Showing posts with label Mental Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mental Health. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

Suicide Prevention 101 for Parents - Do All You Can, Before it's Too Late

We cannot tip toe around this topic. If like me, you don't want to be the person in pain saying "I knew something was wrong. I wish I had done something, I wish I had known what to do." 

Read...share... do something! 




 Register at:

 

Join the Facebook Live event at:

 

This webinar is hosted by the California Department of Education.

Wednesday, July 22, 2020

Understanding Kanye West's Bipolar Disorder

Today Kanye's wife Kim Kardashian West asked the world for compassion and privacy as their family battles the realities of living with someone with Bipolar Disorder. 

Understand, then offer understanding. Learn more about mental health so you can help others and drop some of the judgement. 


Understanding Kanye West's Bipolar Disorder
— From a presidential bid to Satanic vaccines -- could this represent a full-blown manic episode?
by Michele R. Berman, MD, and Mark S. Boguski, MD, PhD July 15, 2020
There have been several reports that Kim Kardashian-West is "concerned" about her husband, rapper and entrepreneur Kanye West, and some of his recent behavior. Kanye, 43, was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2016 and Kim is concerned that West may be going through a manic period.
On the Fourth of July, West announced that he was running for President. A few days later, he did a 4-hour rambling interview with Forbes magazine. Some of the unusual statements he made included:
  • He's running for president in 2020 under the new banner of the Birthday Party. Tesla/Space X founder Elon Musk is giving him advice, and he will name a preacher from Wyoming as his vice-presidential candidate. In addition, he said, "I'm speaking with experts, I'm going to speak with Jared Kushner, the White House, with Biden."
  • He no longer supports President Trump: "I'm taking the red hat off."
  • He's suspicious of a potential COVID-19 vaccine, as vaccines are "the mark of the beast."
  • He believes "Planned Parenthoods have been placed inside cities by white supremacists to do the Devil's work."
  • He envisions a White House organizational model based on the fictitious country of Wakanda in the "Black Panther" film.
In a 2019 interview in Vogue magazine, Kardashian-West openly discussed her husband's mental health issues. She said that, in the past, West found it hard to accept that he has bipolar disorder, telling people that he was instead suffering from sleep deprivation. However, she said that he now accepts his diagnosis. "'I think we're in a pretty good place with it now,' she said, adding that West has a newfound sense of purpose -- to show that you can live a normal life with mental illness. 'It is an emotional process, for sure. Right now everything is really calm. But we can definitely feel episodes coming, and we know how to handle them.'"
But for West, "handling them" doesn't include medications. According to Kardashian-West, "For him, being on medication is not really an option, because it just changes who he is."
Speaking with David Letterman last year for his Netflix series My Next Guest Needs No Introduction, West explained that taking medication every day can "ramp him up" which can be a double-edged sword: "[W]hen you ramp up, it expresses your personality more" and you have "a heightened connection with the universe," as well as more energy and productivity. But West also admitted that during his manic periods he may suffer from racing thoughts, irritability, sleep loss, and paranoia or psychosis. "When you're in this state, you're hyper-paranoid about everything.... Everything's a conspiracy. You feel the government is putting chips in your head. You feel you're being recorded. You feel all these things."
Whether West will actually run for president remains to be seen. On Wednesday, he reportedly filed some of the paperwork necessary to appear on ballots, but he has already missed deadlines for certain states and more filings are needed for the rest. Even as a write-in candidate, some states require paperwork filed in advance for those votes to be counted.
Bipolar Disorder
Bipolar disorder is a mental health condition that causes extreme shifts in mood, energy, and behavior. People with bipolar disorder experience both dramatic "highs," called manic episodes, and "lows," called depressive episodes. These episodes can last from hours to weeks, and many people have no symptoms between episodes.
According to the National Alliance on Mental Illness, there are four types of bipolar disorder:
  • Bipolar I Disorder is an illness in which people have experienced one or more episodes of mania. Most people diagnosed with bipolar I will have episodes of both mania and depression, though an episode of depression is not necessary for a diagnosis. To be diagnosed with bipolar I, a person's manic episodes must last at least seven days or be so severe that hospitalization is required.
