Showing posts with label mental illness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mental illness. Show all posts

Friday, August 15, 2008

Daily Gazette: Counselors offer hope, empathy to mental illness patients





By Kathy Ricketts

Ten years ago, Kathleen, a social worker at the Albany Medical Center neonatal intensive care unit, thought she could get through her depression by herself. Then she crashed.
“It was very scary,” said Kathleen, now 69, who asked that her last name not be used. “You feel like you’re in this deep, dark hole and you can’t get out.”

To get help, she went to the Ellis Hospital psychiatric unit, where she met two peer advocates, people who have recovered from a mental illness and now are helping others in crisis.

“They talked to me, and I remember that for the first time, I didn’t feel so alone,” said Kathleen. “I felt so much better knowing that these folks had been through a similar experience, and they were now helping others.”

For the past eight years, Kathleen has been working as a peer advocate herself, working 14 hours a week.

“I especially love working with patients in the emergency room and the crisis unit,” said Kathleen. “You have a chance to have an impact on them right away. Sometimes, we just sit with patients. Other times, people want to talk about their pain and trauma. I feel so privileged when people want to do that, and that I can be there for them.”
Training advocates

Lynne Davidson, 49, director of the 11-year-old Ellis Hospital peer advocacy program, trains and supervises the 12 peer advocates who have recovered from mental illnesses such as depression, anxiety, schizophrenia and drug and alcohol addictions.

The team, which ranges in age from 22 to 69, works with patients in the emergency room, and on the adult and adolescent inpatient psychiatric units. They are paid $8 an hour.

“Their job is to provide support, comfort, hope and compassion to patients while they are in the hospital,” said Davidson. “Their experience is unique. Someone who has been through a mental health crisis really has the ability to help someone else going through the same thing. It’s a powerful message of hope and comfort.”

Davidson said the three main goals of the program are:

-- To improve services to patients.

“A lot of people are very scared,” Davidson explained. “They might be hallucinating or confused. The peer advocates can meet with them and give them companionship and comfort. They have the time to spend with patients.”

-- To challenge the stigma of mental illness and educate the community.

“Mental illness is not a character flaw,” said Davidson, who has given several talks in the community about mental illness. “It’s a biological disorder. It doesn’t mean people are weak. It doesn’t mean there is something wrong with who you are. It just means you are challenged in that area. People recover all the time.”

-- To provide job opportunities for people who have been mentally ill.

“Traditionally, people with mental illness have been told they don’t need to work, or they are not capable of working,” said Davidson. “We are trying to increase the percentage of people in our community with mental illness who work, even part time.”
Providing hope

Davidson said peer advocates give people who are mentally ill hope.

“They remind people that they are not alone,” said Davidson. “It’s something people really struggle with, especially people with depression. It feels like hopelessness, but the reality is that almost everyone will recover at some point.”

Kathleen, who was so depressed she would barely lift her head, had several rounds of electroshock therapy, which eventually helped her. She also continues to take medication.

When Davidson approached her about becoming a peer advocate in 2000, at first Kathleen hesitated.

“I wondered why would she want me,” recalled Kathleen. “My self-esteem was not very good.”

However, after 40 hours of training, she began working as a peer advocate.

Peer advocates work closely with nurses in the emergency department, asking them if there are any patients who could use their services. If there is, the peer advocate knocks on the person’s door, tells them who they are and what they do, and asks the person if they would like someone to talk to.

“Sometimes, you go in and people will say ‘no,’ said Kathleen. “That’s fine. But when they start telling you their story, I listen. I try to listen more than talk.”

If the patient is admitted, peer advocates check on patients while they are hospitalized to see how they are doing.

Peer advocates usually work from 10 a.m. through 10 p.m. in five-hour shifts. Each advocate spends about a half-hour briefing the next one.

No one day is typical. Some days, peer advocates are very busy. Other days, they may only see one person.

“I learn so much from the patients,” Kathleen said. “They have so much wisdom. They teach me, and hopefully I teach them.”
Gaining confidence

Arlene, 46, was a peer advocate for two years beginning in 1997. After growing up in foster homes, she was hospitalized for depression and post traumatic stress disorder when she was a teenager.

A recent college graduate with a degree in human services, Arlene said the peer advocacy program gave her self confidence.

“I saw I had something to offer, and that I was good at it,” said Arlene. “That’s where my interest in human services came in.”

