Sunday, September 2, 2012

President Signs Order to Improve Access to Mental Health for our Veterans and Troops

President Obama plans to sign an executive order today aimed at reducing the rate of suicide and mental health disorders in veterans and troops by improving access to behavioral health care. The order directs cabinet agencies including the departments of Veterans Affairs, Defense and Health and Human Services and Education, to expand suicide prevention efforts, fill vacancies for mental health jobs and widen outreach to service members and veterans. For more info, please visit: www.armytimes.com/news/2012/08/military-mental-health-care-obama-embargoed-083112w/

Mental Health Community (Online) Connects Activists and Practitioners Worldwide

This online community connects people working on mental health issues in Low and Middle-Income countries. It allows people to share information and experiences and to network with partners and colleagues all over the world. They welcome mental health workers, international aid workers, NGO activists, students and anyone who is interested. The organization is focused on Low and Middle-Income Countries joining the community and sharing information about their local projects and needs. There are already more than 200 members in the Online Mental Health Community and hopefully the number will be much growing in the future. The main goals of Mental Health Community are: CONNECT with people working on mental health issues in low and middle-income countries SHARE information about mental health projects, organizations, events and needs ADVOCATE for commitment to mental health in development aid Join the Mental Health Community Online!

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

Army Suicides Reach Record High in July

Thirty-eight U.S. military personnel took their lives in the month of July 2012. I believe that our government can do a better job addressing the mental health of our soldiers. This begins with shattering the stigma that surrounds mental health in our society and, especially, in the military.

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

GO AWAY EVIL

Check out filmmaker Delaney Ruston's short film on a mother living with bipolar disorder in South Africa.

British artist shatters stigma

http://www.wlmht.nhs.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/harvey2.jpg

Interesting article on the new meaning of "mental health"

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/douglas-labier/mental-health_b_1286445.html

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Coming Out of the...Padded Room



Lately I’ve been thinking of how the stigma of mental illness resembles the shame and secrecy that many gay people carried in the past. As more and more people "came out of the closet" the stigma slowly receded and now gay couples have the right to marry in some states and to serve openly in the U.S. military. In my opinion, today it is more acceptable to tell a co-worker that you’re gay than to tell them you have a mental disorder.

Those of us who have been diagnosed with a mental disorder such as bipolar disorder, schizophrenia or even obsessive compulsive disorder are hesitant to reveal our illness to our supervisors, co-workers and even friends and family. Fear of being judged and treated differently keeps us in silence. Sensational news stories featuring violent crimes carried out by a mentally ill person reinforce the tendency to stay quiet.

Yet according to a rigorous health survey conducted by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control in 2004, an estimated 25 percent of adults in the U.S. reported having a mental illness in the previous year. That means in a room of four people, one of you likely has a mental illness. It could be your teacher, your doctor, your taxi driver or your best friend and you may have no idea.

Professionally, it is especially difficult to admit that you’re living with a mental illness. I wonder “Will it prevent me from getting that promotion? Will I be given less challenging projects? Will I still be invited to Happy Hours? Will people whisper and talk about me behind my back?” Fear of being ostracized, judged and labeled prevents me from coming out to colleagues.

We want to be treated the same as anyone else. Sure we have our faults and weaknesses. We wouldn’t be human without them. But honestly I think I am a better employee, friend, manager and daughter since my diagnosis. Today I appreciate the importance of taking care of myself – eating nutritious foods, getting enough sleep, working out my problems with friends or a trusted therapist instead of keeping them bottled up inside. And if we don’t stand up and speak out, society will continue to equate mental illness with insane criminals and deranged homeless people living on the streets instead of with successful and competent professionals succeeding in http://www.blogger.com/img/blank.gifsociety. The judgment and fear will be perpetuated indefinitely and change will evade us for years to come.

Jagannath Lamichane started his own NGO - the Nepal Mental Health Foundation - to fight for the rights of the mentally ill in his native country, Nepal. I made his acquaintance on Facebook two years ago when he first embarked on his life’s mission and I recently had the pleasure of meeting him in person. As we sat in an empty diner in Arlington, Virginia watching the spring rain pour outside, he reminded me of our obligation to come out and tell our stories. “That’s the only way the stigma will begin to melt away,” he said. I voiced my hesitation to speak openly about my mental illness among colleagues. “Are you gonna say it in 10 years when it won’t matter anymore?” he asked without judgment. “Or will you say it now?”

I will say it now.