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1
Mental Health More Than The Absence Of
Illness Wellness 10 Compiled By Jennifer Foley
Free Powerpoint Templates
2
Say What You Need To Say Statistics Stigmas
  • Say What You Need To Say
  • (United States)
  • Depression Youth
  • (Canadian)

What stigmas can we brainstorm?
Why is it so easy for people to go there so
quickly?
www.goanimate.com
3
Mental Health
Mental health is a state of well-being in which
an individual realizes his or her own abilities,
can cope with the normal stresses of life, can
work productively and is able to make a
contribution to his or her community.
More than the absence of mental disorders or
disabilities.
HOPE Whats Goin OnJonah Mowry (436)
4
Our Brain Can Get Sick Too
5
Our Brain Can Get Sick Too
6
Our Brain Can Get Sick Too
7
Our Brain Can Get Sick Too
8
Our Brain Can Get Sick But It Can Also Heal!
  • Famous People with Mental Illness
  • (Part 1 1340)
  • Famous People with Mental Illness
  • (Part 2 1357)

9
A Day In The Mind of Illness (243)
10
Mood Disorders Depression
Saving Lives - 4 Simple Words 1118
Face To Face With Mental Wellness Taylor
(Depression AnxietyBiking) 346
11
Causes
  • There is no single cause of depression. It is
    likely caused by a mixture of many things like
  • Family history and genetics
  • Medical illnesses
  • Certain medications
  • Life events or environmental stresses
  • Biological factors such as hormonal changes
  • Psychological vulnerability

12
Who gets it?
  • At any given time, almost three million Canadians
    have serious depression
  • Depression is the fastest growing type of
    disability for Canadian employers
  • 10-15 of men and 15-25 of women will have
    serious depression in their lifetime
  • Major depression affects up to 10 of youths and
    is associated with severe short-and long-term
    health problems and death.
  • Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) predictable
    times of the year, usually winter when there is
    less light.
  • Postpartum Depression - moderate to severe
    depression in a woman after she has given birth.
    It may occur soon after delivery or up to a year
    later. Most of the time, it occurs within the
    first 3 months after delivery.

13
Symptoms (lasting 3 or more weeks)
  • Losing interest in things they used to enjoy
  • Feeling sad, empty, hopeless or numb and start
    crying for no reason
  • Feeling unloved and/or hopeless
  • Feeling restless
  • Feeling guilty or worthless
  • Experiencing changes in appetite, or weight loss
    or gain, or digestive problems
  • Suffering from chronic headaches, back, chest,
    muscle or joint pain
  • Feeling tired or exhausted
  • Having trouble making decisions
  • Having problems in school and possibly becoming
    withdrawn or disobedient
  • Feeling anxious or irritable
  • Having trouble falling asleep, staying asleep or
    sleeping too much
  • Having suicidal thoughts

14
What Can I Do?
  • Start/stay physically active every day
  • Increase use of mental health fitness tools
  • Tell someone that you love trust
  • Tell a stranger or trained professional
  • Visit share with a doctor who can put you in
    contact with the care you need.
  • Admit yourself or loved one (minors only) into
    the hospital.

Who Can I Contact?
Cypress Health Mental Health Intake Line
(306)778-5280 www.cypresshealth.ca
Southwest Crisis Services (24hr) Shelter
(306)778-3692 Crisis1(800)567-3334 www.swcrisis.c
a
Canadian Mental Health Association Website
www.cmha.ca
15
Mood Disorders Bipolar
Face To Face With Mental Wellness Joe
(Bipolar-smilingaffect, chess, music) 418
16
  • The word "mania/manic" refers to when a person
    feels overly excited confident. These feelings
    can quickly turn to confusion, irritability,
    anger, and even rage.
  • The word "depression" means when a person feels
    very sad or depressed. The symptoms of mania and
    depression are similar. Sometimes people with
    bipolar depression are diagnosed as having major
    depression by mistake.
  • People with unmanaged bipolar cycle between manic
    and depression... how quickly they cycle
    depends on the individual and life circumstances.

