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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
Monday, May 16, 2005
Mother's Serious Mental Illness and Substance Use among Youths New report from SAMHSA - "Although substance use and serious mental illness (SMI) tend to occur together among adults and parental substance use is associated with an increased risk of substance use in the offspring,research findings are not conclusive about whether substance use among youths is associated with parental mental illness.This report focuses on the association between mother's SMI and substance use among youths aged 12 to 17." Principal findings include: "In 2002 and 2003, an annual average of 2 million (12 percent) mothers living with youths aged 12 to 17 had serious mental illness (SMI) during the past year; among youths aged 12 to 17, 3 million (12.1 percent) youths lived with a mother who had SMI; youths living with a mother who had SMI had an increased risk of past month alcohol or illicit drug use compared with youths living with a mother who did not have SMI." See also the page at the SAMHSA site linking to
related resources.
Taking Aim Together (Schizophrenia Digest) Article reprinted from
Schizophrenia Digest at the NAMI web site - "The relationship between a physician and patient is, inevitably, as fragile and complicated as a cobweb. When problems in the body arise there is, in one corner, a doctor in a starched lab coat, bolstered by academic credentials and the medical community. In the other corner is the patient, naked beneath a paper gown, feeling vulnerable as he or she is poked, prodded and examined. When illness involves the brain, the dynamics between physician and patient become even more complex. A person's most private thoughts, beliefs and life goals are being scrutinized, and ultimately judged, by a psychiatrist. With a prescription pad, the doctor can try to rewrite the script in their patient's mind and-while they’re at it-bring on a cornucopia of side effects that may change the patient's life just as profoundly. The lack of balance in the doctor-patient relationship is particularly acute in schizophrenia, often characterized by a consumer's lack of insight into his or her condition..."
The long road home: Families key to caring and recovery in first episode psychosis Article in the Spring 2005 issue of
Cross Currents, published by Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health - "Early intervention is crucial to getting youth experiencing a first episode of psychosis on the path to recovery. A first psychotic episode (FPE) typically occurs in a person's teens or early 20s and may develop into bipolar disorder or schizophrenia. The incidence rate of FPE is estimated to be 15-20 cases per 100,000, according to the Canadian Mental Health Association. A large body of research has found that early intervention brings about timely treatment, accelerates recovery, preserves psychosocial skills and lowers the risk of relapse. Families play a key role in facilitating these positive outcomes..."
Caring for the caregiver: Concurrent disorders pose unique challenges for families Article in the Spring 2005 issue of
Cross Currents, published by Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health - "...A 2002 study in the
Community Mental Health Journal found that people with concurrent disorders have more difficulty managing daily living tasks than people with a single disorder and that their caregivers spend more time in direct care, crisis intervention, creating structured activities and providing financial support. They also reported greater dissatisfaction with their family relationships, compared to people with a single diagnosis. What this translates into is a strong need for support for caregivers. This gaping necessity is exactly why the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto in partnership with Elmgrove Services at Brockville Psychiatric Hospital in Brockville, Ontario, is running the first study in Canada to examine how to best support these families in a group environment."
States face "meltdown" over Medicaid American Medical News story - "Lawmakers' resolution to shave $10 billion in savings from Medicaid likely means that further cuts to physician reimbursement, patient rolls and benefits are ahead. The recently passed fiscal year 2006 budget resolution calls for a $10 billion reduction in projected Medicaid spending over five years. While a significant sign of congressional intent, the measure is only a blueprint for the final budget. Now lawmakers in various committees must fill in the details of how budget targets will be reached. The Bush administration has proposed finding Medicaid savings by curbing what it sees as inappropriate use of state cost-shifting mechanisms and cracking down on waste, fraud and abuse. It's hard to believe that the government will be able to find $2 billion in savings a year through those measures alone, said Stephen Edwards, MD, past president of the American Academy of Pediatrics and chair of AAP's access subcommittee..."
A Hospital Stay Can Make An Older Person More Likely To Commit Suicide Science Daily story - "A study in the May edition of the
Journal of the American Geriatrics Society indicates that suicide in persons age 80 and older is more prevalent among those who have been hospitalized than in those who have not. A review of data on nearly 1.8 million people age 52 and older revealed that about two-thirds of the oldest subjects who committed suicide had been hospitalized for an illness in the previous two years. This is the first study to examine this type of association between hospitalization and suicide in older adults."
A Public Health Crisis: Children and Adolescents with Mental Disorders Kansas City Infozine story - "A school superintendent whose daughter once attempted suicide, a, college student, a social worker, a board-certified child psychiatrist, and a member of President Bush's New Freedom Commission on Mental Health warned today that children's lives will be lost without programs for early identification, evaluation and treatment of mental disorders. In briefings for the U.S. Senate and House of Representatives, the Campaign for Mental Health Reform (CMHR) addressed misinformation and distortions surrounding a critical need identified by the Surgeon General and the President's Commission-as well as by the medical and public health communities."
Integrated chemical-dependency and mental-health treatment best for adolescents Story at
Medical News Today (UK) - "Adolescents with alcohol- and drug-use disorders often have co-occurring mental-health disorders. 'Dual-diagnosis' patients - those with co-occurring substance-abuse and mental-health problems - tend to have less successful chemical-dependency (CD) treatment outcomes. Findings indicate that dual-diagnosis adolescents in private, managed-care CD treatment who receive psychiatric services have better CD-treatment outcomes than those not receiving these services. Adolescents with alcohol- and drug-use disorders often have co-occurring mental-health disorders. Furthermore, patients with co-occurring substance-abuse and mental-health problems tend to have less successful chemical-dependency (CD) treatment outcomes. A recent study of adolescent patients in private, managed-care CD treatment has found that those individuals who receive needed psychiatric services are more likely to be abstinent from both alcohol and drugs than those not receiving these services. Results are published in the May issue of
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research."
Copyright 2003 © Bill Davis.
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