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More World Events

The Halifax Explosion

=raine-angel:iconraine-angel: reports, December 5
Remembering the Halifax Explosion

INFORMAÇÕES - AMIGO SECRETO

#Supremos-do-DA:iconSupremos-do-DA: reports, November 23
Então que comece o amigo secreto mais supremo da historia do DA!!!

The Czech Freedom is 20 years old.No more murders!

*woxys:iconwoxys: reports, November 18
This new article is dedicated to you, people from USA, Great Britain, Australia, Germany... for all of you, who live in democratic countries. It is a story about my home-country, the Czech republic and its fight for freedom and democracy. And I think it can help you to gain some very important and interesting information!

Exactly twenty years ago, the famous Velvet revolution started in the Czech republic and it finally brought freedom and democracy to the country. During the communist rule, there were political murders, violence and other terrible crimes against the humanity. Read the story about 40 years of totalitarian regime and the final fight for freedom!

Hate crime laws now in the USA!

*GLBT-Pride-Club:iconGLBT-Pride-Club: reports, November 5
As of October 28th, the GLBT community of the United States of America is now protected under the hate crimes laws. It took them almost 6 years after Canada got their laws changed, but they finally did!

Real Paranormal Experiences

*Kytomi:iconKytomi: reports, October 31
I can't wait to hear your scary stories too!

Halloween Is Here

~Professor-Kirby:iconProfessor-Kirby: reports, October 30
It's that time of year when deviants carve pumpkins, watch horror flicks, and break out their spookiest costumes for themselves, their OCs, and their favorite fictional characters. Enjoy some of dA's more underappreciated Halloween art!

H1N1 - Questions asked

*SterlingRuinsFall337:iconSterlingRuinsFall337: reports, October 29
We’ve all heard about it by now; the H1N1 virus, or originally called ‘Swine Flu’ and though there are plenty of theories where it came from or how much of a problem it may be, I have done a bit of research over the last few months and have come up with a ‘small’ bite of information that people can read should they become concerned, or just want to know a bit more before they accuse someone of having the virus, or if you yourself think you may…

Emoticons and Emoticonists: Secret Santa

=Seiorai:iconSeiorai: reports, October 28
A Secret Santa completely dedicated to Emoticons and Emoticonists :dummy:
Make the elf and gift somebody a lovable emoticon :huggle:

Youth Olympic Games: Medal Design competition

^Thiefoworld:iconThiefoworld: reports, October 26
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) is offering the public a chance to make Olympic history by designing an Olympic medal for the Youth Olympic Games.

People around the world are being invited to submit their designs for the medals to be awarded at the inaugural Youth Olympic Games (YOG) which will be held in Singapore next year, from 14 to 26 August 2010.

`kasumichan2003 nueva administradora de =noticias

#noticias:iconnoticias: reports, October 10
:coffeecup: Hoy el equipo de =noticias anuncia que hay una nueva administradora a bordo

World Events This Week

The Halifax Explosion

=raine-angel:iconraine-angel: reports, December 5
Remembering the Halifax Explosion

Happy Birthday EC Segar

`Ghouldaddy:iconGhouldaddy: reports, December 8
Wishing Popeye's creator a happy 115th!

AIDS IN AFRICA : how it is a shame of being human.

=hermaphroditos:iconhermaphroditos: reports, December 6
Here are my source where I found all about this issue.

[link]

PLEASE BE AWARE OF AIDS! PLEASE PROTECT YOURSELF! USE CONDOMS!

MLIA for the soul

~wRiTeRiNmYhEaD:iconwRiTeRiNmYhEaD: reports, December 5
If you had day, and you're taking one down, just read this post just to turn it around!
You say "I don't know." I say "don't be shy"
You work at a smile you go for a magic carpet ride,
You had a bad day, oh, you had a bad day.

Seriously, read this post if you want to turn your day around. Yes, my "bad day" switched around song lyrics are corney but I need you to smile. Being sad is a bad way to go through life.

