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The suicide rate among veterans is almost double that of the general American population. It has been rising among those who served in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

military counseling
monkeybusinessimages/ThinkStock

“At a time when 20 veterans a day still die by suicide, [the Department of Veterans Affairs] should be doing everything in its power to inform the public about the resources available to veterans in crisis,” Rep. Tim Walz, the Minnesota Democrat who requested the investigation, reportedly said in a statement. “Unfortunately, VA failed to do that.”

Mr. Walz was referring to a failure in prevention efforts that was detailed in a Government Accountability Office report released recently and was the subject of an article in the New York Times. The report blames bureaucratic confusion and an absence of leadership – epitomized by several department vacancies.

“This is such an important issue; we need to be throwing everything we can at it,” said Caitin Thompson, PhD. She was director of the VA’s suicide prevention efforts but resigned in frustration in mid-2017. “It’s so ludicrous that money would be sitting on the table. Outreach is one of the first ways to engage with veterans and families about ways to get help. If we don’t have that, what do we have?”

Surviving the holidays with depression

The postcard image of the Christmas season is that of joyous celebration with family and friends. For many people, however, this image is false. Many complain about feelings of stress imposed by familial obligations, pressure to conform to those postcard myths, and the financial toll that all of that holiday largesse can exact.

Now add depression to this mix. How can those burdened by depression find some joy at this time of year? In a recent article in the Huffington Post, author Andrea Loewen advises staying away from social media and focusing on the positive.

“[Social media] is a double-edged sword: Either I see all the amazing things everyone else is doing and feel jealous/insignificant/left out, or I see that no one else is really posting and assume they must be too busy having incredible quality time with their families while I’m the unengaged loser scrolling Instagram,” Ms. Loewen wrote. “Either way, it’s bad news.”

One concrete practice that she engages in is taking a few minutes to think about and write down the positive things that happened each day.

“The list includes everything, big and small: from the thoughtful gift I wasn’t expecting to the simple observation that a friend seemed happy to see me,” Ms. Loewen wrote. “Depending on where I’m at in my depression, those seemingly tiny details can be vital reminders I hold a valuable place in the world.”

Artist perpetuates persistent myth

In some ways, Kanye West embraces his diagnosis of bipolar disorder. He calls the illness his “superpower,” and the art on his new album, “Ye,” includes the phrase: “I hate being Bi-Polar/it’s awesome.” But his decision to abandon his medications promotes a myth, Amanda Mull wrote in an opinion piece in the Atlantic.

 

 

“In apparently quitting his psychiatric medication for the sake of his creativity, Mr. West is promoting one of mental health’s most persistent and dangerous myths: that suffering is necessary for great art,” Ms. Mull wrote.

Philip R. Muskin, MD, who is affiliated with the department of psychiatry at Columbia University in New York, agreed that linking mental turmoil with creative genius is indeed problematic. “Creative people are not creative when they’re depressed, or so manic that no one can tolerate being with them and they start to merge into psychosis, or when they’re filled with numbing anxiety,” he said in the Atlantic article.

Esmé Weijun Wang concurred and offered a counterview to that of Mr. West. A novelist who has written about living with schizoaffective disorder, she said: “It may be true that mental illness has given me insights with which to work, creatively speaking, but it’s also made me too sick to use that creativity. The voice in my head that says, ‘Die, die, die’ is not a voice that encourages putting together a short story.”

For his part, Mr. West’s decision to stop taking his medicine threatens to undermine his own mental health. And his public musings could drive others away from treatment.

“Antiopioid backlash” causes pain

An article by Fox News has highlighted the daily toll that opioid addiction is exacting on Americans. Government efforts aimed at quelling the use of opioids by targeting availability have had the unintended consequence of the cut-off of prescriptions by many physicians. With that route turned off, many people are turning to other sources for pain relief – or are being left with no relief.

One person in the article related how his wife is unable to obtain pain relief for her neurologic and spinal diseases. “A welcome death has become a discussion,” he said.

Meanwhile, a 69-year-old veteran said the Department of Veterans Affairs ended his pain medication. “I now buy heroin on the street.”

Another person in the article, Herb Erne III, wrote: “As a nurse, I have seen addicts and the other end of opioid abuse. But there is another side to this crisis that people are not talking about, those that actually need pain medications but cannot get them because of the ‘fear factor’ of running afoul of the antiopioid – including legal ones taken safely under medical supervision – backlash.

