Link – Childhood Emotional Abuse Linked to Adult PTSD, Opioid Misuse

We are seeing a lot of studies like this, when will we start to deal with addiction as a symptom of a mental health and/or trauma issue, and not something separate?

Drug addiction and mental health issues are often treated separately by different kinds of specialists, Price said. “Mental health counselors will frequently say, ‘Deal with your drug issues first, then come to see me.’

The study suggests “we should really start to explore more integrated treatment,” Price said.

I do know this, what we’re doing now isn’t working for a lot of people. As more information like this comes out, it points us in a different direction.

https://psychcentral.com/news/2017/03/15/childhood-emotional-abuse-linked-to-adult-ptsd-opioid-misuse/117669.html

Similar Posts

  • Links I’m Sharing (weekly)

    The Memory of Trauma in the Body ‘Millennials, please prioritize your mental health during coronavirus,’ says therapist Online mental health resources for coronavirus-related anxiety The Doctor Gap: Where Are All the Mental Health Care Providers? Why you shouldn’t judge yourself for having coronavirus anxiety Quarantine Quandaries: How to Beat the Hum Drum of Isolation An…

  • Sharing – How To Help De-Escalate Bad Situations When You’re In Public

    I think we can agree that having a manic episode in public shouldn’t mean you can be killed. We’d like to think we would be better than that but faced with an uncomfortable situation that is exactly what happened. Probably because no one on that subway expected that the possibility existed and hadn’t considered how they would act and how it might help until it was too late. The article linked below offers some good advice for how to both keep yourself safe and also de-escalate the situation. Which is what should happen if at all possible. Escalating the situation rarely ends well. Someone died in this case. Let’s do what we can to prevent escalation so that no one has to get hurt.

  • Sharing – Are you okay? The power of storytelling in mental health

    As I mentioned, in the workplace this is true. Very few people are going to feel safe talking about their own struggles if the leaders in the company never open up about their own at some level. But, it’s also true in our relationships as well.

    How many of us wish the people in our lives, spouses, kids, siblings, friends and loved ones, would feel comfortable talking to us about their struggles, yet we never share our own? How would they know that you are a safe person to talk to if you appear to never have any struggles?

    Let me give you a prime example from my own life. As many of you know, I worked from home before the pandemic started, and continued to do so all the way through 2020. It had very little impact beyond some lack of socializing, on my life, and so when I compared that to what many others were going through in 2020, I didn’t really want to complain about the things I was struggling with. Most people I did talk to, didn’t really talk about their own struggles either. Finally, however, when I wrote a post about not being OK right now, and shared it across my social media profiles, including LinkedIn, I got notes and messages from a ton of people, some who I haven’t even been in touch with in awhile, telling me about their struggles as well.

    I attribute that to two things. One, I know a lot of amazing people who see someone struggling and immediately set out to make sure I knew I wasn’t alone, and two, by sharing my own difficulties, I also provided them a safe place to share their own struggles.

    Isn’t that what it’s really all about?

    So, what are you struggling with that you have been hiding? What good is hiding doing for you?

  • Link – New court pilot program helps child sex abuse victims to give evidence

    This seems like an interesting thing that Australian courts are doing: “The program involves pre-recording children’s evidence and appointing trained “witness intermediaries” who help children to understand questions and get their answers across effectively. Since March last year more than 700 children have been through the NSW pilot program, which has 44 trained witness intermediaries….

  • Link – ‘Mental health system only works for the wealthy or dying’ – advocate

    The quote from this article is about the situation in New Zealand, but it’s the same everywhere. After 14 suicide attempts and a long battle with mental illness, 23-year-old film director Jazz Thornton co-founded advocacy group Voices of Hope to help others going through similar struggles. “The current system isn’t working because unless you are…

  • |

    Link – 10 podcasts about mental health

    Before my latest job change, when I was traveling all the time, I listened to quite a few podcasts. It’s a habit I’ve since gotten away from, because I’m not on planes and/or out of the country anymore, but it is something I’ve been considering getting back in to. If you’re a podcast listener and…

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

To respond on your own website, enter the URL of your response which should contain a link to this post's permalink URL. Your response will then appear (possibly after moderation) on this page. Want to update or remove your response? Update or delete your post and re-enter your post's URL again. (Find out more about Webmentions.)