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Originally posted by KnowYourEnemy
Originally posted by boymonkey74
I work in a Mental Health unit and it is hit and miss with the medication they give out, some works for one person and others work for another, but I have noticed a lot of press saying you can cure mental illness with diet etc,
I see the things people can do when mentally ill and it scare's me.
I had one patient who had to stop taking his med's because of some health scare and he was off them for a week and boy he was way way way worse than he was when he took his med's.
Mental illness can be caused by a lot of different factors and trust me when I say it's better for those people and everyone else around them that they take the med's.
Its the hardest job I have ever had and the amount of time's I have come home in tears because a patient I have been working with and get on with attack's me and beats the crap outa me because of his illness.
The burnout rate is one in three in my job and the company I work for have a special unit for staff who have burnt out or started to get mentally ill themselves because of the job.
I dont think we will fully understand mental illness for a long time but at the moment lets leave the treating of it to the professionals.
And remember mental illness will affect one in three of us in our life times. So don't laugh at people you meet who are mental.
BM xxx
Thanks for the input.
That’s a good point, it is very individual. I think the saying goes every mental illness is unique, or something along those lines. These drugs each do very specific things and when a different diagnoses and medication is only a checkbox away, there is no way to promise successful treatment or the correct treatment at all.
I believe it is 100% true you can prevent mental illness with good diet and an active lifestyle, but it probably won’t work for all treatments.
A lot of people who get extremely angry are addicted to the drugs, wether they know it our yet.
It would be a hard job and thankyou for what you do. You people are highly underpaid.
I think mental illness would be simple to work out and that corporations already have.
Why are you calling them mental if you work in the field?
www.npr.org...
But was Sybil's story really true? A new book, "Sybil Exposed," suggests that Sybil, whose real name was Shirley, pretended - she pretended to have multiple personalities, in part to please her therapist. Joining me now to talk more about it is Debbie Nathan, the author of "Sybil Exposed: The Extraordinary Story Behind the Famous Multiple Personality Case." She joins us here in New York, at our studios. Welcome to SCIENCE FRIDAY.
www.salon.com...
Debbie Nathan’s “Sybil Exposed” is about psychiatric fads, outrageous therapeutic malpractice, thwarted ambition run amok, and several other subjects, but above all, it is a book about a book. Specifically, that book is “Sybil,” purportedly the true story of a woman with 16 personalities. First published in 1973, “Sybil” remains in print after selling over 6 million copies in the U.S. alone.
A work of high Midwestern gothic trash, “Sybil” might have been purpose-built to enthrall 14-year-old girls of morbid temperament (which is probably the majority of 14-year-old girls, come to think of it). I would not be surprised to learn that it is circulated as avidly on middle-school playgrounds today as it was in my own youth. My sisters, my friends and I all devoured it, discussing its heroine’s baroque sufferings in shocked whispers before promptly forgetting all about it until the TV movie starring Sally Field came along.
That should have been the end of “Sybil,” another flash-in-the-pan “true life” paperback shocker that people sorta believe but mostly not — rather like “The Amityville Horror.” Instead, the book, written by journalist Flora Rheta Schreiber, became the catalyst for a psychotherapeutic movement that ruined many lives, beginning with the woman whose story it claims to tell.