“The chronically ill who do not abuse, who do not divert, have become the unintended victims of misguided and overzealous efforts by policy- and regulation-making bodies in the government,” he said.

Grandparents filling void

An article in the Detroit News reported on more carnage of the opioid crisis. In Michigan and elsewhere nationwide, increasing numbers of parents with opioid addiction are unable to safely care for their children or have died because of an overdose. Grandparents are stepping in to assume care.

Results of a national survey involving more than 1,000 grandparents found that 20% are the daily caregivers to their grandchildren. They can be on their own, without any financial aid from state or national programs. Other children without grandparents can be diverted to foster care.

It’s a role few grandparents anticipated. “Our system as a whole is messed up. It tears at my heart,” 47-year-old Christina Wasilewski said in the article. “Everyone keeps saying children are resilient, but only to a point.”

Ms. Wasilewski and her husband assumed care for their granddaughter when they discovered her in physical distress from lack of care.

In Michigan, the increase in the rate of opioid-related deaths slowed in 2017 but deaths still rose 9% from 2016 , according to the Michigan Department of Health & Human Services. The prior year the death rate was 35%. In Michigan, grandparents raising their grandchildren do not have legal parental rights for this care, including the right to seek medical care and to pursue educational options.

Ms. Wasilewski’s concern about these trends led her to launch the Caregiver Cafe, a support group for grandparents raising their grandchildren.

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The suicide rate among veterans is almost double that of the general American population. It has been rising among those who served in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

military counseling
monkeybusinessimages/ThinkStock

“At a time when 20 veterans a day still die by suicide, [the Department of Veterans Affairs] should be doing everything in its power to inform the public about the resources available to veterans in crisis,” Rep. Tim Walz, the Minnesota Democrat who requested the investigation, reportedly said in a statement. “Unfortunately, VA failed to do that.”

Mr. Walz was referring to a failure in prevention efforts that was detailed in a Government Accountability Office report released recently and was the subject of an article in the New York Times. The report blames bureaucratic confusion and an absence of leadership – epitomized by several department vacancies.

“This is such an important issue; we need to be throwing everything we can at it,” said Caitin Thompson, PhD. She was director of the VA’s suicide prevention efforts but resigned in frustration in mid-2017. “It’s so ludicrous that money would be sitting on the table. Outreach is one of the first ways to engage with veterans and families about ways to get help. If we don’t have that, what do we have?”

Surviving the holidays with depression

The postcard image of the Christmas season is that of joyous celebration with family and friends. For many people, however, this image is false. Many complain about feelings of stress imposed by familial obligations, pressure to conform to those postcard myths, and the financial toll that all of that holiday largesse can exact.

Now add depression to this mix. How can those burdened by depression find some joy at this time of year? In a recent article in the Huffington Post, author Andrea Loewen advises staying away from social media and focusing on the positive.

“[Social media] is a double-edged sword: Either I see all the amazing things everyone else is doing and feel jealous/insignificant/left out, or I see that no one else is really posting and assume they must be too busy having incredible quality time with their families while I’m the unengaged loser scrolling Instagram,” Ms. Loewen wrote. “Either way, it’s bad news.”

One concrete practice that she engages in is taking a few minutes to think about and write down the positive things that happened each day.

“The list includes everything, big and small: from the thoughtful gift I wasn’t expecting to the simple observation that a friend seemed happy to see me,” Ms. Loewen wrote. “Depending on where I’m at in my depression, those seemingly tiny details can be vital reminders I hold a valuable place in the world.”

Artist perpetuates persistent myth

In some ways, Kanye West embraces his diagnosis of bipolar disorder. He calls the illness his “superpower,” and the art on his new album, “Ye,” includes the phrase: “I hate being Bi-Polar/it’s awesome.” But his decision to abandon his medications promotes a myth, Amanda Mull wrote in an opinion piece in the Atlantic.

 

 

“In apparently quitting his psychiatric medication for the sake of his creativity, Mr. West is promoting one of mental health’s most persistent and dangerous myths: that suffering is necessary for great art,” Ms. Mull wrote.

Philip R. Muskin, MD, who is affiliated with the department of psychiatry at Columbia University in New York, agreed that linking mental turmoil with creative genius is indeed problematic. “Creative people are not creative when they’re depressed, or so manic that no one can tolerate being with them and they start to merge into psychosis, or when they’re filled with numbing anxiety,” he said in the Atlantic article.