Arlene said she loved being a peer counselor.

“It gave me a sense of purpose and encouragement that I could make a difference,” she said. “It gave me back a whole lot more than I gave to the patients.”

Thursday, July 24, 2008

The Korea Times: More Office Workers Suffer Mental Illness

By Bae Ji-sook

Staff Reporter

With the business world becoming ever more complex and competitive, more people are suffering from various mental illnesses due to work-related stress, government data showed Wednesday. While women tended to suffer more human relation-related problems at work, men were seen to be more vulnerable to the stress of work itself.
The number of those diagnosed with depression or other mental illnesses has steadily risen. It jumped to 354,221 in 2007 up from 163,213 in 2000, according to the National Health Insurance Corp.

Competition among peers ㅡ thriving for promotion or having to achieve various work-related targets ㅡ drove office workers to severe stress. Researchers classed this as ``Acute Stress.''

``The key reason to mental disease is stress. Workers should always try to effectively control their workload
and tell themselves not to rush,'' Psychiatrist Kang Hee-chan said.

The number of male office workers suffering mental illness doubled to 212,883 in 2007 from 114,579 in 2000, with the number of females increasing threefold to 141,338.

It was mostly the workload or the work itself giving stress to males. They said they couldn't bear the stress of having to stay late at work or not being able to go home; or dealing with large amounts of hard work. They mostly had ``insecurity'' issues.

Men in their 30-50s were the most common sufferers. About 3.7 percent of those in their 40s and 50s had such symptoms.

On the other hand, women couldn't stand the stress of conflict and tension caused by relations in the office.

``I had this boss always picking on me and teasing me. Whenever she came near me, I started getting nervous. I had indigestion problems and had to take some therapy,'' 31-year-old office worker Yang said. ``I had to take medication for that. I couldn't quit the job, though.'' Yang said she has been taking medicine for the past two months.

Another worker at a perfume manufacturer said she has been in therapy for over a year. ``I am rather a quiet person. But office life was all about being vibrant and having to laugh all day with people. It took me a year to assure myself that I could be friends with my teammates,'' she confessed.

bjs@koreatimes.co.kr

Saturday, June 14, 2008

Psychminded.co.uk: 'Mental illness is petrifying'

From Psychminded.co.uk"
EXCLUSIVE
by Adam James

.....
Day-to-day life as an inpatient on a psychiatric unit is being documented on an internet blog by a woman diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

Mandy Lawrence, aged 45, was admitted into a six-bed NHS psychiatric unit in Bedfordshire on Friday last week and is writing about her experience.

The blog is believed to be the first by a patient while an inpatient on a mental health unit.

In the candid blog Ms Lawrence describes her crisis in the days leading up to her admission and concerns over who will care for her daughter.

On admission she writes of her worries of being prescribed a new anti-psychotic, its side effects, ward conditions, staff, other patients and her struggle with anxiety. Anecdotes range from consultations with her psychiatrist to watching European Championship football with other patients.

To post on the blog Ms Lawrence has been using the laptop of another patient.

The blog, called mandylifeboatsahoy, receives postings from co-bloggers with an interest in mental health.

Ms Lawrence says she has had mental health problems since a teenager. "Throughout that time I have had episodes of mania or depression which would floor me,” she writes.

To read more of her blog, click here ...

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Gazette.net: Peer support offered to those suffering from mental illness

from Gazette.net:
by Kristi Tousignant

When JoAnn Anderson feels like laughing, she buys DVDs of comedians’ stand-up routines for $5 at Wal-Mart, finding a release in the comedic punch lines and witty jokes.

For Anderson, however, it is not just about entertainment. Anderson has bipolar disorder, and the videos allow her to feel good as a way to deal with her mental illness.

‘‘If you can laugh at something, maybe it’s not that bad,” Anderson said.

Anderson, 49, of New Carrollton and friend Regina Prophet, 47, of Temple Hills, who suffers from schizoaffective disorder, have reached out to those suffering just like them. The two lead a mental illness support group as a part of the county’s chapter of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, based in Greenbelt. New to the county, the group started in March with the goal of offering a safe place for participants to discuss their illness.

Read more ...

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

National Post: Mental illness alone can’t explain murder-suicides

From the National Post:

Linda Nguyen, Canwest News Service Published: Friday, May 30, 2008

OTTAWA -- Mental illness alone seldom explains why some people kill their spouses and children, according to Canadian experts in psychology and family homicide.

