A least one problem I envision with such MH Articles in WP is the fact that you would, in some cases, have patients writing the textbook. There are many aspects of mental, emotional, and behavioral conditions that are beyond some persons¹ ability to accept. In the very first month that I signed on as a WP editor I encountered such a problem. I wanted to upgrade an existing Article on a chemical dependency-related subject, and immediately encountered strong resistance from another editor. I was attempting to emphasize the disease component of the condition, but the editor refused to acknowledge this fact. Being very new to WP, after a least a week of back and forth with this editor, of endless diatribes by them, and every one on my edits being changed, I finally gave up, left the Article, and haven¹t looked back since. I have practiced (one day I may get it right :-) ) in the fields of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy for 42 years now. I wanted to bring some expertise to the Articles in WP related to my fields, but have backed away.
I would love to see more, well-written Articles on all aspects of MH in the encyclopedia. I believe they should be written by persons schooled in the fields, and should be written so that any sentient person could understand it. For me, the true measure of an ³expert² in something is his or her ability to explain it to someone who isn¹t.
I would also like to see links to biographies of persons in the encyclopedia who have suffered from these conditions.
Some thoughts.
Marc Riddell
It's "consumers", not "patients". That cranky statement aside...
[[NAMI]] highlighted a study done on the stigma associated with psychiatric disabilities and found that the population that had the most intransigent prejudices against the mentally ill were mental health professionals themselves. This is disappointing, but not surprising. Though study after study showcases the success rate of the Recovery Model, few MHPs know it, much less accept it or even understand it.
On a side note, many people reject the disease model of addiction. I myself stopped drinking through [[Rational Recovery]]. A 29% success rate [[12 step model]] simply didn't cut it for me.
Nina