Saturday, May 25, 2019

Obtaining Mental Health Services

Being a probation military officer is not easy. It requires a lot of knowledge, skills, and experience to be an legal probation officer. Having a golden heart is fine believing that these offenders can change their lifestyle, supporting them in their intention to function in the community, and making sure that the hatful within the community where these offenders argon staying would be safe from any danger. However, objectivity should always come first since homoy lives are dependent on the probation officers ability to supervise and monitor these offenders performance.A probation officer also uses his resources in the community to assist his client, the offender in seeking employment or services such as medical care, alcohol treatment, psychological health treatment, and the worry. The probation officer explains all the terms to the offenders temporary release and the consequences for violating them infra probation. Everything is made clear.In the case of this 22-year-old ma n who have been convicted four times in two years straight for driving while under the bias of alcohol, thorough investigation should be done. This man may be telling his substance abuse counselor that he is clean. He may be erupt in in all his counseling appointments. Nevertheless, these claims do not prove that he has stopped alcohol consumption. Furthermore, having eccentric ideas and opinions this man telling you that his neighbors are monitoring his ventilating system through the television proves that there is something terribly wrong about this person. So, what do I plan to do about the matter?First, researching and investigating about this mans personal history , such as his family to start with, would be a good start. Knowledge about his childhood, his relationship with his co-family members, and his plight during his growing-up years are vital information in knowing how and why he acquired such behavior, vices, and even beliefs that he still carry on up to this day.A backdrop check of his life three to five years prior the present date could also come in handy. Past relationships usually contribute to a persons perspective and sanity. Another background check would be his scholastic and interpersonal performance in school given that he went into one. base from his interaction with these people, I might find clues to some grounds as to why and how this person came to be the way he is.Second, talking with this man would give me hints and clues about the way he thinks, the way he answers questions may it be rational, practical or not, and the way he views the world. Upon acquiring his personal background, a instruct interview about his family and previous relations with others would somehow prove if this man is reliable or not. This would be indispensable because inconsistencies on his statements would prove irregularity of his character, thus making him a threat, somehow, to the community.Third, I would discuss with his substance abuse coun selor all my findings so we could come up with proper procedures needed to prove his mental capability or incapability. I would suggest that the substance abuse officer gives my client some intellectual tests because my client is showing signs of a paranoid insane or of a person just having paranoid reactions that may be due to depression or traumaFourth, I would require my client to abide not only the psychological tests that his substance abuse counselor would give him but also a series of physical exams for instance urinalysis, blood tests, and the like to see if he really is clean or if he went back to alcohol or worse took other substances and mixed it with alcohol altering the effectuate of the alcohol-intake alone.Fifth, I would reiterate to my client the sanctions that he might be subjected to if his tests prove that he is positive of alcohol and/or substance intake. Such are necessary actions for me to accurately and objectively assess him and propose certain measures.Re ferencesCivil Service Associations, Inc. (August 2000). Examination Preparation Booklet.. Principles and Practices in the Treatment of the mentally Ill/Emotionally Disturbed, Problems of the mentally Ill/Emotionally disturbed, booklet 10. pp. 4-5. Retrieved October 10, 2007, fromhttp//www.csea9200.com/pdfs/TestPrepBks/TreatMIllBook10.pdfCourt and Community. (January 2003). Probation Officers. p2, numbers 4 6 . Retrieved October 10, 2007, from

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