The Patty Duke Online Center for Mental Wellness is a place of comfort, caring, and compassion, a place to blossom as you read the articles, participate in discussions and follow your individual path to wellness. It is not meant as a replacement for therapy as much as a gathering place to shed the darkness of ignorance and replace it with the everlasting light of understanding.
 
Pauley Lecture Series Marks 20th Anniversary - Patty Duke to Speak

From The Pilot.com:

"The Ruth Pauley Lecture Series will celebrate its 20th anniversary with six lectures dealing with history, religion, mental health and the world of animals.

Patty Duke, an Academy-Award winning actress, will discuss "A Brilliant Madness: Living with Manic-Depressive Illness" on Sept. 30. Duke has published two books dealing with the problems of manic-depression.

All Ruth Pauley Lectures will be in Owens Auditorium on the Sandhills Community College campus in Pinehurst, except the presentation by Jack Hanna. That will take place at the R.E. Lee Auditorium on the Pinecrest High School campus in Southern Pines.

Lectures begin at 7:30 p.m. and are open to the public. The lectures are free of charge, and no tickets are required.

The Ruth Pauley Lecture series is sponsored by Sandhills Community College, the Moore County League of Women Voters, the American Association of University Women, and the Moore County school system."


Posted by Mike on Thu 07th of September 2006 | Static Link

Bipolar Disorder Exacts Twice Depression?s Toll in Workplace

Productivity Lags Even After Mood Lifts

"Bipolar disorder costs twice as much in lost productivity as major depressive disorder, a study funded by the National Institutes of Health's (NIH) National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) has found. Each U.S. worker with bipolar disorder averaged 65.5 lost workdays in a year, compared to 27.2 for major depression. Even though major depression is more than six times as prevalent, bipolar disorder costs the U.S. workplace nearly half as much ? a disproportionately high $14.1 billion annually. Researchers traced the higher toll mostly to bipolar disorder's more severe depressive episodes rather than to its agitated manic periods. The study by Drs. Ronald Kessler, Philip Wang, Harvard University, and colleagues, is among two on mood disorders in the workplace published in the September 2006 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.

Their study is the first to distinguish the impact of depressive episodes due to bipolar disorder from those due to major depressive disorder on the workplace. It is based on one-year data from 3378 employed respondents to the National Co-morbidity Survey Replication, a nationally representative household survey of 9,282 U.S. adults, conducted in 2001-2003." 

For more of this story visit the NIMH Website.


Posted by Mike on Thu 07th of September 2006 | Static Link

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