Yearly Archive for 2006
Psychiatry & Psychology | By June 03, 2006 | By Tony Brown | 2 Comments
Health Matters - Schizophrenia
Schizophrenia is a chronic, severe, and disabling brain disease. Approximately 1 percent of the population develops schizophrenia during their lifetime — more than 2 million Americans suffer from the illness in a given year. Dr. Kristin Cadenhead, UCSD Department of Psychiatry discusses this mysterious and devastating disease. Read more →
- Mental Health Spending - A Low Priority for Government
- Sergei Korsakoff’s Psychosis
- The Origin of the Human Mind - Insights from Brain Imaging and Evolution
- Resistance to Seeking Treatment for Mental Illness - How Others Can Help
- Brainy Kids’ Brains Develop Slowly
- Latest Lines of Biopsychosocial Research
- Impaired Awareness of Mental Illness
- A Westerner’s Pilgrimage - Chrysanthemum Tea
- Yoga and Paradoxical Wakefulness
- Memory Storage Begins Before Bedtime
- Social Isolation and Mental Illness
The power of stigmatization of the mentally ill is so strong that it keeps mental health low on the list of public priorities for spending. One of the barriers to treatment for the mentally ill is the inability to pay for it, and another is how to access it. Policy-making and funding decisions for mental... Read more →
Korsakoff was one of the greatest neuropsychiatrist of the 19th century and published numerous works in neuropathology, psychiatry, and forensic medicine. Apart from his studies on alcoholic psychosis he introduced the concept of paranoia and wrote an excellent textbook on psychiatry. Read more → Read More →
UCSD cognitive scientist Martin Sereno takes you on a captivating exploration of the brain’s structure and function as revealed through investigations with new advanced imaging techniques and understandings of evolution. Read more → Read More →
There is a time when a mentally ill person may realize that they need help. Symptoms worry them or others enough that they consider getting treatment. But the White House Conference on Mental Health identified stigma as the most important barrier to treatment for the mentally ill. (1) More than any other... Read more →
Do larger brains correlate with higher intelligence? Or does higher intelligence run parallel with the more diverse environmental experiences encountered? This research of nature versus nurture in intelligence, in humans especially, has been a complex and a persistent debate. This article about the brain’s... Read more →
Generally, the latest hot topics in biopsychosocial fields include medical ethics, international medicine and health, reducing health care costs and expanding health services, and correlations between nutrition and illness. To view the latest research in health psychology, behavioral medicine, and the... Read more →
There are about six million severely mentally ill people in the United States. About half of these severely mentally ill do not know they are ill. (1) (Severe mental illness includes schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and a few other diagnoses). There is a medical term for this condition: anosognosia, an... Read more →
When last we met I was standing in a Chinese herbal store with plastic bag full of dried chrysanthemum flowers in my hand. The pharmacist instructed me to combine the flowers with something called Wolfberry fruit an herb that resembled a little like a red crystal rock. In typical Western style, I asked... Read more →
Dr Auriol proposed the term “of paradoxical wakefulness” rather than “of fourth state of consciousness” in order to mark the symmetry of this state of consciousness in its function of cleaning memory, restoring, purifying, in opposition to imaginary enrichment and to the setting... Read more →
Most of us remember pulling an all-nighter and last-minute cramming before an exam despite the fact that your parents and your professors have told you to get a good night’s sleep before an exam. For years, people have believed that sleeping helps to reinforce what we have learned. However the... Read more →
Think about what it would be like to spend most of your time alone because being around other people is just too difficult. You feel that others are judging you for your mental illness, and so you are scared to face the world. You withdraw to avoid this stigmatization. This social withdrawal is emotionally... Read more →
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
- The Anti-Psychiatry Movement
- Vaccines - A Two-Edged Sword
- Should Doctors Have Guns?
- Extremist Muslim Doctors Do More Than Heal
- God And Religion: Is It All In Our Heads?
- Woman Comparable to Men in Domestic Violence: Stereotypes and their Consequences
- The Bipolar Trend
- Anti-Smoking Campaign Doesn't Mess Around
- The Science of Brain Freeze
- Are You Vegetarian? How Do You Get Enough Protein?
- The Implications of Implanted Chips
- Is War A Psychosis?
- The Biopsychosocial Model of Health & Illness
- Meditation for Troubled Minds: Can the Mind Heal the Mind?
- Unhinging from Theory: Autism and Opinions
- Mind-Body: We Want Evidence, Don't We?
- Encephalon, Thirty-Third Edition
- Acknowledging Vaccination Concerns
- Health Care and Politics II - The Democrats
- Usually It's Cheaper to Pay Than to Go To Court
- Recent Drug Warnings About Suicide
- Sleeping on the Job - A Program Director’s Take on IOM Recommendations
- Work and Mental Health
- Why a Smartphone is a Dumb Idea
- Sometimes It’s Good to Be Cold - Therapeutic Hypothermia
- Recognizing the Man in the Mirror
- Brain Blogging, Forty-Second Edition
- Happiness is Contagious, If Not For a Fleeting Moment
- Look Me in the Eyes - From Eye Contact to “Fear Blindness”
- The Doctor Can’t See You Right Now, He’s Napping
- Suicide Rates Could Rise
- Gingko Study Proves Nothing
- Exercise to Keep Your Brain Healthy and Increase Cerebral Blood Flow
- Personal Health Records and Mental Health
- New Option for the Management of Acute Pain
- Depression and the Risk for Cardiovascular Events
- Beating the Biological Clock - Clinical Trials of Tasimelteon
- Ginkgo Biloba Ineffective for Preventing Dementia
- A Special Thanks - Remembering a Man Who Remembered No One
- Psychiatric Conditions and Alcohol Abuse in the College-Aged
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- I found this an excellent post on a very professional blog, and have selected it...
- As a psychologist somewhat familiar with the sleep deprivation research, it stri...
- We can spread happiness by simply smiling at others. We make ourselves happy in ...
- The 6 months I was unemployed (having had a stressful- but not anxiety inducing-...
- Detractors can argue all they want. My now 15 year old was 4 months old and cryi...
- USC doctor Gerald Loeb and Jonathan Kellerman are guilty of implanting un-consen...
- try relaxation techniques. yoga, massage....anything. ^_^...
- I think we all have a place in society for helping people with mood disorders an...
- I've always had a hard time separating my work life from my home life. It took ...
- I have been on the Donor 's list for 17 years, never got a call. But I would sti...
- Very nice work. Thanks......
- Good Day,
I have been diagnosed with Essential Tremor and would like to recei...
- Widely available forms of MCT oil include nonhydrogenated coconut or palm oil, b...
- The only practical way to stop hospital staff and doctors from seeing records th...
- The point that there are cultural differences in individual and societal respons...
- Late 1980s I was under massive stress, blackmail froma hospital (investor) and l...
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