psychiatrist

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Mental Health Problems On Campus: Nationwide Push For Colleges To Prioritize Psychiatric Support

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown Report

Arcadio Morales, one of six residence deans at Stanford University, has lived in an apartment in the campus dorms for 15 years, often fielding late-night phone calls from students about everything from Frisbee injuries to mid-term anxiety to alcohol poisoning. He says some arriving freshmen have always packed emotional baggage along with their laptops and books. But the mix of problems he’s called to weigh in on has become more serious in recent years.

“Early on,” he says, “most of the issues that surfaced were roommate issues, compatibility issues.” He still gets that sort of thing, along with the calls from “very involved” parents who want him, for example, to go down the hall and wake up their son or daughter. But these days, Morales is getting more calls about students in need of substantial psychiatric support.

“We’re getting students that wouldn’t have been here 10 years ago,” Morales says, “because they’re on antidepressants or antipsychotic medication, and they’re functioning fairly well.” But it can be a big challenge for colleges when these students have crises, he says.

National epidemiological studies confirm that what Morales is seeing is happening on campuses nationwide, irrespective of the type of college or its size …

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Continue reading this very important NPR report
Listen to the corresponding NPR audio segment

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According to Psychiatrist Dr. Catherine Harmer and her team of researchers at Oxford University…

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown Report

Antidepressant

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Antidepressants “work instantly”

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Being funny about the unfunny: a lighthearted poem about dementia

Sunday, October 25th, 2009
Filed under: Uncategorized

Dr. David E. Thomas is a 60-year-old male physician specializing in psychiatry. He was diagnosed with Lewy Body Dementia (LBD) in October 2007, and currently runs this very active, very wonderful blog. Here’s a lighthearted poem about an utterly unfunny subject that recently appeared on Dr. Thomas’ website:

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Forgetter Be Forgotten

My forgetter’s getting better,
But my rememberer is broke
To you that may seem funny
But, to me, that is no joke

For when I’m ‘here’ I’m wondering
If I really should be ‘there’
And, when I try to think it through,
I haven’t got a prayer!

Oft times I walk into a room,
Say ‘what am I here for?’
I wrack my brain, but all in vain!
A zero, is my score.

At times I put something away
Where it is safe, but, Gee!
The person it is safest from
Is, generally, me!

When shopping I may see someone,
Say ‘Hi’ and have a chat,
Then, when the person walks away
I ask myself, ‘who the hell was that?’

Yes, my forgetter’s getting better
While my rememberer is broke,
And it’s driving me plumb crazy
And that isn’t any joke.

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Closing the Chasm: Letters from a Bipolar Physician to His Son

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown ReportBooks & Book Reviews

What would it be like to be a physician with a major mental illness? You would have all the challenges of medical practice complicated by moods that swung from high to low and back again. What if you were also struggling to be a husband and a father?

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Ramblings on Becoming a Wheelchair, by Brian Segal

Saturday, March 22nd, 2008
Filed under: Regular Contributors, Brian Segal, Themes, Wheelchairman of the Board 

 

Before I start writing my little essay I would like to make a couple of things clear: Firstly, I accept the fact that I must use a wheelchair. My explanation to people who ask why I am in a wheelchair is simply that I have multiple sclerosis—an accident of life and nothing else. Secondly, and for me something that is obvious, is that I would much rather not have to use one. I don’t feel sorry for myself; I would simply rather not be in my present physical state. Click to continue »

My Four Weeks On Another Planet, by Brian Segal

Saturday, June 16th, 2007
Filed under: Regular Contributors, Brian Segal, Themes, Wheelchairman of the Board 

“Like many people, I felt that seeing a psychiatrist would somehow stigmatize me. If you’re a diabetic and take insulin no one questions you. But if your disease is of the mentally interesting kind…well…that puts you in a different category entirely.”

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Finding a Level Place, by Dr. Joel Walker & Anna

Saturday, June 16th, 2007
Filed under: ThemesThe UpDown ReportArt Gallery

by Dr. Joel Walker & Anna

About this photo essay

This is the story of Anna and her struggle with bipolar disorder.

The photos you are about to see were taken during therapy sessions between Anna and Dr. Walker, who introduced the camera when traditional talk methods stopped being effective.

Anna was having a really hard time recognizing that she was manic depressive, so Dr. Walker suggested something entirely unconventional: he brought a camera to one of their appointments and put it down between them. And he declared that either one of them could pick up the camera at any time during their sessions.

Two photographs taken just days apart show Click to continue »