  • Bipolar II Disorder is a subset of bipolar disorder in which people experience depressive episodes shifting back and forth with hypomanic episodes, but never a "full" manic episode.
  • Cyclothymic Disorder or Cyclothymia is a chronically unstable mood state in which people experience hypomania and mild depression for at least two years. People with cyclothymia may have brief periods of normal mood, but these periods last less than eight weeks.
  • Bipolar Disorder "other specified" and "unspecified" is when a person does not meet the criteria for bipolar I, II, or cyclothymia but has still experienced periods of clinically significant abnormal mood elevation.
Bipolar disorder affects nearly 6 million adults in the U.S., or about 2.6% of the population over 18 years of age. The median age of onset is 25 years, although the illness can start as early as childhood or as late as the 40s or 50s. It affects men and women equally and is found in all racial and ethnic groups and all social classes.
Much has been written about the depressive side of bipolar disorder, while much less material is available about the manic side (it doesn't even get its own page on the National Institute of Mental Health, NIMH website). This article will focus on mania.
The primary symptoms of mania include:
  • Talkativeness
  • Rapid speech
  • Decreased need for sleep
  • Racing thoughts
  • Distractibility
  • Increase in goal-directed activity
  • Psychomotor agitation
  • Expansive mood
  • Mood lability
  • Impulsivity
  • Irritability
Mania also commonly presents with psychotic features, which include delusions or hallucinations. Many patients endorse grandiose delusions, believing they are high-level operatives such as spies, government officials, members of secret agencies, or that they are knowledgeable professionals despite lacking such background. These individuals may also experience auditory or visual hallucinations, which only present when they are in the manic phases. Some of the most common delusions are delusions of paranoia, in which patients believe that people are stalking, targeting, or surveilling them. They may believe this to be done by government agencies, gangs, or others.
These patients are highly unlikely to respond to outsiders' views on their psychosis as well as their mania. A component of the manic phase is that the individuals themselves generally do not realize what is happening (poor insight). The problem is mainly noticed by others, including family members, friends, and even strangers or police.
Unlike full-blown mania, hypomania does not cause major difficulties in social or occupational function. In addition, it tends to last at least 4 days, but usually not as long as a week.
Treatment of Bipolar Disorder
Treatment can help many people, including those with the most severe forms of bipolar disorder. An effective treatment plan usually includes a combination of medication and psychotherapy, also called "talk therapy."
Bipolar disorder is a lifelong illness. Episodes of mania and depression typically come back over time. Between episodes, many people with bipolar disorder are free of mood changes, but some people may have lingering symptoms. Long-term, continuous treatment can help people manage these symptoms.
Medications generally used to treat bipolar disorder include mood stabilizers and second-generation ("atypical") antipsychotics. Treatment plans may also include medications that target sleep or anxiety. Health care providers often prescribe antidepressant medication to treat depressive episodes in bipolar disorder, combining the antidepressant with a mood stabilizer to prevent triggering a manic episode. Examples of these types of medications include:
Mood stabilizers: To control episodes of mania
  • Lithium (Lithobid)
  • Valproic acid (Depakene)
  • Divalproex sodium (Depakote)
  • Carbamazepine (Tegretol, Equetro, others)
  • Lamotrigine (Lamictal)
Antipsychotics: Added if symptoms of depression or mania persist despite treatment with other medications
  • Olanzapine (Zyprexa)
  • Risperidone (Risperdal)
  • Quetiapine (Seroquel)
  • Aripiprazole (Abilify)
  • Ziprasidone (Geodon)
  • Lurasidone (Latuda)
  • Asenapine (Saphris)
Antidepressants: Used to control depressive symptoms. Because an antidepressant can sometimes trigger a manic episode, it's usually prescribed along with a mood stabilizer or antipsychotic. An extensive discussion of the many types of antidepressants is beyond the scope of this article.
Michele R. Berman, MD, and Mark S. Boguski, MD, PhD, are a wife and husband team of physicians who have trained and taught at some of the top medical schools in the country, including Harvard, Johns Hopkins, and Washington University in St. Louis. Their mission is both a journalistic and educational one: to report on common diseases affecting uncommon people and summarize the evidence-based medicine behind the headlines.