Sources told the Calgary Herald that Joshua Lall -- who killed five people, including himself, inside an upscale Calgary home earlier this week -- recently reported hearing voices and thought he was possessed by the devil.

Calgary police confirmed late Friday that Lall stabbed his family to death, along with a tenant in his home, on Wednesday morning.

But Martin Daly, a professor in neuroscience and behaviour at McMaster University in Hamilton, said mental illness is seldom enough to drive someone to kill his whole family.

"People with major psychiatric disorders are scarcely more violent than the rest of the population," Mr. Daly said Friday. "They are commanded by the voices to do things like jump in front of a train [or] leap out of a window because they think they can fly - or go to the top of a mountain because they believe they will be taken away by a flying saucer.

"Guys who off their whole family are typically not mentally ill. They've decided to do this over some period of brooding and made a plan."

Read more ....

Globeandmail.com: Celebrity breakdowns: 'Is crazy the new black?'

from Globeandmail.com:

Whether it's a bid for publicity or a desire for sympathy, more stars are pitching their inner demons to the media - prompting some to wonder if mental illness has finally come out of the closet. Hayley Mick reports.


In a world where Lindsay Lohan gets million-dollar offers to come out as gay, and pregnant 17-year-old Disney star Jamie Lynn Spears spikes magazine sales, the latest taboo to hit publicist gold is mental illness.

Kirsten Dunst is one of a string of celebs to put their inner struggles in the spotlight, saying last week that she had been in rehab - not for the drug habit expected of stars such as singer Amy Winehouse - but for depression.

"Depression," the actress says, "is pretty serious and should not be gossiped about."

Gossip is unavoidable, though, with bloggers such as Perez Hilton following celebrities' every move. "Is crazy the new black?" he quipped recently.

The statement from Ms. Dunst followed similar confessions from Counting Crows lead singer Adam Duritz, who plugged the band's new album by disclosing his depression; from Grey's Anatomy star Justin Chambers, who opened up about his sleep disorder in People magazine after checking into the same Los Angeles psychiatric ward as Britney Spears; and Jackass's Steve-O, who blogged about being bipolar.

Whether it's a bid for publicity or a genuine desire to raise awareness, more celebrities are airing their psychological struggles in the media - prompting some mental health advocates to wonder if mental illness is finally coming out of the closet.

Read more ...

Monday, June 9, 2008

New Book Brings Mental Illness to the Forefront

(PRWEB) June 7, 2008 -- Outskirts Press author Two Lenz gives readers a first-hand look at the American mental health care system in Walking Through Walls: Overcoming the Barriers of Serious Mental Illness. In 39 years of hospitalizations, Lenz finds the inner strength to make it through, and shares her hope--and insights into the country's treatment system--in this remarkable book.

May 12, Denver, CO and Las Vegas, NV Research shows mental illness troubles an estimated 26.2 percent of Americans--6 percent severely--and is blamed as the leading cause of disability in the U.S. and Canada among those ages 15-44. But those staggering numbers don't make it any less lonely for people who travel the poorly understood roads of the American mental health system.

Now, one woman is seeking to increase awareness of mental health suffering and give hope to those affected by telling the remarkable story of her 39-year journey through a slew of hospitalizations, diagnoses and medications.

Walking Through Walls: Overcoming the Barriers of Serious Mental Illness (Outskirts Press), by writer Two Lenz, weaves autobiographical narrative with a historical look at our understanding of mental health and problems in modern treatment. Two Lenz (not a pseudonym) was diagnosed with schizophrenia in the 1970s, after suffering from symptoms of mental illness since childhood. Over the years, she would be hospitalized 25 times, undergo a host of treatments and be diagnosed incorrectly until doctors finally found her to be suffering from schizoaffective disorder.

read more ...

Sunday, June 8, 2008

Strib: Love's Dark Journey

From the Minneapolis Star Tribune:

By Kim Ode, Star Tribune
June 7, 2008

Lynda Cannova came through the door of the coffee shop, her face strained and drawn. She looked like one of those marathon runners in their final miles, their eyes betraying a fear that they've spent their last reserves, that there's no more left. If they can only reach the finish line.
If only there were a finish line. For the past seven years, Cannova's life has seemed an unending pursuit of doctors, money, appointments, time, beds and peace of mind for her 26-year-old son Tony, who has a form of schizophrenia. "It's like I can't catch up to anything, even to him," she said.

