Is The Microbiome our Puppeteer?
âMy message today is that your state of gut will affect your state of mind. To have a healthy brain, we may need a...
Researchers Develop New Model for Understanding Depression
Acknowledging that current depression treatments are failing many people, researchers from Michigan State and MIT have developed a new model for understanding how multiple psychological, biological, social and environmental factors contribute to depression.
âLoneliness May Warp Our Genes, And Our Immune Systemsâ
NPR reports how loneliness can change our bodies and affect our physical and mental health. "There are things we can do to get out of a depressed or lonely state, but they're not easy," they report. "Part of the reason is because these negative psychological states develop some kind of molecular momentum."
âThe Myth of the Ever-More-Fragile College Studentâ
âThe point, overall, is that given the dizzying array of possible factors at work here, itâs much too pat a story to say that kids are getting more 'fragile' as a result of some cultural bugaboo,â Jesse Singal writes in response to the flurry of recent think pieces decrying the weakened resolve of today's college students.
âCan You Think Yourself into a Different Person?â
Will Storr, for Mosaic Science, wades into the world of neuroplasticity and explores to what extent our brains are capable of changing through adulthood. He asks if the tendency to overemphasize the findings of epigenetics and neuroplasticity isnât tied to our cultural belief that individuals are totally free to create themselves and pursue the American dream.
âNature and Nurture: Human Brains Evolved to be More Responsive to Environmental Influencesâ
"We found that the anatomy of the chimpanzee brain is more strongly controlled by genes than that of human brains, suggesting that the human brain is extensively shaped by its environment no matter its genetics," said Aida GĂłmez-Robles, postdoctoral scientist at the GW Center for the Advanced Study of Human Paleobiology and lead author on the paper. "So while genetics determined human and chimpanzee brain size, it isn't as much of a factor for human cerebral organization as it is for chimpanzees."
Free Online Course: Psychology and Mental Health- Beyond Nature and Nurture
MIA contributor, Peter Kinderman, from the University of Liverpool, is teaching a free online course that explores new perspectives on the ânature vs nurtureâ debate, and how we are affected by life experiences.
âWhy We Need to Abandon the Disease-Model of Mental Health Careâ
In a guest blog for the Scientific American, Peter Kinderman takes on the âharmful mythâ that our more distressing emotions can best be understood as symptoms of physical illnesses. âOur present approach to helping vulnerable people in acute emotional distress is severely hampered by old-fashioned, inhumane and fundamentally unscientific ideas about the nature and origins of mental health problems.â
âThe Curious Case of the Antidepressant, Anti-Anxiety Backyard Gardenâ
âMy vegetable beds have even buoyed me through more acute stressors, such as my medical internship, my daughterâs departure for college, and a loved oneâs cancer treatment,â writes Dr. Daphne Miller. Now neuroscientists are attempting to study the antidepressant effects of soil microbes in hopes of unlocking the secrets of a powerful mood enhancer.
âThe Life and Times of Strider Wolfâ
In the Boston Globe, Sarah Schweitzer tells the story of a young boy brutally abused by his parents then given to his grandparents who struggled with extreme poverty and homelessness. âResearchers now understood that trauma could alter the chemistry of developing brains and disrupt the systems that help a person handle stress, propelling a perpetual state of high alert. The consequences could be lifelong. As an adult, heâd be more likely to suffer anxiety and depression and heart disease and stroke. His ability to hold a job, manage money, and make good decisions could be compromised. And there was evidence, controversial but mounting, that he could pass on these traits to his children.â
Disease Theory of âMental Illnessâ Tied To Pessimism About Recovery
Researchers recently completed a first of its kind, large-scale international survey of attitudes about mental health and they were surprised by the results. According to their analysis published in this monthâs issue of the Journal of Affective Disorders, people in developed countries, like the United States, are more likely to assume that âmental illnessesâ are similar to physical illnesses and biological or genetic in origin, but they are also much less likely to think that individuals can overcome these challenges and recover
âThe Tantalizing Links between Gut Microbes and the Brainâ
Nature magazine reports on recent discoveries by neuroscientists that microbes that live in the intestinal track may have an influence on brain development and behavior. âResearchers have drawn links between gastrointestinal pathology and psychiatric neurological conditions such as anxiety, depression, autism, schizophrenia and neurodegenerative disordersâbut they are just links.â
Relieving Poverty Significantly Improves Mental Health
Giving money to people diagnosed with severe mental health issues can significantly improve depression and anxiety. A new study, published in the October issue of the Journal of Community Mental Health, found that giving about $73 US dollars per month for recreational spending can also reduce social isolation and strengthen a sense of self.