Friday, February 5, 2016

Woman with Asperger’s shot dead by police in Arizona

Woman with Asperger’s who touched millions with viral video shot dead by police in Arizona

NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Mesa police investigate officer-involved shooting

A woman with Asperger’s who posted a touching viral video with her service dog last summer has been shot dead by police.
Danielle Jacobs was killed by Mesa, Arizona, officers on Thursday after they arrived at her apartment for a suicide call around 11 a.m., her mother Stacia confirmed to the Daily News.
Police told local media that the 24-year-old came at them with a knife and they fired in self-defense.
Jacobs had garnered international attention last year for posting a courageous video where she sobs as her loving dog Samson provided comfort during a meltdown and used his paws to stop her hitting herself.
“This is what having Asperger's like,” she wrote alongside the clip, and told theHuffington Post, “When I have a meltdown, I often have self-injurious behavior and I often self-harm.”
The video has been made private, though up until three days before her death she posted videos of the canine comforting her during outbreaks of anxiety.
DANIELLE JACOBS/VIA YOUTUBE
“I talked to her last night and the night before and she seemed fine,” her mother, who now is taking care of the Rottweiler, told the News.

Danielle Jacobs, an Arizona woman with Asperger's who was in a touching viral video last year, was shot dead by police in Mesa.




Millions viewed a video that Jacobs 

courageously posted last year, showing her 

dog Samson comforting her during a 

meltdown. She added  that people who knew her were questioning whether police shooting the young woman in the stomach was necessary. “Before the police arrived she wasn’t posing a threat to the community at all,” Stacia said.

“And the police came into her own place. They shot and killed a 24-year-old autistic, mentally ill individual whom they had been familiar with and aware of her special needs.” Detective Esteban Flores told AZ Family that police had responded to a suicide call at the same residence two years ago. Jacobs lived in a “mother-in-law” apartment next to an older couple’s house.The Mesa Police Department said that two people in their 70s were at the home on Thursday.
Flores told the Daily News in a statement Thursday night that "This morning officers from the Mesa Police Department were involved in an officer involved shooting with a 24-year-old woman who was threatening suicide with a knife" and did not elaborate on the circumstances of the incident.  Police who responded to a suicide call on Thursday said that the 24-year-old came at police with a knife.

Jacobs’ openness about the struggles she faced as a person with Asperger’s, and her close relationship to Samson, warmed the hearts of more than 2 million people who viewed her video last summer.

Her mother said that Jacobs was caring young woman who would have given someone she’d just met the shirt off her back.
She added that after the holidays her daughter had — despite a limited income from her job at Target — bought two Christmas trees and ornaments on sale to give to low income families for this upcoming December.
Officers involved in the shooting, none of whom were hurt, have been placed on administrative leave, according to ABC 15.  They were not wearing body cameras.

Wednesday, August 5, 2015

Execution by Mental Illness, Part 3 Response from Seth's Family. He Wasn't Invisable.

I stumbled upon your page as I am combing the on-line articles on Seth, looking for clues. Yes, he was loved, dearly and deeply, and at the same time was profoundly mentally ill. I fell in love with this man when I was young, and had a beautiful daughter with him. Due to his mental illness, he was never truly capable of having a healthy relationship, despite my repeated tries. I saw him last in 2012, in LA, and he again pushed us out of his life. I AM coming, to bring flowers, for Seth. He was loved, he is missed.


-----Dear Brandy, 

I will take flowers too. 
Donna

Monday, August 3, 2015

Execution by Mental Illness Part 2 ; No Flowers When People with Mental Illness are Killed by Police?.


Today as I drove past the spot when a homeless man was shot by police there was no sign that a human being, who killed no one, had lost his life. His crime, mentall illness, not comprehending police commands. No street memorial, no flowers, no notes, no RIP Seth, nothing. No sign that any one had lost their life just a few days ago. It seems no one cries for him. Sad. So sad to be invisible.  

Armed Man ‘Firing Into the Air’ Shot by LAPD in Studio City, Prompting Bomb Squad Response.

and... 