Animal of the Month: Pangolin

~Wildlife-Awareness:iconWildlife-Awareness: reports, December 5
Animal of the Month of December: Panoglin!

So I heard you liek X-Mas Cards?

*Leichenengel:iconLeichenengel: reports, December 7
Check this article to recieve detailed info on how to ceceive a Christmas Card!!!
2 comments   World Events  Last +fav: *Danium

My Alcohol Virginity

~Lo-0:iconLo-0: reports, December 5
dude im buzzed
13 comments   World Events  Last +fav: Nobody

Snow day

~Happypaw:iconHappypaw: reports, 2d 15h ago
I woke up late this mourning. So I was worried about missing the bus. I walked into my parents room, only to find, SNOW DAY!! School's been canceled!

So I'll be here all day!

So comment, requests, anything!

~Happy
3 comments   World Events  Last +fav: Nobody

FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY -- OWEN DAWSON!!!!!!!!!!!

~JustOwen:iconJustOwen: reports, December 7
Owen's Epic enterance
No comments   World Events  Last +fav: Nobody

Apology Days

~fhrei:iconfhrei: reports, 1d 16h ago
So, I've been active on my favorite anime site [link] it has some rare anime videos that crunchyroll doesn't (lol, why am I advertising this site now? haha) so back to the topic, when I went to look up what's new at the forums, someone said that December, 10th was an "Apology Days" which mean I.. we should be apologizing to anyone that need my or our apologize. Just a little bit information for you guys, I don't know one of you already known it or not but hey, it's just an info! XD lol

KEEP SMILING EVERYONE! :D
No comments   World Events  Last +fav: Nobody

World Events


Medication is a mainstay of mental health therapy

=geaannunziata:icongeaannunziata: reports, July 15
Joanna Moncrief

VIEWPOINT
Dr Joanna Moncrieff
Mental health expert

Taking a pill to treat depression is widely believed to work by reversing a chemical imbalance.
Pill
Medication is a mainstay of mental health therapy

But in this week's Scrubbing Up health column, Dr Joanna Moncrieff, of the department of mental health sciences at University College London, says they actually put people into "drug-induced states".

If you've seen a doctor about emotional problems some time over the past 20 years, you may have been told that you had a chemical imbalance, and that you needed tablets to correct it.

It's not just doctors that think this way, either.

Magazines, newspapers, patients' organisations and internet sites have all publicised the idea that conditions like depression, anxiety, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder can be treated by drugs that help to rectify an underlying brain problem.

People with schizophrenia and other conditions are frequently told that they need to take psychiatric medication for the rest of their lives to stabilise their brain chemicals, just like a diabetic needs to take insulin.

The trouble is there is little justification for this view of psychiatric drugs.

Altered states

First, although ideas like the serotonin theory of depression have been widely publicised, scientific research has not detected any reliable abnormalities of the serotonin system in people who are depressed.

Second, it is often said the fact that drug treatment "works" proves there's an underlying biological deficiency.


Psychoactive drugs make people feel different

But there is another explanation for how psychiatric drugs affect people with emotional problems.

It is frequently overlooked that drugs used in psychiatry are psychoactive drugs, like alcohol and cannabis.

Psychoactive drugs make people feel different; they put people into an altered mental and physical state.

They affect everyone, regardless of whether they have a mental disorder or not.

Therefore, an alternative way of understanding how psychiatric drugs affect people is to look at the psychoactive effects they produce.

Drugs referred to as antipsychotics, for example, dampen down thoughts and emotions, which may be helpful in someone with psychosis.

Drugs like Valium produce a state of relaxation and a pleasant drowsiness, which may reduce anxiety and agitation.

Drugs labelled as "anti-depressants" come from many different chemical classes and produce a variety of effects.

Prior to the 1950s, the drugs that were used for mental health problems were thought of as psychoactive drugs, which produced mainly sedative effects.