âKids in Foster Care Three Times More Likely to be Diagnosed with ADHDâ
PsychCentral presents a new study from the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that found that foster care children are three times more likely than other children on Medicaid to receive a diagnosis of ADHD. Overall, more than one in four children in foster care receive such a diagnosis. CDC statistician Melissa Danielson interpreted these results as revealing a âsubstantial needâ for more medical and behavioral services for kids in foster care.
âCan Madness Save the World?â
Writing for CounterPunch, Paris Williams writes that when an individual is experiencing what has been termed âpsychosis,â it is important to recognize that this may also be the manifestation of a breakdown in their larger social groups, the family, society, and even the species.
Video: âHow Childhood Trauma Can Make You A Sick Adultâ
Dr. Vincent Felitti details the connection between childhood trauma and negative mental health outcomes in adulthood in a powerful video.
âMore Patients in Scotland Given Antidepressantsâ
The BBC reports that the number of people in Scotland taking antidepressants has increased by 5% in the past year with most of the patients being women and those in the poorest parts of the country. âWe are now looking at the flabbergasting statistic of more than one in seven people in Scotland being prescribed antidepressants this year,â Conservative health spokesman Jackson Carlaw said. âWe urgently have to look at better alternatives than simply parking people on medication in the hope things don't get any worse, with no aspiration for complete recovery."
Series on Anti-Psychiatry and Critical Theory for World Mental Health Day
To coincide with World Mental Health Day on October 10th, 2015, Verso Books, the largest independent and radical publishing house released a series of blogs on mental health and critical and antipsychiatry. The posts include pieces on R.D. Laing, colonialism, womenâs oppression, delusions and art, âThe Happiness Industry,â and social and institutional oppression.
Emphasis on Nutrition Needed to Reform Mental Health Treatments
Even thought current mental health treatments are âsuboptimal,â there is a lack of attention paid to the preventative effects of diet and nutrition. Recent studies suggests that nutritional changes can influence the risk for mental health issues and that nutritional supplements, called nutraceuticals, can be prescribed for existing conditions.
âHow Poverty Affects Childrenâs Brainsâ
New research is investigating how âpoverty reduction promotes cognitive and brain development.â
Nunavut Declares Suicide Epidemic a State of Emergency
Nunavut, Canadaâs largest and northernmost territory, is suffering from a suicide rate that is 10 times the national average. âIn the case of Inuit boys 15 to 19,â CBC News reports, âthe suicide rate is 40 times higher than those of their peers in the rest of Canada.â
âA Bad Job is Harder on Your Mental Health Than Unemploymentâ
Writing for Mashable, Stephan Bevan- the director of the Centre for Workforce Effectiveness- explains how an increase in poor quality, precarious, and temporary jobs âthreatens our productivity and competitiveness, levels of social inclusion and, ultimately, the health of the workforce.â
âMental Illness and Gun Violence: Stigmatizing People Isnât the Answer”
In an opinion piece for care2, Katie Medlock discusses how âmental illnessâ awareness campaigns have shifted, dangerously, âand ended up insinuating that people with mental illness could turn on âusâ at any time and should be feared.â
âThe Decline of Play in Preschoolers and the Rise in Sensory Issuesâ
âWe are consistently seeing sensory, motor, and cognitive issues pop up more and more in later childhood, partly because of inadequate opportunities to move and play at an early age,â writes Angela Hanscom in The Washington Post.
âPost-Katrina Stress Disorder: Climate Change and Mental Healthâ
Writing for Truth-Out, hurricane Katrina survivor G. Maris Jones writes: âTo adapt to a changing climate, survivors of these catastrophes - especially those in marginalized, low-income communities - need long-term physical and mental health services.â She adds a concurrent call to âassume our responsibility to make positive change through action on climate change.â