Esmé Weijun Wang concurred and offered a counterview to that of Mr. West. A novelist who has written about living with schizoaffective disorder, she said: “It may be true that mental illness has given me insights with which to work, creatively speaking, but it’s also made me too sick to use that creativity. The voice in my head that says, ‘Die, die, die’ is not a voice that encourages putting together a short story.”

For his part, Mr. West’s decision to stop taking his medicine threatens to undermine his own mental health. And his public musings could drive others away from treatment.

“Antiopioid backlash” causes pain

An article by Fox News has highlighted the daily toll that opioid addiction is exacting on Americans. Government efforts aimed at quelling the use of opioids by targeting availability have had the unintended consequence of the cut-off of prescriptions by many physicians. With that route turned off, many people are turning to other sources for pain relief – or are being left with no relief.

One person in the article related how his wife is unable to obtain pain relief for her neurologic and spinal diseases. “A welcome death has become a discussion,” he said.

Meanwhile, a 69-year-old veteran said the Department of Veterans Affairs ended his pain medication. “I now buy heroin on the street.”

Another person in the article, Herb Erne III, wrote: “As a nurse, I have seen addicts and the other end of opioid abuse. But there is another side to this crisis that people are not talking about, those that actually need pain medications but cannot get them because of the ‘fear factor’ of running afoul of the antiopioid – including legal ones taken safely under medical supervision – backlash.

“The chronically ill who do not abuse, who do not divert, have become the unintended victims of misguided and overzealous efforts by policy- and regulation-making bodies in the government,” he said.

Grandparents filling void

An article in the Detroit News reported on more carnage of the opioid crisis. In Michigan and elsewhere nationwide, increasing numbers of parents with opioid addiction are unable to safely care for their children or have died because of an overdose. Grandparents are stepping in to assume care.

Results of a national survey involving more than 1,000 grandparents found that 20% are the daily caregivers to their grandchildren. They can be on their own, without any financial aid from state or national programs. Other children without grandparents can be diverted to foster care.

It’s a role few grandparents anticipated. “Our system as a whole is messed up. It tears at my heart,” 47-year-old Christina Wasilewski said in the article. “Everyone keeps saying children are resilient, but only to a point.”

Ms. Wasilewski and her husband assumed care for their granddaughter when they discovered her in physical distress from lack of care.

In Michigan, the increase in the rate of opioid-related deaths slowed in 2017 but deaths still rose 9% from 2016 , according to the Michigan Department of Health & Human Services. The prior year the death rate was 35%. In Michigan, grandparents raising their grandchildren do not have legal parental rights for this care, including the right to seek medical care and to pursue educational options.

Ms. Wasilewski’s concern about these trends led her to launch the Caregiver Cafe, a support group for grandparents raising their grandchildren.

 

The suicide rate among veterans is almost double that of the general American population. It has been rising among those who served in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

military counseling
monkeybusinessimages/ThinkStock

“At a time when 20 veterans a day still die by suicide, [the Department of Veterans Affairs] should be doing everything in its power to inform the public about the resources available to veterans in crisis,” Rep. Tim Walz, the Minnesota Democrat who requested the investigation, reportedly said in a statement. “Unfortunately, VA failed to do that.”

Mr. Walz was referring to a failure in prevention efforts that was detailed in a Government Accountability Office report released recently and was the subject of an article in the New York Times. The report blames bureaucratic confusion and an absence of leadership – epitomized by several department vacancies.

“This is such an important issue; we need to be throwing everything we can at it,” said Caitin Thompson, PhD. She was director of the VA’s suicide prevention efforts but resigned in frustration in mid-2017. “It’s so ludicrous that money would be sitting on the table. Outreach is one of the first ways to engage with veterans and families about ways to get help. If we don’t have that, what do we have?”

Surviving the holidays with depression

The postcard image of the Christmas season is that of joyous celebration with family and friends. For many people, however, this image is false. Many complain about feelings of stress imposed by familial obligations, pressure to conform to those postcard myths, and the financial toll that all of that holiday largesse can exact.

Now add depression to this mix. How can those burdened by depression find some joy at this time of year? In a recent article in the Huffington Post, author Andrea Loewen advises staying away from social media and focusing on the positive.

