4Feb73; LP43382.
LP43383.
The Mystery of the yellow rose. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 106 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: Hec Ramsey) © Hec Ramsey Productions; 28Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43383.
LP43384.
The Mystery of Chalk Hill. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: Hec Ramsey) © Hec Ramsey Productions: 18Feb73 (in notice: 1972); LP43384.
LP43385.
The Lisbon beat. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Wednesday mystery movie: Madigan) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 3Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43385.
LP43386.
The Park Avenue beat. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Wednesday mystery movie: Madigan) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 28Feb73; LP43386.
LP43387.
The Naples beat. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Wednesday mystery movie: Madigan) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 31Jan73; LP43387.
LP43388.
The Mystery of the green feather. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: Hec Ramsey) © Hec Ramsey Productions; 15Dec72; LP43388.
LP43389.
Hangman’s wages. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: Hec Ramsey) © Hec Ramsey Productions; 27Oct72; LP43389.
LP43390.
The Manhattan beat. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Wednesday mystery movie: Madigan) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 20Sep72; LP43390.
LP43391.
The London beat. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Wednesday mystery movie: Madigan) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 18Nov72; LP43391.
LP43392.
The Midtown beat. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Wednesday mystery movie: Madigan) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 4Oct72; LP43392.
LP43393.
The New Mexican connection. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: McCloud) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 29Sep72; LP43393.
LP43394.
The Barefoot stewardess caper. 106 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: McCloud) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 3Dec72; LP43394.
LP43395.
The Park Avenue rustlers. 80 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (NBC Sunday mystery movie: McCloud) © Universal City Studios, Inc.;
22Dec72; LP43395.
LP43396.
Catch a ring that isn’t there. Produced with cooperation of the American Academy of Family Physicians. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Marcus Welby, M. D.) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 6Feb73; LP43396.
LP43397.
The Day after forever. Produced with cooperation of the American Academy of Family Physicians. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Marcus Welby, M. D.) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 27Feb73; LP43397.
LP43398.
The Tortoise dance. Produced with cooperation of the American Academy of Family Physicians. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Marcus Welby, M. D.) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 6Mar73; LP43398.
LP43399.
Ollinger’s last case. A Harbour UTV production. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Ironside) © Harbour UTV; 1Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43399.
LP43400.
A Special person. A Harbour UTV production. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Ironside) © Harbour UTV; 8Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43400.
LP43401.
The Caller. A Harbour UTV production. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Ironside) © Harbour UTV; 22Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43401.
LP43402.
Drivers. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Emergency) © Emergency Productions; 4Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43402.
LP43403.
School days. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Emergency) © Emergency Productions; 11Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43403.
LP43404.
Boot. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Emergency) © Emergency Productions; 25Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43404.
LP43405.
Hold down. Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 26 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Escape) © Escape Productions; 11Feb73; LP43405.
LP43406.
Render safe. Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 26 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Escape) © Escape Productions; 11Mar73; LP43406.
LP43407.
Lost. Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 26 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Escape) © Escape Productions; 25Mar73; LP43407.
LP43408.
Walk south. Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 26 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Escape) © Escape Productions; 1Apr73; LP43408.
LP43409.
Seed of doubt. Universal Studios. Produced in association with Groverton Productions, Ltd. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Owen Marshall, counselor at law) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 1Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43409.
LP43410.
An Often and familiar ghost. Universal Studios. Produced in association with Groverton Productions, Ltd. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Owen Marshall, counselor at law) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 4Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43410.
LP43411. Sometimes tough is good. Universal Studios. Produced in association with Groverton Productions, Ltd. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Owen Marshall, counselor at law) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 15Jan73 (in notice: 1972); LP43411.
LP43412.
They’ve got to blame somebody. Universal Studios. Produced in association with Groverton Productions, Ltd. 53 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Owen Marshall, counselor at law) © Universal City Studios, Inc.; 12Feb73 (in notice: 1972); LP43412.
LP43413.
Night watch. A production of Mark 7, Ltd. Produced in association with Universal Studios. 26 min., sd., color, 16 mm. (Adam 12) © Adam 12 Productions; 11Feb73; LP43413.