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Link Minds, Like Mine TV ad (WMV format)
We are featuring the second of three TV Ads developed in New Zealand by the Link Minds, Like Mine programme. This highly successful anti discrimination programme has been very effective in presenting to the people of New Zealand how mental health problems affect many of our neighbors and friends. You can see the first of the three ads about Lana on our IIMHL website. It may take sometime to download this file especially if you are not using a DSL line.
Friday, May 14, 2004
Testimony of Eileen D. White, Vice-President, NAMI Consumer Council Before the Institute of Medicine Committee Transcript of White's testimony, at the NAMI web site - "Your Committee has taken on the enormously important task of applying the "Crossing the Quality Chasm" report to mental health and addictive disorders. When it comes to the mental health system, the gap is indeed a chasm – and it looks like the Grand Canyon. For people living with mental illnesses, the mental health system is huge and daunting, and scary for those who don’t know their way through it. ... The sad reality today is that many people with serious mental illnesses don’t seek or participate in treatment because they have had negative, even traumatizing experiences with the mental health system in the past. I myself have had dehumanizing experiences while in treatment."
The other prison scandalColumn by Rich Lowry, editor of the
National Review, at
Townhall.com, on prisons in the US - "It is telling that two of the guards involved in the Iraq scandal were prison guards in the United States. Our prisons aren't run the way cellblocks 1-A and 1-B in Abu Ghraib were between 2 a.m. and 4 a.m. last fall, thank goodness, but they tend to be pits of sexual violence, madness and drug abuse. They are at once too brutal and too lax. Fixing them is not something we owe the international community or anyone else -- besides ourselves. ... Suicidal despair is a common feature of prisons, since they are used to warehouse the mentally ill. Instead of deinstitutionalizing the mentally ill, we have trans-institutionalized them, effectively transferring them from mental-health hospitals into prisons. There are more mentally ill people in America's jails and prisons -- somewhere between 200,000 and 300,000 -- than in all its psychiatric hospitals. They don't get proper treatment and are often punished for the consequences of their illness by being placed in solitary confinement, thus exacerbating their sickness."
Wave of Mental Problems Follows GIs HomeArticle in, of all places,
Good Houeskeeping - "Soldiers at Fort Carson report a wave of serious mental problems among troops back from the "war on terrorism," according to interviews with soldiers, their families and a therapist working with them. The torment seems linked to troubling behavior -- including a suicide, violence and heavy drinking among a number of the 12,000 troops arriving back in Colorado Springs, nestled in the eastern foothills of the Rocky Mountains, 60 miles south of Denver. They say the Army frequently fails to diagnose or properly help suffering soldiers. In some cases -- particularly in elite fighting units -- soldiers hide problems fearing damage to their careers, turning instead to alcohol and sometimes resulting in domestic violence..."
Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.
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