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The Complexity of Youth Suicide and Prevention

Posted on 04/12/2008 | 0 Comments

There's a lot of misinformation out there about youth suicide. Suicide rates in young people nationally have decreased by about 20% from the mid 1990’s to 2004.

Evidence-Based Medicine and You

Posted on 01/12/2008 | 0 Comments

Evidence-based medicine (EBM) is a term that has become widely used in health care settings. But, what exactly is EBM and what does it mean for you?

Medications and Mental Disorders in Young People

Posted on 27/11/2008 | 0 Comments

The recent Globe and Mail piece on mental health concerns pertaining to children and youth strikes many correct notes, but unfortunately also incorrectly hits a few important “major chords”, particularly pertaining to the use of medications to treat mental disorders in young people.

Broadening the Spectrum of Stories about Mental Illness

Posted on 24/11/2008 | 0 Comments

This week the Globe and Mail is revisiting the issue of Canada's mental health crisis in a week long expose. Saturday's article addressed child and youth mental health. Kudos to Anderssen and Picard for bringing attention to an issue that is often underreported and often misunderstood by mainstream media outlets. The piece has some important points to make - most notably about the absurd double-standard we have about mental health care in this country:

Dr. Leslie Ramsammy, President of the Sixty-first World Health Assembly visits Halifax

Posted on 20/11/2008 | 0 Comments

Sometimes you have to travel far and wide to meet the leaders in your field. Other times they come to you. Dr. Leslie Ramsammy is in Halifax this week speaking about health for all in resource-poor countries and meeting with local health providers.

Depression is not just being Blue

Posted on 17/11/2008 | 1 Comments

Everyone feels low or sad sometimes. Often those feelings are in response to a negative event or life problem. Those feelings are perfectly normal. Indeed the ability to experience these emotions may be an essential part of what it means to be human.

Studying the Brain from the Inside Out

Posted on 12/11/2008 | 0 Comments

Ever find one of those websites you just can't stop going to? A few months ago a friend sent me a link to TED - an annual conference devoted to technology, education and design. Now I'm hooked.

Enhancing Successful School Learning by Understanding How the Brain Works

Posted on 07/11/2008 | 2 Comments

There is no health without brain health. A healthy functioning brain is the foundation for all successful learning, social, civic and economic development. The school environment is an important component of healthy brain development. Just as schools are locations in which physical health can be encouraged and improved, so are they locations in which brain health can be encouraged and improved.

What is Health 2.0?

Posted on 03/11/2008 | 1 Comments

Web 2.0 has been exploding over the past few years. Simply put Web 2.0 is a an innovative, creative and collaborative way to share information on the web using tools such as social-networking sites, video sharing sites, wikis, and blogs.

What is Knowledge Translation?

Posted on 30/10/2008 | 1 Comments

Knowledge translation (also known as KT) is one of those important things that has been going on since the dawn of time, but has now been given a name and a scientific grounding. Many things that we have learned have been from knowledge translation - someone who “knows” has taken that knowledge and put it into a format that helped us learn. This is great as long as the knowledge is correct.

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Thank you, Judith, for an interesting post, rasiing debate about such an important topic.I think more research is needed, but the kind of research that needs to be done is a matter of differing opinions. I think more attention needs to be given to the social conditions which affect people’s mental health. Like The Critical Psychiatry Network, I disagree with the emphasis on biological research. Both here and in the US so much research focuses on neurobiology and genetics. Yet, after many years of research, there is no evidence that brain disease is the basis of what are known as mental illnesses. The Campaign to Abolish Psychiatric Diagnoses (rightly in my view) calls for an end to the years of fruitless research to find biological correlates which continue to deliver nothing clinically useful.‘I would like to see more recognition of the importance of user-led research into issues of concern for the service user, which often professionally-led research has failed to address. I agree, Judith, that drug treatments have debilitating effects on the lives of people who take them. More research is neeeded to look into service users’ experiences of psychiatric drugs and into finding alternatives to drug treatments. The unaceptable adverse effects of drugs tends to be ignored or denied when research is initiated and funded by drugs companies motivated by their profits.I appreciate the good work and intentions of the Time to Change anti-stigma campaign. We do need to fight against stigma, but perhaps we should look first at the stigmatising attitudes coming from within the mental health services and question the validity of stimatising diagnostic labels.

By Lesekele on March 13th

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