She was in the midst of an especially bad stretch of whipsaw emotions. A weekend earlier, she'd driven from the Twin Cities to Duluth, where Tony has lived in a group home since November. They'd spent a glorious afternoon on the North Shore, at Gooseberry Falls State Park. Tony was all over the rocks, always just out of reach. "It doesn't matter what age a boy is, he's going to pick up sticks," she'd said, laughing as she watched her son striding 20 yards ahead, whacking weeds along the trail.

Now she took a fortifying swallow of iced coffee and blurted the news. Tony had been in the hospital after cutting his wrists on Memorial Day.

She has "wish list" destinations for him, therapeutic working farms for people with mental health issues. "But he needs to go a year without hurting himself before he could even be considered," she said.

Now it's Month One, once again.

Read more ...

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Myvesta UK: Spending Sprees Plunge Mental Health Patients Into Chronic Debt

By Myvesta UK

Excessive Spending - A Common Symptom and A Terrible Curse


Average household debt reached £9,216 (excluding mortgages) in May, according to the charity Credit Action. One in four people with mental health problems is in debt, which means that a staggering 2.5 million people are estimated to be struggling with debts while dealing with illness.

People with mental health problems are three times more likely to be debt-ridden than the general population as personal borrowing reaches record levels in the UK.

The number is likely to be even higher among those with bipolar disorder as over-spending is often part of the condition, according to experts. They warn that financial troubles result in mental health problems such as anxiety, depression and even suicide, and urge lenders, debt collectors and health professionals to be alert as the credit crunch worsens. They advise that
“When you are well, consider putting some safeguards on your money so that you cannot
over spend it when you become high.”

Gail Porter has it. Stephen Fry made a documentary about it. Sophie Anderton, Adam Ant, Russell Brand, Richard Dreyfuss, Kerry Katona and Tony Slattery are all sufferers. And now Britney Spears, too, has bipolar disorder, at least according to the media, in whose unforgiving
glare she has undergone her very public meltdown.

At times, it seems as though bipolar illness is the latest celebrity fad – like wheat intolerance, perhaps. But the apparent spike in celebrity sufferers points to something else: that awareness amongst both clinicians and the public is growing and some of the stigma attached to admitting to mental health problems has begun to diminish.

It has been suggested that having a celebrity's ultra-outgoing personality might dispose someone to bipolar illness. My heart goes out to anyone in the public eye who does have bipolar. It is an
unforgiving illness that makes you behave, both when manic and depressed, in ways that can leave you deeply ashamed when you're in a fit state to reflect on your behaviour.

Bipolar expert, Dr Ronald R Fieve, describes bipolar excessive spending in his book Moodswing like this:
“the lifestyle of the manic depressive who is in a high tends to be a glorious scattering of money”.
This "glorious scattering of money" can take many forms:
  • It may be wild shopping sprees with a self-medicating overtone.
  • It may be crazy investments when our bipolar grandiosity is telling us we can do no wrong.
  • It may be extravagant gifts to family, friends or charity - again arising from manic grandiosity.
  • Or in some very distressing scenarios, it may be spending a fortune on travel, hotels, pornography, prostitution, champagne and lingerie in an extra-marital affair, cybersex, or whatever outlet manic hypersexuality can find.
  • Gambling more than one can afford, for example on horse racing.
It is not always about a spending spree - Patty Duke, Oscar winning actress, did her share of bipolar excessive spending, which she describes candidly in her autobiography - but the best example of how bipolar ruined her relationship with money was Patty asking two strangers she literally met in a car park to become her business managers (no prizes for guessing how that worked out!)

Comedian and writer Stephen Fry, who has bipolar disorder, has called for better understanding about the links between debt and manic depression. He said: "My own bipolar condition has caused me to go on plenty of giddy spending sprees.

"Because so much stigma still surrounds mental health, many people can't get a job, are on the poverty line, and can't get credit from anyone but doorstep lenders charging up to 400 per cent interest."

Negative attitudes towards people with mental distress may be manifested by physical and verbal abuse, problems in the workplace or discrimination by providers of goods and services. Negative attitudes are sometimes evident in the development of government policies on
mental health.