LAPD chief says Studio City shooting was a 'suicide by cop'


The night before Seth Raines was shot to death by Los Angeles police in Studio City, a chaplain in a skid row homeless shelter pleaded with him not to leave.
The 44-year-old Raines had made huge strides since arriving at the Union Rescue Mission, where he had recently completed an intensive, year-long recovery program, said the shelter's chief executive, the Rev. Andrew Bales.
The program included one-on-one time with a counselor, regular workouts in the gym, visits to the learning center and spiritual guidance.





Just recently, Raines and others in recovery had a cap-and-gown ceremony with friends and family looking on.
Raines was beaming that day, Bales said.
"I was with him a few weeks ago as he graduated. Shook his hand and took his picture with him. It's been on my mind since Friday," Bales said mournfully. "I just see his shining, cheerful face and blue eyes."
Friday was the day Raines died.
LAPD Chief Charlie Beck told reporters Wednesday that investigators believe the shooting was a "suicide by cop" scenario, based on the man's actions and on interviews with his family.
Witnesses said Raines fired shots into the air and toward the ground about 3:20 p.m. near Vantage Avenue on Ventura Boulevard. Soon after, police responded to the scene.
Terrified witnesses sought cover and hid behind police cars as officers inched closer to the man.
But witnesses said Raines appeared to be calm as he sat on a brick ledge outside a bank.
"He looked like he was just waiting for the cops," witness Paul Gilmartin said after the shooting.





Beck said Raines, identified later by the county coroner, had what police thought was an explosive device: natural gas cylinders with wiring connecting them to a cellphone. The device wasn't explosive, Beck said, but was so convincing that the LAPD deployed a bomb robot to detonate it and another object found near the man's body.
Beck said the officers shot Raines after he refused to drop his pistol and instead pointed it at the officers. That pistol was recovered at the scene.





"Of course, we still have much investigation to do and the final conclusions have not been reached, but the only conclusion we've come to at this time is that this was a suicide by cop," Beck said. "All those things are very consistent with somebody that wanted to take their own life."
The chief said the shooting was a "very difficult incident for everybody."
"We not only had to shut down a very active boulevard, but we also had to take a human life," he said. "And that is, of course, something that we take very seriously."
Raines didn't give any indication of where he was going or why he was leaving when he packed up and left the skid row mission the night before he died, Bales said.
Mission residents and staff didn't hear about what happened to Raines until one of his cousins sent Bales an email this week, thanking him and the shelter for all they had done for Raines.
"He let us know how [Raines] felt comfortable here. He loved this place," Bales said.
A Facebook page that appears to have belonged to Raines shows him holding up an image of a skull days before he died, along with a picture of flames spelling out "RIP."
"There's no real way to figure out what's going through someone's mind when they take this kind of drastic action," Bales said.
The LAPD said it would not release the names of the officers involved until after the so-called 72-hour briefing, where Beck and command staff will be told about the initial investigation. The officers involved were assigned to the LAPD's Van Nuys Division, a department spokesman said.
The shooting marked the 23rd time this year that LAPD officers have shot someone. Twelve of those people died.
The shooting will also be reviewed by the district attorney's office, the Police Commission and its independent inspector general.

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Execution by Mental Illness; A Shooting Has Me Thinking There Has To Be A Better Way!



Okay, I'm back on my "Be Afraid, Be Very Afraid for our boys . Police shoot to kill". We talk inclusion yet, we live in a country where individuals with mental health issues not only suffer the realities of their illness's - but as a result of our collective ignorance - are vunerable to execution by default. 


This week there was a fatal police shooting in our town on our main street, Ventura Blvd. A busy street with families walking and visiting bookstores, clothing shops and eateries. Its always felt like a safe place for everyone, not a street where you expect to see a police officer kill a man.

I wasn't there, when the shooting occured. I just heard  people talking about how they couldn't drive on Laurel Canyon because the police had it cordoned off. Then I turned on the news to hear a man had a gun, and the police shot him. My first thought was sadness in general for a terrible situation. The next morning I scanned the internet to find out what had happened, and I read this:

“He was just firing into the air while there were children and parents walking around. He was just firing into the air,” Keshishyan said. “Police showed up, and they told him to drop his weapon…He wasn’t listening.”  Witnesses said he fired at least one shot in the air and then police opened fire.

After police tried to negotiate with the man for about five minutes, the man “held up his gun and aimed toward the police, and that’s when they shot him,” Keshishyan said.

