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Induction training for social workers
Mental health workers are high-risk victims! Are you still willing to engage in mental health work? If you really like this job, you can become a mental health social worker without a master's degree as long as you do research, join a social work organization or hospital, and participate in internship training. But there is still a lot of knowledge to learn after joining the job, such as psychology, sociology, law, psychiatry and so on. Unfortunately, the treatment of mental health social workers is not very good at present. It's dangerous. Therefore, everyone who wants to help others must think about it. They should not only have smart, fearless spirit and love, but also have some "martial arts". In the face of gangsters, at least protect yourself to the greatest extent.

It is hard to imagine that a normal person would do such cruel behavior if he is not a patient with severe mental disorder! If enough mental health social workers go deep into the community where patients live, understand their difficulties and feedback their demands, will such tragedies be reduced? Allowing patients with mental illness to receive cheap and effective treatment to the maximum extent is not only beneficial to patients, but also conducive to ensuring social stability.

According to the provisions of Article 30 of the Mental Health Law, the hospitalization of mental patients must meet two conditions: patients diagnosed with severe mental disorders have caused harm to their own or others' safety, or there is a danger of endangering their own/others' safety. "Both must be satisfied at the same time, and both are indispensable." This law is to protect normal people from being forcibly sent to the hospital as mental illness. However, will protecting normal people be counterproductive? Is it to prevent patients who should be hospitalized from getting effective and timely treatment?

Do patients with mental disorders and their families think that patients have the right to choose whether to be hospitalized as long as they do not harm others and do not violate the law? If they choose to take medicine at home instead of being hospitalized, and there are not enough mental health social workers to visit patients' homes, can they ensure effective treatment? If mental health social workers concentrate on home visits, who will protect their personal safety? Mostly girls. In the long run, the number of mental health social workers is small, the lubricant of social workers is lacking between patients and doctors, and the relationship between doctors and patients is becoming more and more tense. The tragedy of mental health workers, including social workers and doctors, will continue. This is indeed a question worth pondering.