About 1 in 100 people develop this condition at some point in their lives. The majority of these are ordinary, everyday people. It can start at any time during or after the teenage years, and can affect children and the elderly. It affects as many men as women. The rapid cycling form of the illness occurs in about 1 in 6 cases. Bipolar disorder is often not recognised as an illness, and people may suffer for years before it is properly diagnosed and treated. Like diabetes or heart disease, bipolar disorder is a long-term illness that must be carefully managed throughout a person’s life.

During a manic or high phase, shopping sprees are common. During a low phase, a person may feel so depressed they are unable to leave the house or even answer the phone. Unopened bills pile up. Juggling creditors while trying to recover from an acute phase of bipolar disorder can leave them vulnerable to relapse.

It is not your fault; it is not a character disorder. Neither mania nor depression is a sign of weakness, nor that someone has just given in. It is not something that people are able to just pull themselves out of it.

Chris Fitch, of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, says financial problems are the result of more than overspending. "People with mental health problems are often on low incomes, experience high unemployment rates, and are reliant on benefits. Borrowing money or not paying the bills can often feel like the only options," he said.

Lenders must tread a fine line between not discriminating against people with mental health problems and protecting vulnerable customers whose spending is out of control as a result of illness. But many people in debt report unhelpful, aggressive responses from lenders, resulting in greater anxiety, stress and more debt.

Joanna Elson of the Money Advice Trust said: "The stress of unmanageable debt has a direct impact on an individual's physical and mental well being.

"The guidelines are voluntary but they are designed to encourage good practice by creditors, debt collection agencies and money advisers working with people with debt and mental health problems."

According to Mind's chief executive, Paul Farmer: "Living with bipolar disorder greatly increases the likelihood of falling into debt. In many cases, people are using credit they cannot afford to repay, which means they become trapped in a spiral of debt that further compounds their mental health problems.

"Banks and other lenders should not be encouraging their customers with bipolar disorder to take out more loans when they are already in lots of debt."

Rachael Watson, 34, a PhD student from Blackburn, has bipolar disorder, and over the past few years has racked debts of £35,000. She bought a £14,000 car, using a credit card, days before she was admitted to hospital for mania. While depressed she shopped for unnecessary clothes and food, in the hope it would make her feel more in control. Unable to face the world when she is depressed, phone calls and letters from the bank go unanswered.

Every time she got into debt, her bank encouraged her to release equity from her home to pay back what she owed. As soon as her debts were cleared, they offered her more credit. She is now being pursued by the bank, which has made her so anxious she has been prescribed extra
medication. The bank phones her up to 10 times a day and sends letters demanding payments she simply cannot afford.

Recovery from bipolar disorder can be hampered by the additional stress and practical problems presented by financial difficulties. Whether it is repairing the damage caused by excessive spending during episodes of 'mania', dealing with loss of earnings as a result of illness or taking steps to prevent future problems, financial health can be as important a factor in returning to wellness as other forms of help, treatment and support.

As well as being a consequence of mental ill health, financial problems can increase the stress of day-to-day life and become a 'trigger' for illness.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Wicked Local.com: Patients with psychiatric disorders find hope in Tunefoolery

From WickedLocal.com:

By Francis Ma

Boston - Since the age of 21, Paul Thompson has used medication and therapy to deal with his schizophrenia. He desperately needed both of them, but they failed to give him what he wanted.

“You don’t get a sense of structure,” says Thompson. “That’s sadly lacking in the psychiatric circles. You have so much time on your hands and you tend to dwell on your illness. The entire day revolved around the negativity of my illness.”

This cycle continued until Thompson, along with three other like-minded patients, did what any artist would do when confronted with a dire outlook on life: He started a band.

When Tunefoolery launched in 1994 at the Cambridge-Somerville Social Club, the goal was simple — to use music as an outlet for their creativity. What Thompson didn’t fully realize was that Tunefoolery would grow to 50 members, and provide that much-needed feeling of hope to others suffering from psychiatric disorders. (Thompson prefers the term “psychiatric disorder” to “mental illness” because of the stigma that comes with the latter.)

“With Tunefoolery, as opposed to focusing on the negative, it focuses on our strengths and talents,” explains Thompson. “I’ve seen a lot of people fall through the cracks and into despair with no light at the end of the tunnel. When people have something to look forward to, it gives them a positive perspective.”

Read more...

