POST

Psychosocial Therapy for Bipolar Illness

Bipolar illness is usually best treated with an educational rather than a psychodynamic approach. This illness seems less dependent on external events and styles of interacting, and more on chemical imbalances. It is also a chronic and recurrent illness that will not disappear, and it requires ongoing treat­ment to help you cope. When you suffer Read more

POST

Physical Illnesses and Depression

Depressive symptoms are part of many physical illnesses that are associated with aging. In yet other physical illnesses, the depression results from the limitations and discomfort the illness causes. If you and your family are told to expect some depression with these illnesses, you may feel less alarmed when it happens. Post-Stroke Syndrome Just as Read more

POST

Parenting and Depression

Mothering requires a high emotional involvement, but restricts your freedom to plan your life as you please. If you are already vulnerable because of poor education, low self-esteem or a troubled marital state, you are more prone to develop depression. Serious social problems such as job loss, poor housing, overcrowding, threats of eviction, and physical Read more

POST

How to Recognize Suicide Warning Signs

If you recognize that your friend or relative has a depressive disorder, a bipolar illness, or an alcohol or substance abuse problem, you can help. At some point, 41 per cent of people suffering from depression are suicidal. Most suicides occur when the person is recovering from depression, six to nine months after leaving hospital. Read more

POST

Depression in the Elderly – Cognitive Changes of Aging

Maintaining an active and healthy lifestyle, with exercise and lots of interests, can decrease the effects of aging. Still, memory does decline with age, although recall is usually affected more than recognition. (In other words, the person recognizes the face of a distant acquaintance, but is unable to recall the name.) People tend to exaggerate Read more

POST

Complementary Treatments for Depression

Phillipa was a sixty-eight-year-old widow who had lost her husband after a lengthy illness three years previously. She was lonely, fearful and desolate. She and her husband had been active politically, they had had lively dinner parties and discussion groups with colleagues, but all that had ceased with his death. She was convinced that she Read more