17
When/How does it start?
  • Fifty-nine percent of adults diagnosed with
    bipolar said they had symptoms of their illness
    during or before adolescence. Half of those
    adults had bipolar illness for the first time
    before they turned 17.
  • Puberty is a time of high risk for bipolar
    disorder to develop in people that have a genetic
    risk. Twenty percent reported their disease
    happened between the ages of 10 and 14. Ten
    percent reported having it for the first time
    between ages 5 and 9.
  • Bipolar has a tendency to be based on brain
    chemistry and influenced by hormone levels.
    Visiting a doctor who can put you in touch with
    the care you need is highly recommended.

18
What Can I Do?
  • Start/stay physically active every day
  • Increase use of mental health fitness tools
  • Tell someone that you love trust
  • Tell a stranger or trained professional
  • Visit share with a doctor who can put you in
    contact with the care you need.
  • Admit yourself or loved one (minors only) into
    the hospital.

Who Can I Contact?
Cypress Health Mental Health Intake Line
(306)778-5280 www.cypresshealth.ca
Southwest Crisis Services (24hr) Shelter
(306)778-3692 Crisis1(800)567-3334 www.swcrisis.c
a
Canadian Mental Health Association Website
www.cmha.ca
19
Personality Disorders Schizophrenia Dissociat
ive Disorder
Brent Seal Turn Psych Wards Into Spas (958
Total 100-707 His Story) SchizophreniaJr.
Hockey, SFU
Anderson Cooper 360 (503) SchizophreniaSimulat
ed
Auditory Hallucinations (338)
Schizophrenia...Simulated
ABC News Report Herschel Walker (610)
Dissociative Disorder
20
Causes
  • Schizophrenia is a mystery, a puzzle with missing
    pieces.
  • This complex biochemical brain disorder affects a
    persons ability to determine what is reality and
    what is not.
  • People with schizophrenia are affected by
    delusions (fixed false beliefs that can be
    terrifying to the person experiencing them),
    hallucinations (sensory experiences, such as
    hearing voices talking about them when there is
    no one there), social withdrawal and disturbed
    thinking.
  • Striking most often in the 16 to 30 year age
    group, affecting an estimated one person in a
    hundred.

21
Who gets it?
  • Schizophrenia affects men and women equally. It
    occurs at similar rates in all ethnic groups
    around the world.
  • Striking most often in the 16 to 30 year age
    group. Most of the time, people do not get
    schizophrenia after age 45.
  • The first signs can include a change of friends,
    a drop in grades, sleep problems, and
    irritabilitybehaviors that are common among
    teens. A combination of factors can predict
    schizophrenia in up to 80 percent of youth who
    are at high risk of developing the illness. These
    factors include isolating oneself and withdrawing
    from others, an increase in unusual thoughts and
    suspicions, and a family history of psychosis.

22
Symptoms
  • Positive symptoms - Positive symptoms are
    psychotic behaviors not seen in healthy people.
    People with positive symptoms often "lose touch"
    with reality. These symptoms can come and go.
    Sometimes they are severe and at other times
    hardly noticeable, depending on whether the
    individual is receiving treatment. They include
    the following
  • Hallucinations are things a person sees,
    hears, smells, or feels that no
  • one else can see, hear, smell, or feel.
  • Delusions are false beliefs that are not
    part of the person's culture and do
  • not change.
  • Thought disorders are unusual or
    dysfunctional ways of thinking.
  • Movement disorders may appear as agitated
    body movements.
  • Negative symptoms - Negative symptoms are
    associated with disruptions to normal emotions
    and behaviors. These symptoms are harder to
    recognize as part of the disorder and can be
    mistaken for depression or other conditions.
  • Cognitive symptoms - Cognitive symptoms are
    subtle. Like negative symptoms, cognitive
    symptoms may be difficult to recognize as part of
    the disorder. Often, they are detected only when
    other tests are performed.

23
What Can I Do?
  • Start/stay physically active every day
  • Increase use of mental health fitness tools
  • Tell someone that you love trust
  • Tell a stranger or trained professional
  • Visit share with a doctor who can put you in
    contact with the care you need.
  • Admit yourself or loved one (minors only) into
    the hospital.