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

Time: Tallying Mental Illness' Costs


From TIME :
By KATHLEEN KINGSBURY


mental illness cost to society

It's a debate with which the U.S. workplace has yet to come to grips: should employees' mental and physical health be considered equal in importance?

Corporate America's answer has traditionally been unambiguous, with few employer-backed health plans offering any coverage for workers' mental conditions. But that line has been shifting recently — a change that could save the U.S. economy billions of dollars in lost income, a new government-funded study suggests.

Serious mental illnesses (SMIs), which afflict about 6% of American adults, cost society $193.2 billion in lost earnings per year, according to findings published in this month's American Journal of Psychiatry. Surveying data from nearly 5,000 participants, researchers determined that people suffering from a SMI — defined as a range of mood and anxiety disorders, including suicidal tendencies, that significantly impaired a person's ability to function for at least 30 days over the past year — earned at least 40% less than people in good mental health. "The results of this study confirm the belief that mental disorders contribute to enormous losses of human productivity," says Ronald Kessler, a Harvard professor of health care policy and lead author of the study, funded by the National Institute of Mental Health.

read more ...


Monday, May 12, 2008

Science News: Epic Genetics - the biology of mental illness


From Science News:

Genes’ chemical clothes may underlie the biology behind mental illness

In research circles the debate is settled. Psychiatric illnesses are disorders rooted in biology.

As convincing as the evidence is, mysteries still fog our understanding of mental illnesses. Yes, the disorders stem from problems in the brain, but “on the other hand, for time and ages people have been looking at brains under the microscope, and they don’t see much,” says Schahram Akbarian, a psychiatrist and neuroscientist at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester. No lesions, malformations, scars or other outward signs distinguish a mentally ill brain from a healthy one.

In recent years, researchers have searched the genome for mutations linked to mental illness. The scans have been fruitful, perhaps too fruitful. Hundreds of genes have been implicated in predisposing a person to such disorders as addiction, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, depression or anxiety. But no gene has been shown to be a master switch.

The debate has raged for decades over whether mental illnesses sprout from nature or nurture. Scientists now suspect both. A new field linking genes and environment may chart the way for solving some of the mysteries shrouding mental illness.

read more ...

Saturday, May 10, 2008

Experiments in Philosophy: Can the mentally ill be to blame?

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Suppose you discovered that someone has committed a horribly violent crime. And now suppose I tell you one additional fact about the person who performed this act: he or she is mentally ill. In fact, suppose I tell you that the reason he performed this act he is suffering from damage to a particular area of his brain. Would you still conclude that he could be morally responsible for what he had done?

At this point, you might be guessing that no one would hold an agent morally responsible in such a circumstance. After all, how could we hold someone morally responsible for behavior that was clearly the result of neurological illness? Surely, anyone would agree in such a case that the agent is not to blame for what he has done!

Guess again. As Matthew Hutson has recently emphasized, people show a depressingly persistent tendency to attribute moral responsibility -- a tendency that persists even in the face of strong theoretical reasons to reach the opposite conclusion.

Read more ...




Can the mentally ill be to blame? | Psychology Today Blogs

NPR This I Believe: The Importance of Restlessness and Jagged Edges

by Kay Redfield Jamison

I believe that curiosity, wonder and passion are defining qualities of imaginative minds and great teachers; that restlessness and discontent are vital things; and that intense experience and suffering instruct us in ways that less intense emotions can never do. I believe, in short, that we are equally beholden to heart and mind, and that those who have particularly passionate temperaments and questioning minds leave the world a different place for their having been there. It is important to value intellect and discipline, of course, but it is also important to recognize the power of irrationality, enthusiasm and vast energy. Intensity has its costs, of course -- in pain, in hastily and poorly reckoned plans, in impetuousness -- but it has its advantages as well.

Like millions of Americans, I was dealt a hand of intense emotions and volatile moods. I have had manic-depressive illness, also known as bipolar disorder, since I was 18 years old. It is an illness that ensures that those who have it will experience a frightening, chaotic and emotional ride. It is not a gentle or easy disease. And, yet, from it I have come to see how important a certain restlessness and discontent can be in one's life; how important the jagged edges and pain can be in determining the course and force of one's life.

Read more ...

Thursday, May 8, 2008

Royal College of Psychiatrists: 'Quichua' healers of the Andes diagnose mental illnesses

politics.co,uk reports:

Yachactaitas (the Quichua healers of the Andes) may be identifying general psychiatric disorders in their communities, according to a study published in the May 2008 issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry.

