Tuesday, November 19, 2013

NAMI Blog Repost

Tuesday, November 19, 2013 Let’s Connect for Mental Health By Bob Carolla, NAMI Director of Media Relations This past summer, the White House Conference on Mental Health launched a National Dialogue in which communities large and small have engaged in dialogues about mental illness and needs in the mental health care system. NAMI members have participated in many forums, including one held on college campuses and at veterans’ facilities. NAMIonCampus has produced a produced a special toolkit for use with college students and we have launched a new national education program, NAMI Ending the Silence, designed to educate and empower high school students. A New Initiative This week, NAMI introduced a new initiative in partnership with the National Council on Behavioral Health (National Council), called Connect4MentalHealth that seeks to keep moving the National Dialogue forward to action. Connect4Mental Health is calling on community leaders to make mental health care a priority. Commitment is needed not just from the mental health community, but also law enforcement, emergency services, public housing, school districts and others. Efforts will focus on four specific strategies: Early intervention. Creative use of technology. Integration of services. Improved continuity of care. These strategies can help break cycles of hospitalization, homelessness or incarceration. They are community-focused and reflect the need for collaboration. They can help save money in the long run. Support Exists for Greater Priority For too long, mental health care has been “the poor step child” of American health care, even though the cost to the country’s economy is an estimated $300 billion a year. Mental health care receives only six to seven percent of all federal health spending; meanwhile, 40 percent of adults living with mental illness do not receive treatment. From 2009 to 2012, states slashed approximately $4.35 billion from mental health care. Awareness of the need for change exists. A recent poll of 1000 persons indicated that: 82 percent see people living with mental illness as being treated differently than others people because of social stigma. 74 percent claim to know someone who lives with mental health condition. 41 percent believe access to mental health treatment is poor or awful. 87 percent recognize the need to prioritize funding for early intervention. 68 percent believe mental health care should be addressed at both the national and local levels. 91 percent agree that that community can do more to help people affected by mental illness. Despite these figures, one of the most disappointing responses of the past year has been that many states have nonetheless rejected expansion of Medicaid under the Affordable Care Act, which would have covered people who have no health insurance. People living with mental illness are among the largest group of potential beneficiaries from states expansions. We still have much work ahead. Model Programs Play a Role There is no “one size that fits all” in mental health care treatment. Local circumstances will always influence basic strategies. As part of launching Connect4Mental Health, a summit in Washington, D.C. highlighted four examples: Henderson Behavioral Healthcare in Fort Lauderdale, which developed an evidence-based early intervention program that has helped hundreds of adults live an independent lifestyle in supported housing. Vinfen in Boston, which is using technology to encourage more accurate and frequent reporting on medication adherence and other needs, with estimated savings of $3.8 million to the health care system over three years. Center for Health Services in San Antonio, which has partnered with police, firefighters and emergency response teams to divert more than 1,000 individuals living with mental illness from hospitals or jails each month. MHA Village in Los Angeles, which provides continuity of care that increased employment 200 percent while lowering hospitalizations, homelessness and incarcerations. Real-life examples help establish that the vision of new, strengthened mental health care system is not an illusion. It is real and achievable. There is already a foundation to build on—if community leaders are willing to seize the opportunity. Change cannot be achieved without continuing dialogue. It also will depend ultimately on community action. In order to help individuals and families affected by mental illness, NAMI is committed to moving dialogue and action forward for the long haul. Posted by Katrina Gay at 4:53 PM Labels: connect4mentalhealth, ending the silence, mental health, nami, national dialogue, policy,

Saturday, November 9, 2013

Another reason that here is the place

Another main reason that Disney World holds some old fears and paranoia for me is that back in 1996, when I was a senior in High School, on a music trip with the chorus, we were here and I experienced prodrome. I'll explain; prodrome refers to a set of symptoms, almost like a warning sign, that happens sometimes years before, sometimes months prior, or even a decade or more earlier than the onset, or breakthrough episode of psychosis. So I'm thinking that since I had some paranoia and overstimulation when I was down here a full three years before my first major break. Now, 17 years later, and many coping strategies through and, of course on medication now, I've returned to one of my places of origin and early onset.

I've used earbuds and my iPod throughout long lines and crowded parks and restaurants to help offset my paranoia and overstimulation. Dr Malhotra said he treated a lady who raised eight children and had schizophrenia herself. She said the only way she was able to quiet the voices consistently was to always have the radio on. So that's what she did and how she coped. 

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Mega medication dosages in Disney

Hello from Disney World, the most magical place on earth and also the most taxing for someone with mental illness. This is especially true of someone with psychotic type illnesses. After all, there are stimuli all around you as well as children who need you all the time, small children crying and complaining. 
Oh well, it is what it is. We'll see how the rest of the trip goes.