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Institutionalisation - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The term institutionalisation is widely used in social theory to denote the process of making something (for example a concept, a social role, particular values and norms, or modes of behaviour) bec...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institutionalisation |
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Institutionalization (psychology) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In clinical and abnormal psychology, institutionalization refers to deficits or disabilities in social and life skills, which develop after a person has spent a long period living in mental hospital...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Institutionalization_(psychology) |
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Some concerns have also been raised regarding the institutionalization of children. In 1990, the American Public Welfare Association estimated that 65,000 children were living in group homes, residential treatment centers, or psychiatric hospitals.
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Microsimulation Paper No. 2 ... James McNally and Douglas A. Wolf ... Abstract: Research on the patterns and behavioral consequences of kin networks among the older population is limited due to the shortcomings of most available survey data. Often, household surveys obtain little information on the number and characteristics...
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Health Information Technology and Telehealth ... Hospitals and Health Systems...
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Amazon.com: Institutionalization of Usability: A Step-by-Step Guide
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Even if doctors of prior generations had understood the essentially biological nature of schizophrenia, it is unclear that they would have had much to offer patients in the way of effective therapy beyond the segregation and physical restraints that characterized institutionalization prior to the ad ... In the Middle Ages,
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