Traditional healers' practices are widespread around the world, yet their diagnostic skills have rarely been investigated.

This exploratory study was carried out in Otavalo, in the province of Imbabura in the highlands of Ecuador. For over 18 months, 10 yachactaitas from three rural villages drew patients from the surrounding areas.

Read more ...

Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Poets on Prozac. Mental Illness, Treatment, and the Creative Process

BERLIN, Richard M. (dir.), Poets on Prozac. Mental Illness, Treatment, and the Creative Process, Baltimore, John Hopkins University Press, 2008, 200 p.

ISBN 978-0-8018-8839-7


_blank Poets on Prozac shatters the notion that madness fuels
creativity by giving voice to contemporary poets who have battled myriad psychiatric disorders, including depression, schizophrenia, post-traumatic stress disorder, and substance abuse. The sixteen essays collected here address many provocative questions: Does emotional distress inspire great work? Is artistry enhanced or diminished by mental illness? What effect does substance abuse have on esthetic vision? Do psychoactive medications impinge on ingenuity? Can treatment enhance inherent talents, or does relieving emotional pain shut off the creative process? Featuring examples of each contributor’s poetry before, during, and after treatment, this original and thoughtful collection finally puts to rest the idea that a tortured soul is one’s finest muse.

BIOGRAPHIE

Richard M. Berlin, M.D., is an associate professor of psychiatry at the
University of Massachusetts, a psychiatrist in private practice, and a
published poet. He writes a monthly poetry column for Psychiatric Times and is the author of How JFK Killed My Father, a collection of poems about illness and the healing arts.



Tuesday, May 6, 2008

From The Windsor Star ...

Comedy helps group to cope with their demons
Doug Williamson
Windsor Star

Depression. Alcoholism. Chronic pain. Failed relationships.

Serious subjects, but fair game for a group of budding standup comedians who showcased their talents Monday night.

After practising their routines for two months, seven people suffering from mental illnesses took the stage at the Caboto Club for the kickoff of Mental Health Week, organized by the Windsor-Essex County branch of the Canadian Mental Health Association.

"I went a whole year without laughing or smiling, I just wanted to die," said Denise Jackson of Windsor, one of the neophyte comics who performed at the Caboto Club, and who is being treated for bipolar disorder.

"The message I'm trying to share is there's hope," said Jackson, 45. "Whatever people are experiencing, people have experienced it before. I'm just doing what I need to take care of myself."

People with mental illness also suffer from the effects of misplaced public perceptions, said Vancouver comedian and counsellor David Granirer, founder of Stand Up for Mental Health, a group which advocates using comedy to empower the mentally ill.

Read more ...

Saturday, May 3, 2008

The Writer's Almanac: "The Waitresses"

from The Writer's Almanac:

The Waitresses

The waitresses
At the restaurant
Have to keep reminding
The schizophrenic man
That if he keeps acting
Like a schizophrenic man
They'll have to ask him to leave the restaurant.
But he keeps forgetting that he's a schizophrenic man,
So they have to keep reminding him.

"The Waitresses." by Matt Cook from Evesdrop Soup

Monday, February 4, 2008

"If you can no longer make fun of someone for being black or gay or even disabled, you can laugh at them for being 'wacko'"


Britney Spears is being detained in a psychiatric hospital. Her very public breakdown reminded Emma Forrest of her own slide into mania and suicidal despair - and how her parents helped achieve her ultimate recovery.


Saturday, February 2, 2008

And we think WE have reason to be depressed ...



I don't usually cross-post between my two blogs; frankly, I prefer to keep the depression-related stuff in one place and the "lighter" stuff in another. But since my most effective anti-depressants came from puppy mills and not Wyeth, I've been tuned into this Michael Vick thing from the beginning.



Reading about Georgia and the abuse she suffered at Vick's hands is so similar to what many puppy mill dogs go through. And now his rescued dogs, the ones in good enough physical shape not to have been euthanized, are suffering mental health issues including depression and PTSD. That's Georgia, in the picture above. One of the volunteers is trying to help her learn to trust people.




Yet despite it all ... dogs have a capacity and an ability for forgiveness that we can only aspire to. Read the article. Look at the pictures. And if you can do something for them, do it.


Here is the link to the article:

And here is a link to the audio slide show:

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