Who Can I Contact?
Cypress Health Mental Health Intake Line
(306)778-5280 www.cypresshealth.ca
Southwest Crisis Services (24hr) Shelter
(306)778-3692 Crisis1(800)567-3334 www.swcrisis.c
a
Canadian Mental Health Association Website
www.cmha.ca
24
Anxiety Disorders Post-Traumatic
Stress Phobias Panic Disorder Separation
Anxiety Social Anxiety Obsessive Compulsive
25
Anxiety Symptoms
  • anxious thoughts, usually worry about something
    bad happening.
  • anxious body symptoms like a racing or pounding
    heart, stomach butterflies, sweating,
    headaches, dizziness
  • anxious behaviors like fighting, avoiding,
    seeking comfort or reassurance, temper tantrum,
    crying

26
Anxiety Disorders PTSD, Phobias, Panic,
Separation, Social Obsessive Compulsive
Howie Mandel Talks About Living With OCD (906)
ABC News Report
Piglet A Case Study In GAD (1000) Generalized
Anxiety Disorder
Auditory Hallucinations (338)
Schizophrenia...Simulated
ABC News Report Herschel Walker (610)
Dissociative Disorder
27
What Can I Do?
  • Start/stay physically active every day
  • Increase use of mental health fitness tools
  • Tell someone that you love trust
  • Tell a stranger or trained professional
  • Visit share with a doctor who can put you in
    contact with the care you need.
  • Admit yourself or loved one (minors only) into
    the hospital.

Who Can I Contact?
Cypress Health Mental Health Intake Line
(306)778-5280 www.cypresshealth.ca
Southwest Crisis Services (24hr) Shelter
(306)778-3692 Crisis1(800)567-3334 www.swcrisis.c
a
Canadian Mental Health Association Website
www.cmha.ca
28
Self-Harm Disorders Eating Disorders (Anorexia
Bulimia Nervosa) Cutting Substance Use
29
  • Some people hurt themselves on purpose to help
    themselves deal with bad feelings or thoughts.
    This is called self-harm.
  • People who self-harm dont do it to end their
    life. Instead, self-harm may be the best way they
    know to survive.

30
How?
  • The most common ways to self-harm are cutting or
    burning the skin, scratching that breaks the
    skin, hitting to the point of bruising or
    breaking bones, biting or falling, and hair
    pulling.

31
The Reasons
  • To deal with unwanted feelings like anxiety or
    depression
  • To cope with grief, loss, violence or chronic
    illness
  • To punish themselves or to express feelings of
    failure, anger or hatred toward themselves
  • To make their emotional pain feel like physical
    pain
  • To  feel real, feel anything or to cope with
    feeling numb
  • To regain control, or establish control
  • To just feel better

32
Warning Signs
  • Someone who self-harms may try to cover up their
    injuries because theyre ashamed. While people
    may hurt themselves in different ways, here are a
    few warning signs
  • They often have  wounds like cuts, burns or
    bruises that they cant explain
  • They have many scars that they cant explain
  • They often say that they have many accidents
  • They cover their body, even during warm weather

Remember, someone who self-harms doesnt want to
die. But if you arent sure, its best to be safe
and get help right away.
33
Factors that help people recover from mental
illnesses
  • Reliance
  • Early identification and early effective
    treatment
  • Avoiding drugs
  • Positive attitudes
  • A healthy lifestyle (good food, exercise, and
    proper sleep)
  • Good support network of family, friends and
    professionals
  • Taking medications and other treatments as
    prescribed
  • Learning how to cope with stress

34
What Can I Do?
  • Start/stay physically active every day
  • Increase use of mental health fitness tools
  • Tell someone that you love trust
  • Tell a stranger or trained professional
  • Visit share with a doctor who can put you in
    contact with the care you need.
  • Admit yourself or loved one (minors only) into
    the hospital.

Who Can I Contact?
Cypress Health Mental Health Intake Line
(306)778-5280 www.cypresshealth.ca
Southwest Crisis Services (24hr) Shelter
(306)778-3692 Crisis1(800)567-3334 www.swcrisis.c
a
Canadian Mental Health Association Website
www.cmha.ca
35
Mental Health
Mental health is a state of well-being in which
an individual realizes his or her own abilities,
can cope with the normal stresses of life, can
work productively and is able to make a
contribution to his or her community.
More than the absence of mental disorders or
disabilities.
HOPE My New Year's Resolution 2012 (603)
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