Another witness, Wyatt Torosian, said police fired two shots, sending the “bedraggled” man back and killing him in front of the Union Bank building.

“That was it for the man. It was very dramatic,” Torosian said.  Torosian, who was inside a nearby Starbucks, said he was told the man had fired into the air. A third witness described five or six shots being fired by the man.

The armed man hadn’t aimed at any other people on the street, Keshishyan said. He had held up some kind of object that appeared to be in a bag toward police and then put it back down, she said “And they shot him”.


What I hear in this news report - and please know I am biased in support of those who cannot speak for themselves - this individual did pose a threat to our community, and he did not seem to comprehend the officer's directives. This should not have been a death sentence. 1 in every 54 boys in this country has Autism, and lack the social skills to survive a situation with Law Enforcement.  I'm afraid for my son. Lord knows, there has to be a better way.

Monday, June 8, 2015

Young People and Mental Health - The Stat's Will Disturb You

Young People and Mental Health - The Stat's Will Disturb You. The numbers sure disturbed me. At the same time the easy to read warning signs listed here were really helpful. Let's spread this and educate families :)
Donna

Youth-Counseling
Share this infographic on your site!

Are the Kids Alright? Young People and Mental Health

Mental illness is often thought of only as an adult concern. But about half of mental illnesses begin to reveal themselves in childhood. What is the state of children’s mental health and how is it different from that of adults?

Children and Mental Health

Almost 15 million American children have some kind of diagnosable mental disorder. (1)
4 million
American children and adolescents with a serious mental disorder (2)
2 in 10
Children 9-17 with any diagnosable mental or addictive disorder that causes at least minimal impairment (2)
1 in 2
Mental disorders that begin by age 14 (2)
In any given year, only 20% of children with mental disorders are identified and treated. (2)
Most common disorders among children 8-15 (percentage in age group with disorder) (3)
ADHD: 8.6%
Mood disorder: 3.7%
Major depression: 2.7%
Conduct disorder: 2.1%
Depression: 1%
Anxiety disorder: 0.7%
Panic disorder: 0.4%
Generalized anxiety disorder: 0.3%
Eating disorder: 0.1%

Ripple Effects

Mental health problems can lead to issues with family and school — and can even lead children to attempt suicide.
Suicide
Suicide is the third-leading cause of death for people age 15-24. Suicide kills more Americans in this age group than these causes combined: cancer, heart disease, AIDS, birth defects, stroke, pneumonia, influenza and chronic lung disease. (2)
9 in 10
Children and adolescents who commit suicide who have a mental disorder (2)
School problems
1 in 2
Students 14 and older with a mental illness who drop out of high school (2)
Legal trouble
Youths in juvenile detention with at least one mental illness (2)
Boys: 65%
Girls: 75%

Identifying and Treating the Problem

Early identification and adequate treatment can quite literally be the difference between life and death for young people with mental illness.
Signs of mental illness
Signs can vary depending on the disorder and age of the child.
Common signs of mental health trouble, by age group: (4)
Age 4-7, preschool/early elementary years
  • Bad behavior at preschool or daycare
  • Hyperactivity outside of what other children are doing
  • Insomnia
  • Persistent nightmares
  • Excessive fear, worrying or crying
  • Extreme disobedience or aggression
  • Lots of temper tantrums all the time
Age 7-11, grade school years
  • Inconsistent friend group
  • Excessive fear and worrying
  • Extreme hyperactivity
  • Sudden drop in school performance
  • Loss of appetite
  • Sudden weight changes
  • Obsession over weight
  • Sudden change in sleep habits
  • Visible and prolonged sadness
  • Visual or auditory hallucinations
Age 11-19, tween and teen years
  • Other common signs on either list above
  • Destructive behavior
  • Repeatedly threatening to run away
  • Self-harm
  • Withdrawal from family or friends
  • Troubling writings or art that suggest desire to harm self or others
Treatment
Though children’s brains are still in a state of development, adequate treatment of mental disorders can help put a young person on a path to a healthy future.
Most common treatment options (1, 5)
  • Medication
  • Psychotherapy
  • Cognitive behavioral therapy
  • Art therapy
  • Animal-assisted therapy
  • Group therapy