MRCO BLOG
Medical Musings, Health Hypotheses & Therapeutic Thoughts
This week (16-22 November) is postnatal depression awareness week. PANDA (Post & Antenatal Depression Association) is calling for greater awareness of antenatal and postnatal anxiety, encouraging mums and dads to seek help early.
14/3/2014 Contrary to popular opinion - quitting smoking helps to reduce depression, anxiety and stressSmoking can feel like a stress reliever, and in times of stress, quitting can seem almost impossible. However, recent research shows that quitting smoking is actually associated with improvements in mental health. Compared to people who continued to smoke, people who quit smoking reported lower levels of anxiety, depression and stress, and improved psychological quality of life. What is even more interesting, is that these improvements in mental health were similar, or even better, than improvements to mood and anxiety disorders when antidepressants have been used... that's powerful stuff! Click here to read some possible interpretations of these findings in The Conversation (if you are not part of The Conversation, we recommend signing up!) Interested in giving quitting a go? Your clinical psychologist can help. Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) sessions will work you through your motivation to quit, stress management techniques to help overcome cravings, and learning alternative ways to think about smoking. 22/11/2013 How mad are you?Five people in this group have had a diagnosed mental illness and five people in this group have not. Are you able to guess who is who? The picture is of a documentary I watched last night. The documentary follows ten volunteers, half have a psychiatric disorder, and the other half do not. Over five days the group are put through a series of challenges under the observation of a panel of mental health clinicians. Can the clinicians correctly identify and diagnose the individuals within the group? Can you? The documentary explores the character traits of mental illness and highlights how just like all of human emotional experience, mental illness is on a spectrum. Additionally, the documentary shows just how subjective our judgments, and mental illness diagnosis, can be; participants with a disorder can lead a "normal" life, undetected by specialists, and those without a disorder can display "abnormal" behaviours. The idea behind this documentary comes from a psychological experiment conducted in the 1970s by psychologist David Rosenhan. The Rosenhan experiment asked some "pseudopatients" (healthy volunteers) to report that they heard voices to admissions clinics. All were admitted into a psychiatric clinic and given a diagnosis of a psychiatric disorder. Despite telling hospital staff that they felt fine and no longer experienced auditory hallucinations, the pseudopatients were only released upon admitting that they had a mental illness and by agreeing to take antipsychotic medication. The average length of stay was 19 days (!) Although there are plenty of scientific flaws in the documentary and the psychological experiment, they are both worthy social studies for showing the public, and reminding mental health professionals, how subjective our judgements on mental disorder can be. Keen to hear your thoughts... Claire Click here to watch Part 1 of the documentary. Click here to watch Part 2 of the documentary Click here to read David Rosenhan's paper published in Science titled "Being sane in insane places". PS. To be fair to the expert panel, it wasn't a fair game! It would usually be completely inappropriate to diagnose based on observation alone. In a clinical setting we would normally obtain information from multiple sources including; observation, client interview, questionnaires, information from referring professional, information from family & friends.
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AuthorsDrs. Edmund Bruce-Gardner and Soraya Burrows are osteopaths Categories
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Osteopathy at Moreland Road Clinic
High quality & personalised service from experienced professionals. A safe, effective & collaborative approach to patient care. All osteopaths undertake a 4-5 year university degree and are licensed and registered healthcare pracitioners. |
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Moreland Road Clinic 85 Moreland Road Coburg VIC 3058 P (03) 9384 0812 F (03) 9086 4194 osteopathy@morelandroadclinic.com.au |
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Osteopathy at Moreland Road Clinic is on Moreland Road, near the corner of Nicholson Street/Holmes Street, on the border of Coburg, Brunswick & Thornbury.
This makes Osteopathy at Moreland Road Clinic the ideal location for people in the inner north and outer northern suburbs of Melbourne, including: Coburg, Coburg North, Coburg East, Brunswick, Brunswick East, Brunswick West, Fawkner, Oak Park, Glenroy, Preston, Pascoe Vale, Pascoe Vale South, Gowanbrae, Hadfield, Essendon, Moonee Ponds, Thornbury and Reservoir. |
17/11/2014
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