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"Action Methods for Healing the Effects of Trauma" ( MS Word format).
In this issue we are featuring a brief article from Mario Cossa about how Action Methods, that range of expressive therapies that include psychodrama and drama therapy, dance / movement therapy and music therapy are ideally suited to working with trauma survivors. Mario Cossa is a psycho dramatist, drama therapist and drama educator who offers training in the USA, Canada, the UK, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. His workshop "Befriending Your Amygdala" puts neurobiology into action together with addressing the effects of secondary traumatisation on human service workers. You can contact Mario at cossa@attglobal.net
Tuesday, May 03, 2005
Living With Schizophrenia: A Family Perspective Article in
Online Journal of Issues in Nursing at
Medscape - "The lifetime emotional, social, and financial consequences experienced by individuals with schizophrenia have significant effects on their families. Family responses to having a family member with schizophrenia include: care burden, fear and embarrassment about illness signs and symptoms, uncertainty about course of the disease, lack of social support, and stigma. Study findings about families in which parents are hostile, critical, or overly involved are equivocal about whether this negative environment contributes to patient relapse. This review summarizes the studies related to the family responses and emotional environment of families who have a member with schizophrenia."
Public have prejudiced attitude toward ECT Brief article at
Psychiatry Matters based on a study published in
Psychiatry Research - "Having a prejudice toward electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) appears to be a 'uniform attitude' among the general population, probably as a result of misconceptions about the technique, survey findings show. 'Although its efficacy and safety have been demonstrated for many psychiatric conditions, and most patients are enduringly satisfied with the results, ECT has a negative image in the media,' observe Christoph Lauber and colleagues from the Psychiatric University Hospital in Zurich, Switzerland."
Millionaires And Mental Health: Proposition 63 In California Article in
Health Affairs - "In November 2004 California passed Proposition 63, a landmark piece of mental health and fiscal legislation. This initiative places a 1 percent tax on adjusted gross income over $1 million, affecting about 30,000 taxpayers and raising $1.8 billion (a 31 percent increase) in new revenues over the first three years to support county-operated mental health systems. Our analysis suggests that Proposition 63 passed with strong support from Democrats, urban dwellers, and social workers and in counties with high rates of homelessness. Proposition 63 faces challenges in implementation and provides unprecedented opportunities for transformation and change. California passed Proposition 63, a landmark piece of mental health and fiscal legislation, in the November 2004 election. California has a long history of using the initiative process to pass laws that are often controversial and influence the rest of the nation." Also available in
Acrobat format (PDF).
Neighborhood Residence and Mental Health Problems of 5- to 11-Year-Olds Abstract of a study in
Archives of General Psychiatry - "The percentages of children above the clinical threshold were 21.5%, 18.3%, and 11.5% in neighborhoods of low, medium, and high socioeconomic status, respectively. A substantial proportion of variance in children’s total internalizing scores (intraclass correlation, 11.1%) was attributable to between-neighborhood differences. Concentrated disadvantage was associated with more mental health problems and a higher number of children in the clinical range, after accounting for family demographic characteristics, maternal depression, and earlier child mental health scores. Neighborhood collective efficacy and organizational participation were associated with better mental health, after accounting for neighborhood concentrated disadvantage. Collective efficacy mediated the effect of concentrated disadvantage. "
Serious Psychiatric Impact of Marijuana Use Evident in Growing Body of Research PR Newswire press release - "The Nation's Drug Czar, John P. Walters, and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) Administrator, Charles G. Curie, joined with scientists and experts from the leading mental health organizations today to alert parents about the danger marijuana poses to their teens' mental health. ... A number of prominent studies have recently identified a direct link between marijuana use and increased risk of mental health problems. Recent research makes a stronger case that cannabis smoking itself is a causal agent in psychiatric symptoms, particularly schizophrenia. During the past three years, these studies have strengthened that association and further found that the age when marijuana is first smoked is a crucial risk factor in later development of mental health problems."
Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.
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