Saturday Sanity: Light Your Fire
Here at Mental Health Notes and b5media’s Health & Wellness Channel, it’s become the trend for every week to feel just as busy - if not busier - than the last. I love it, mind you. I just think I need to sit down and seriously re-evaluate my current system of organization.
Anyway, on to what went on this week in the world of mental health!

Here at Mental Health Notes, I was all over the place. From sharing a few thoughts about LiveJournal to reviewing Google’s top five results for “brain games” to offering resources for help with cyberbullies in light of Megan Meier’s suicide and Lori Drew’s indictment, the topics this week were certainly diverse at Mental Health Notes. Too, I had to lash out about the battle against abusing mentally ill patients, pass up the opportunity to present an A.S.S. Award, share a little mental health humor, and remind everyone about the current Mental Health Notes Birthday Giveaway and This Is Why I ROCK! series!

Mental health advocacy group news was definitely a challenge to keep up with this week - there was so much! The Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA) is reminding everyone about registration discounts for their Power of Peers conference in September, as well as their upcoming June webinar course Not a Pity Party: Effective Peer Support Groups. Mental Health America sent around a reminder for us to urge our House representatives to support including a delay on the Medicaid regs in the war funding supplemental bill. And TIME Magazine has named Jill Bolte Taylor, Ph.D., who speaks at many National Alliance on Mental Illness conferences and is president of NAMI Indiana’s Greater Bloomington affiliate, one of “the world’s 100 most influential people.”

Of course, keeping up with mental health in the news is always a busy time. Ira Katz, the VA’s director of mental health, has apologized for his email discussing veterans’ suicide attempts - you know, the one that read “Shh!” in the subject line. An study published in the Archives of General Psychiatry suggests low levels of vitamin D and high levels of the parathyroid hormone could lead to depression in older adults. After recent studies, researchers are paying more attention to the role a distinctive pattern of the genetic variations single nucleotide polymorphisms may be playing in the onset of Alzheimer’s Disease. And, assistant professor of neurosciences at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Roberto Fernández Galán, Ph.D., used math and a computer model of brain activity (and no rats) to show new looks at the dynamics of the brain’s cortex.

And finally, perhaps the easiest thing to keep up with this week was the b5media Health & Wellness Channel’s involvement in the world of mental health. Because May is Mental Health Month, our monthly theme day was focused on the topic of mental health. I hosted the event, so make sure you check out what all my fellow bloggers had to say! Also, the Health & Wellness Channel bloggers got together and shared their versions of “Top 5″ posts. Find out which posts I chose, and check out the rest of the channel’s lists courtesy of Kendra James!
That’s all for this week’s Saturday Sanity. If you have any news you’d like to share, send it my way for next week!

All images (except for the b5 logo) courtesy of Newscom.
Remember! You have until May 31, 2008 to enter the Mental Health Notes Birthday Giveaway, and forever to join the This Is Why I ROCK! series!
Tags: absusing mentally ill patients, Alzheimer's Disease, Archives of General Psychiatry, brain games, Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, contest, cyberbullies, dbsa, depression and bipolar support alliance, depression in older adults, dynamics of the brain's cortex, giveaway, Health and Wellness, Ira Katz, Jill Bolte Taylor, LiveJournal, Lori Drew, Medicaid, Megan Meier, mental health advocacy groups, mental health america, mental health blog, Mental Health Humor, Mental Health Month, mental health news, mental health resources, mental health support groups, mental health updates, NAMI, National Alliance on Mental Illness, neuroscience, parathyroid hormone, Power of Peers, Roberto Fernandez Galan, sanity, single nucleotide polymorphisms, stigma, Vitamin DPOSTED IN: A.S.S. Awards, Alzheimer's, Anxiety Disorders, Cognitive Disorders, Criminal Psych, Current Affairs & News, Depression, Doctors & Scientists, Government & Politics, Have Some Fun, Health Insurance, Mental Health Advocacy, Mood Disorders, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Resources, Saturday Sanity, Sites of Interest, Suicide
2 opinions for Saturday Sanity: Light Your Fire
Linda
May 22, 2008 at 10:13 pm
I’ve been recommending “My Stroke of Insight” to everyone I know. It’s the best book I’ve read all year! You can get Jill’s book from Amazon for a good discount.
Here’s the link:
http://www.amazon.com/My-Stroke-Insight-Scientists-Personal/dp/0670020745/ref=pd_bbs_sr_4?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1210709205&sr=8-4
Alicia Sparks, NAMI Affiliation Leader
May 23, 2008 at 10:08 am
Hi Linda, thanks for the recommended reading! I haven’t read the book, but because you have would you be interested in sharing your thoughts about it here at Mental Health Notes? Maybe as a guest post here? I’d be glad to share it. If you’re interested, you can email me. (Email is in the box titled “About Mental Health Notes” near the top.)
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