'Informed choice'

Views about psychiatric drugs changed over the course of the 1950s and 1960s.

They gradually came to be seen as being specific treatments for specific diseases, or "magic bullets", and their psychoactive effects were forgotten.

However, this transformation was not based on any compelling evidence.

In my view it remains more plausible that they "work" by producing drug-induced states which suppress or mask emotional problems.


If we gave people a clearer picture drug treatment might not always be so appealing

This doesn't mean psychiatric drugs can't be useful, sometimes.

But, people need to be aware of what they do and the sorts of effects they produce.

At the moment people are being encouraged to believe that taking a pill will make them feel better by reversing some defective brain process.

That sounds good. If your brain is not functioning properly, and a drug can make it work better, then it makes sense to take the pill.

If, on the other hand, we gave people a clearer picture, drug treatment might not always be so appealing.

If you told people that we have no idea what is going on in their brain, but that they could take a drug that would make them feel different and might help to suppress their thoughts and feelings, then many people might choose to avoid taking drugs if they could.

On the other hand, people who are severely disturbed or distressed might welcome these effects, at least for a time.

People need to make up their own minds about whether taking psychoactive drugs is a useful way to manage emotional problems.

To do this responsibly, however, doctors and patients need much more information about the nature of psychiatric drugs and the effects they prod

Devious Comments

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:iconrozrr:
This is a very important statement for anyone who has ever been on antidepressants Gea or anyone who may be about to start...

I have been off all meds for my depression for 2 years and a fact overlooked above is that the effects of coming off these terrible drugs can affect many of us for the rest of our lives.

Last night I was getting the familiar brain zaps and took a Benadryl which seems to help. This had been going on for a couple of days, it happens now and then. It had become so bad that last night I had no choice. This morning I jumped out of bed a bit quick and nearly passed out. I stood leaning against my wardrobe for several minutes trying to get myself to the bathroom where I desperately needed to be, my bladder was bursting.

This is a side effect of having been on Effexor for a total of 4 years, 2 years on 150 mg a day and the other 2 years trying to get off the bloody things so I could think again and feel things properly again, I have been off them for 2 and 1/2 years now.

It is all too easy for the doctor to give pills, we go home thinking it will make us feel better, when the problem that brought us to him is still there. The only way is to change your life style so that the problem is not there any more. Very difficult to do, we can't all suddenly up and move somewhere else, we all have responsibilities. We can take a slightly different approach to dealing with our lives and try moving on from there.

I have done that in several ways and I still have bad days which sometimes last a week. However the rest of the time things are a bit better.

I could well do without the brain zaps and the terrible dizziness though. I would never have taken the bloody pills if I had known this would happen. My thinking is still not as clear as it was. Like there are bits missing here and there.

Thanks for posting this.
:iconwinklepickers:
I've taken small doses of these types of drugs for years.
Tranquillisers make you calm when you are constantly anxious, and insomniac, even if you may not be deemed mentally ill.
Anti -depressants and anxiety pills such as mirtazepine, stop you feeling miserable every day even if you have only a relatively minor problem. They have stopped me weeping every day because I felt trapped in a depressing environment that I couldn't change.
Hypnotic pills make me sleep every night.

One family member suffers from manic-depression. Without drugs and now just lithium, she would have committed suicide. She tried more than once. Now she is free from that extreme reaction.

Tranquillisers steal my memory, but not excessively. Old age does too. Anti-depressants don't appear to have major side effects. Hypnotics just make me sleep.
I don't take large doses of anything.
Lithium needs monitoring.

They do change my outlook. That's what I take them for. They do suppress thoughts and feelings.
They stop me flying into bad tempers I can't easily control.
I don't feel I'm not myself. On the contrary I feel much better.
I'm not mentally ill. I'm over sensitive and hate it.

