Posted by: Uticopa in Untagged on
Jun 01, 2009
Our body's ability to metabolise food is complex and not widely-understood. There are as many different types of metabolic-rate as there are, say, types of facial features. If someone has inherited a poor bodily metabolic rate and then, foolishly, overeats to a marked extent as well - then we get the sort of extreme obesity levels one sees in places like the USA. There's one particular family I know where the wife is obese, the husband skinny, the one son following the mother's shape, the other the father's.
Yet, they all eat the same amount and type of food!
Every day there seem to be yet more doctors telling us that what we eat is bad for us. Most related studies have in the past concentrated on how obesity and poor choice of food give undoubted risk to our cardiovascular system, leading to strokes and cancer. However, a new Australian study has now shown a link between Western-style diets and mental health problems in teenagers.
Posted by: Uticopa in Untagged on
May 27, 2009
As the recession deepens, many couples are struggling - financially, in their relationships and in their own inner mental states.
A typical scenario
Where once the joint monthly income was easily enough to cover outgoings, now that one partner has lost their job, their very financial credibility is at stake. Their arguments become ever more rancorous over how to spend their limited resources; they criticize and blame each other for their current financial woes and then retreat from each other in silence or anger.
Posted by: Uticopa in Untagged on
May 27, 2009
It's now out in the open. Unemployment causes depression causes physical symptoms. We all know that the main reason for working is to gain money to feed ourselves and our families, together with fuelling our ever-increasing lifestyles. However, it seems it's more subtle than that - and this is historically significant for men in particular. To work, and indeed the type of work, is a significant source of a person's sense of self-worth and self-esteem.
How many of us recall TV sitcoms of old, like Reggie Perrin and its ilk, whereby men would often still leave for work in the morning - complete with briefcase and pinstripe suit - months after losing their jobs. The stigma attached to disclosing their misfortune was just too much to bear - even to their wives and family - so the familiar, comforting charade of a normal working routine was continued. But what of the bottling-up of anxieties inside, together with the increasing likelihood of more illnesses to come?
It's a known fact that a high percentage of people develop a depressive illness within six months of becoming unemployed. In fact, after relationship difficulties, unemployment is the most likely thing to force you into a bad depression. With the loss of your job, even through no fault of your own, comes the risk of moving from a position of feeling in reasonable control of your life to facing an uncertain future and suffering from an eroded sense of self-confidence - especially if it takes a long time to find another job.
Posted by: Uticopa in Untagged on
May 16, 2009
For men with mental health issues, is life any easier in Scotland? Is NHS provision better in the north than in England and Wales? And what about costs and waiting times?
I thought I'd better find out.
However, before you get your hopes up too much, it seems that information gathered by a spending watchdog has highlighted a mixed picture on the provision of mental health services in Scotland.
Posted by: Uticopa in Untagged on
May 16, 2009
In the days of yesteryear, WW1 soldiers returned from the fields of battle with all kinds of undiagnosed mental health injuries. But what of the soldiers in today's battlefields of Iraq and Afghanistan? A recent investigation puts the spotlight on whether adequate care is offered to them.
In Baghdad, the U.S. military command recently launched an investigation into whether it offers adequate mental health care to its soldiers. This followed a tragic incident where a sergeant allegedly shot and killed five comrades at a clinic on a U.S. base.
Sgt. John M. Russell, from Texas, was taken into custody outside a mental health clinic following the recent shooting and was charged with five counts of murder and one of aggravated assault. The case, which is the deadliest of the war so far involving soldier-to-soldier violence, highlighted combat stress and the emotional problems resulting from fighting in the battle zones of Iraq and Afghanistan.