“[Social media] is a double-edged sword: Either I see all the amazing things everyone else is doing and feel jealous/insignificant/left out, or I see that no one else is really posting and assume they must be too busy having incredible quality time with their families while I’m the unengaged loser scrolling Instagram,” Ms. Loewen wrote. “Either way, it’s bad news.”

One concrete practice that she engages in is taking a few minutes to think about and write down the positive things that happened each day.

“The list includes everything, big and small: from the thoughtful gift I wasn’t expecting to the simple observation that a friend seemed happy to see me,” Ms. Loewen wrote. “Depending on where I’m at in my depression, those seemingly tiny details can be vital reminders I hold a valuable place in the world.”

Artist perpetuates persistent myth

In some ways, Kanye West embraces his diagnosis of bipolar disorder. He calls the illness his “superpower,” and the art on his new album, “Ye,” includes the phrase: “I hate being Bi-Polar/it’s awesome.” But his decision to abandon his medications promotes a myth, Amanda Mull wrote in an opinion piece in the Atlantic.

 

 

“In apparently quitting his psychiatric medication for the sake of his creativity, Mr. West is promoting one of mental health’s most persistent and dangerous myths: that suffering is necessary for great art,” Ms. Mull wrote.

Philip R. Muskin, MD, who is affiliated with the department of psychiatry at Columbia University in New York, agreed that linking mental turmoil with creative genius is indeed problematic. “Creative people are not creative when they’re depressed, or so manic that no one can tolerate being with them and they start to merge into psychosis, or when they’re filled with numbing anxiety,” he said in the Atlantic article.

Esmé Weijun Wang concurred and offered a counterview to that of Mr. West. A novelist who has written about living with schizoaffective disorder, she said: “It may be true that mental illness has given me insights with which to work, creatively speaking, but it’s also made me too sick to use that creativity. The voice in my head that says, ‘Die, die, die’ is not a voice that encourages putting together a short story.”

For his part, Mr. West’s decision to stop taking his medicine threatens to undermine his own mental health. And his public musings could drive others away from treatment.

“Antiopioid backlash” causes pain

An article by Fox News has highlighted the daily toll that opioid addiction is exacting on Americans. Government efforts aimed at quelling the use of opioids by targeting availability have had the unintended consequence of the cut-off of prescriptions by many physicians. With that route turned off, many people are turning to other sources for pain relief – or are being left with no relief.

One person in the article related how his wife is unable to obtain pain relief for her neurologic and spinal diseases. “A welcome death has become a discussion,” he said.

Meanwhile, a 69-year-old veteran said the Department of Veterans Affairs ended his pain medication. “I now buy heroin on the street.”

Another person in the article, Herb Erne III, wrote: “As a nurse, I have seen addicts and the other end of opioid abuse. But there is another side to this crisis that people are not talking about, those that actually need pain medications but cannot get them because of the ‘fear factor’ of running afoul of the antiopioid – including legal ones taken safely under medical supervision – backlash.

“The chronically ill who do not abuse, who do not divert, have become the unintended victims of misguided and overzealous efforts by policy- and regulation-making bodies in the government,” he said.

Grandparents filling void

An article in the Detroit News reported on more carnage of the opioid crisis. In Michigan and elsewhere nationwide, increasing numbers of parents with opioid addiction are unable to safely care for their children or have died because of an overdose. Grandparents are stepping in to assume care.

Results of a national survey involving more than 1,000 grandparents found that 20% are the daily caregivers to their grandchildren. They can be on their own, without any financial aid from state or national programs. Other children without grandparents can be diverted to foster care.

It’s a role few grandparents anticipated. “Our system as a whole is messed up. It tears at my heart,” 47-year-old Christina Wasilewski said in the article. “Everyone keeps saying children are resilient, but only to a point.”

Ms. Wasilewski and her husband assumed care for their granddaughter when they discovered her in physical distress from lack of care.

In Michigan, the increase in the rate of opioid-related deaths slowed in 2017 but deaths still rose 9% from 2016 , according to the Michigan Department of Health & Human Services. The prior year the death rate was 35%. In Michigan, grandparents raising their grandchildren do not have legal parental rights for this care, including the right to seek medical care and to pursue educational options.

Ms. Wasilewski’s concern about these trends led her to launch the Caregiver Cafe, a support group for grandparents raising their grandchildren.

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