I get annoyed with people who tell me I'm drugged and just ought to get more exercise and persuade myself that I'm fine. How dare they? They are not in my shoes.
Have they all stopped drinking tea, coffee, beer, and wine.
I have. Ages ago.

My psychiatrist told me a few years ago that anxiety was normal and useful to be able to avoid danger, BUT if it got too much, and was a problem then it ought to be controlled.

Gea. This is not a grumble at you. :hug. XXXXXXXXXX

--
Member of *FracMan.
~MyFractalStock
:iconwinklepickers:
From what Roz says her experience is very different from mine.
I'm totally satisfied with my treatment. Side effects are almost inexistent and I don't feel the need to stop it all.
Certainly not all of a sudden.
I am weaning myself off the tranquilliser to sleep. I take away a very small portion of the pill every few days. It works. The doctor says it's the most "harmful".
No-one should stop suddenly. Weaning is necessary.
I took Effexor and had no problem stopping.

I wouldn't trust the NHS with anything frankly.

--
Member of *FracMan.
~MyFractalStock
:iconjennabee25:
I too have strong feelings toward this subject as a person who suffers from bipolar II disorder. I have to take these medications to maintain a balance in my life. I have suffered swings of depression and bouts of hypomania. These medications have helped my brain juices keep steady levels so I stay steady. I will have to be on them for the rest of my life.

Now, I will say that sometimes I think doctors do overuse these medications and unless you have a diagnosed life mental illness, you should not be on them long term. People get depressed or may have bad anxiety. After a time, the person should be evaluated, checked to see if the illness is a permanent disorder or temporary, and then weaned off the medication. I also believe these medications, in whatever capacity, should be used under the supervision of your family doc as well as a psychiatrist, and you should be actively involved in some sort of counseling/therapy.

I tend to agree with winklepickers. I'm happy with my treatment and the professionals who oversee it. No one should NEVER EVER stop their meds without consulting their doctor. I have bipolar friends who have and it is frightening to see what happens. I also identify with people telling that I need to get off these medications and blah blah blah.....it's very hard to explain why I take them and what happens if I don't.

I do see where you are coming from here, Gea, and I thought it was a very interesting article, so thank you for sharing it!

--
-Apophysis- -Digital Tweakers- -Chaoscopers- -Ultra Fractal-
:iconcurliee:
It's funny, I was encouraged by my doctor to NOT start taking medication for my anxiety attacks/panic attacks unless I ABSOLUTELY needed to. It got to the point where I was lacking in so much confidence that breathing exercises and the like would do nothing for me.

So I started the lowest dosage of anti-depressants a year ago. They settled me down enough to the point of where I could start to handle any anxiety without having a huge panic attack. I gained confidence, which I think was the main key in maintaining my day-to-day life. Even though I was relying on the medication to back me up, I was glad I could be confident in SOMETHING.

About exactly one year later, now, I've just started....well...stopping taking my medication. So far, I've seen no increase in anxiety besides a single mini anxiety attack, which I was told might happen due to the usual withdrawal symptoms. I feel much more confident than I did a year ago, and I must say it is thanks to the drugs. Without the extra boost I would have not been able to grab a hold of the situation as I have now.

Regardless, that's all that the medicine has done. It provided me with a new calmness I hadn't felt in years, and from there I could start working on my anxiety by myself. I am by no means "cured", I still experience anxiety. And I probably will for the rest of my life. But since I was given a year of peace to work things out, I have been able to obtain new skills and knowledge about my disorder, and self-confidence to boot.

I was a little upset when my doctor first told me "the medicine will be a temporary fix", because I was so upset and depressed at that point I just wanted a CURE. But I'm glad he didn't sugar coat it because now I don't feel like I have to rely on the medication as much. (this could change, seeing as I've only been off of them for two weeks or so. I was on the lowest dosage, though.)

Sorry if that all didn't make any sense haha

Thank you very much for sharing this! It was quite the interesting read.
 

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