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Scientists explore how nutrition may feed mental health [EurekAlert.org]

Good nutrition has long been viewed as a cornerstone of physical health, but research is increasingly showing diet's effect on mental health, as well. A special section in Clinical Psychological Science highlights the different approaches that psychology researchers are taking to understand the many ways in which nutrition and mental health intersect. Clinical Psychological Science is a journal of the Association for Psychological Science . Decades of research have shown the importance of...

Understanding Extreme States: An Interview with Paris Williams [MadInAmerica.com]

In this interview, a practicing therapist weighs our contemporary understanding of “schizophrenia” and explores alternative models beyond the “medicate your brain disease” approach. I, the interviewer Matt Stevenson , am a psychiatric survivor who first encountered Paris Williams while searching years ago for hopeful alternative conceptualizations of “schizophrenia.” At that time Paris responded kindly to my requests for reassurance that extreme states could be healed. Today I'm following in...

Depressed Women Less Likely to Get Best Breast Cancer Care: Study [Consumer.Healthday.com]

Breast cancer patients with a history of depression are less likely to receive recommended care for their disease, a new study finds. The study included more than 45,000 Danish women diagnosed with early stage breast cancer between 1998 and 2011. Of those, 13 percent had been treated with antidepressants and 2 percent had previously visited a hospital for depression. Compared with those who never took antidepressants, patients who used antidepressants were much less likely to receive...

Psychiatrists attack 'scandal' of child mental health spending [TheGuardian.com]

NHS bodies are spending as little as £2.01 per child on mental health care for young people, despite the big spike in anxiety, depression and other serious problems among under-18s. Psychiatrists claim the small sums being spent by GP-led clinical commissioning groups (CCGs) in England constitute a national scandal at a time when youth self-harm and suicide are rising. [For more of this story, written by Denis Campbell, go to ...

Combining Art Therapy and Mindfulness for Refugees [MadInAmerica.com]

A new article, published in The Arts in Psychotherapy, describes the ways art therapy and mindfulness have benefitted refugees and asylum seekers in Hong Kong. The article describes how the program, Inhabited Studio, which provides workshops on art making and mindfulness meditation, has supported individuals in moving forward after traumatic experiences. “The combination of art therapy and mindfulness helped participants cope day to day and allowed participants to begin to get a sense of not...

Childhood Adversity Associated With Poor Blood Pressure Regulation [EndocrinologyAdvisor.com]

A history of childhood adversity was associated with blood pressure dysfunction from childhood into adulthood, researchers reported at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2016 . 1 “Adverse environments in early life have been consistently associated with the increased risk of hypertension in later life,” Shaoyong Su, PhD, lead author and associate professor of pediatrics at Augusta University Medical College of Georgia in Augusta, stated in a press release. 2 “We found that...

Child Welfare Systems Grapple with How to Translate Brain Science into Practice [ChronicleOfSocialChange.org]

The idea of brain science in child welfare is hardly new but a pair of recent efforts highlight a growing push in the child welfare field to move an influx of findings drawn from the worlds of neuroscience and child development into practice. According to leaders in the field, child welfare policies and practices can see immediate and substantive benefits from the successful translation of this emerging brain science, but several challenges remain. A recently released brief from the Center...

Encouraging Neighbors to See Eye to Eye [CityLab.com]

Illuminated faces loom large in storefronts and street corners along lower Georgia Avenue NW in Washington, D.C. Some are backgrounded by humming cars, others by chain link fences, or patterned wallpaper. They blink, smile, or turn slightly as wind musses their hair. Through November 20, close-up videos of local residents are being projected into the windows as part of the SEE/CHANGE project , part of the “Crossing the Street” creative placemaking initiative , backed by the D.C. office of...

Gabby Falzone translates the study of trauma [OaklandNorth.net]

When she was 12, Gabby Falzone and her family became homeless in New York. At 15, she ran away. She moved between squats and stints with her family, but said she suffered too much abuse from them to stay for long. At 17, she moved to Boston, where she said she survived by exchanging sex for rent. At 19, she got into a friend’s car and drove to San Francisco. Within a month, she said, she was shooting heroin. “I kept thinking that if I escaped where I had just been, it would get better, not...

Los Angeles tops the nation in chronically homeless people, federal report finds [LATimes.com]

For the second year in a row, Los Angeles reported the largest number of chronically homeless people in the nation — nearly 13,000 — and 95% of them live outdoors, in cars, tents and encampments, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development’s report to Congress released Wednesday. Los Angeles also topped the national register this year in homeless veterans — 2,700 — despite slashing the numbers by a third. It also recorded the most unaccompanied homeless youth — more...

The Childhood Experiences Study for Adults

The Childhood Experiences Study for Adults Have you ever experienced negative or adverse events within the first 18 years of your life? Do you remember how old you were during these events? Researchers at Teachers College, Columbia University are seeking adults from diverse backgrounds, to participate in a study aimed at understanding both whether and when people experienced difficult or adverse events in the first 18 years of their life, as well as their mental health in adulthood. If...

Chronicle of Social Change Article on Translating Brain Science into Practice

The Chronicle of Social Change recently ran an article on the increasing efforts in the child welfare field to realize findings from neurosciences into practice. The article offers details from a recent Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University report and a policy document created by the Alliance for Strong Families and Communities to steer the development of policies that take into account the latest brain science. Access the Chronicle of Social Change article .

Fraction of Americans With Drug Addiction Receive Treatment, Surgeon General Says [NYTimes.com]

Millions of Americans suffer from alcoholism or addiction to legal and illegal drugs, but only a fraction are being treated, according to a report released on Thursday by the surgeon general. One in seven people in the United States is expected to develop a substance use disorder at some point in their lives, the report said. But as of now, only one in 10 will receive treatment. The report is the first from a surgeon general to address substance use disorders and the wider range of health...

Surgeon General Murthy Wants America To Face Up To Addiction [NPR.org]

In 1964, the U.S. surgeon general released a report on the health impacts of smoking, and it shaped the public and government's attitudes toward tobacco for years to come . On Thursday, another surgeon general's report was issued, this time tackling a much broader issue: addiction and the misuse and abuse of chemical substances. The focus isn't just one drug, but all of them. Though little in the report is new, it puts impressive numbers to the problem, and some surprising context: More...

Former Inmate, Advocates and Attorneys Honored for Work to Reform Sentencing [JJIE.org]

Wine and tears poured and tissues were borrowed as several juvenile justice reform advocates were honored for their work to end life without parole for juvenile offenders. The first award winners at the Campaign for the Fair Sentencing of Youth ’s highly emotional Hope & Healing awards ceremony Tuesday were Steve Drizin and Laura Nirider, the advocates working to earn “Making a Murderer” star Brendan Dassey his freedom. Gary Tyler, sentenced to death at age 16 in 1974 by an all-white...

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