Tag Archive for 'depression'

VOD: Something For Kate's Monsters

Some of my all time favorite song lyrics are in the song, Monsters. It doesn’t take a huge leap to conclude the song is about depression, but my favorite line is more of a life goal.

’cause i don’t want to be a container
or a bastard with a ten page disclaimer

I don’t just want to take up space in this life or be the person life happened to.  I really want to make a difference and leave my mark.

i was hanging upside down from the overpass
waiting to discover something about the world
i couldn’t get with the program and i couldn’t listen to them
it was like trying to think in reverse
and i don’t want to slide into apathy
and i don’t want to die in captivity
but these monsters follow me around
hunting me down, trying to wipe me out

wipe me out

i was hiding away under water
waiting for distance and buying some time
trying to be two hundred thousand years younger
so i could excuse myself from humankind
’cause i don’t want to be a container
or a bastard with a ten page disclaimer
but these monsters spin me around
get me down, just try and shut me out

shut me out

hold it in your head
believe and make believe and make believe

i was hiding away under water
waiting for distance, waiting for time
and i don’t want to slide into apathy and i don’t
and i don’t want to live in captivity

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VOD: Peter Schiff predicted our economic boondoggle; he says more to come

Peter Schiff then:

Peter Schiff now:

Makes your blood run cold. Why was Schiff in the minority seeing the trajectory of our economy and housing market? Time to buy gold?

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Mental health parity

effexor

photo by nicasaurusrex

For years insurance companies have dictated how much psychological and psychiatric care patients covered by their policies can receive.  Most policy plans limited the number of sessions covered per year, with the exception of conditions like extreme anxiety.

Imagine being treated for cancer and being told by the insurance company that you’ll be covered for 2 rounds of chemo, even though your doctor thinks 4 are medically necessarily.  Or being told by your doctor that you need to take 10 days of antibiotics to clear an infection from your system, but the insurance company will only pay for 7.

People seeking help for eating disorders have frequently found themselves at odds with their insurance companies, despite having “the highest mortality rate of any mental illness.”  Because treatment can last months, if not years, and include very expensive inpatient treatment, insurance companies work hard to limit treatment for those diagnosed, except when patients are speeding towards the point of no return.

Let’s say that you have coverage and that it pays at the beginning of treatment at an eating disorder treatment center. You then learn, though, that it will only pay for the first ten days of your stay. Your treatment plan says that you should stay for six weeks. Given that a treatment center’s cost per month can range in to the tens of thousands of dollars, it’s clear why many families must take out second home mortgages to pay for their loved ones’ treatment.

A treatment plan may include outpatient therapy, residential care, inpatient treatment, hospital care, support from a dietitian, medications or other options. Insurance providers can draw the line in seemingly random and confusing places to disallow parts of the treatment you seek.

In other instances, people find themselves blocked from insurance coverage because of previous use of medications for anxiety or depression.  After applying for individual insurance after graduate school, I was turned down for a policy because I had taken anxiety medication in the previous year, while being treated for a series of panic attacks.   Since mental health conditions are rarely easy fixes with a short stint on medication, any pre-existing treatment for a mental health issue can make it that much harder to insure.

Why are ailments of the mind judged differently then lifelong allegies in the minds of insurers?  What of diabetics that take insulin daily?  Surely no one illness is more deserving of coverage than another.  And why should your co-pays differ if you see a psychiatrist, instead of a urologist?

While it shouldn’t take an act of Congress to achieve mental health parity in insurance coverage, Americans recently got one to usher in a bit more fairness in their health care coverage.

Remember that 2.5 page Wall Street bailout/rescue that turned into a 417 page bill, filled with the special projects needed to get the support of enough Congresspersons and Senators to pass?  The Wall Street Bailout mandated change via the Paul Wellstone and Pete Domenici Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act of 2008 .

Under the bill, if a group health plan covers the treatment of mental illness or drug or alcohol abuse, the treatment limits and financial requirements for these services can be ‘no more restrictive’ than those that apply to medical and surgical benefits.

What this means, the bill says, is that co-payments, deductibles and out-of-pocket expenses for mental health services cannot be higher than those for treatment of physical illnesses.

By January of 2010, insurers will be treating physical and psychological conditions equitably.  And it can’t come soon enough for the 8 million suffering from an eating disorder,  15 million depressed Americans or overwhelmed college students. A 2004 study found that,”Almost 40% of the men and 50% of the women reported feeling so depressed that they had difficulty functioning one or more times.”

It’s especially important to women since 7 in 8 diagnosed with an eating disorder are women, and women are twice as likely to become depressed compared with men.

Unfortunately, for women, this bill doesn’t begin to address the higher premiums women pay for the same insurance coverage available to men.  But we’ll save that conversation for another blog post.

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Stress and depression up in youth

When I lived in Australia, I found myself overwhelmed at the grocery store. While the weekly farmer’s market was great for produce and chicken (if I remember correctly), I did venture out to an express grocery store for the random marinades, seasonings and rice mixes. Each time I made my way around the store, I passed through the chip and snack aisle, not because I eat a lot of potato chips (they’re actually pretty far down my list of junk food preferences). I used to stop just to contemplate the wide variety of chip flavors available to customers beyond the usual BBQ and salt & vinegar options. Despite being able to create steak & pepper or ham-flavored chips, do consumers really need that option available?

For young adults, life is increasingly like standing in the middle of the potato chip aisle. From education to entertainment to resume building experiences to technology, we face a tidal wave of choice. While adults are quick to point out that we have so many more options available to us, very few are teaching us how to handle having those options. Our response to these options is typically to try and tap them all, a direction that cannot be sustained indefinitely. And while our means of communication have exploded, the increasingly popular modes require less and less face time, which limits our interaction with those meant to provide support in our lives.

Thus, young people are more stressed than ever before.

In the survey, 45 percent of girls and young women reported experiencing stress frequently, to 32 percent of boys and young men. (MSNBC, August 23, 2007)

It doesn’t help that teens are faced with more standardized testing than ever, which determines everything from their own graduation and college acceptances to their district’s funding and their teachers’ pay.

The unsurprising corollary? A 2007 study of teens in the UK found:

A total of 27% of those questioned agreed with the statement: “I often feel depressed”.

In the Newsround survey many children said they felt under pressure from school, their classmates, and family expectations.

Seven out of ten said they felt the need to “look good”, and were on a diet some or all of the time.

In the US, similar numbers are reported with 20 to 25 percent of teens experiencing “major depression” before they turn 18

We eventually learn that we can’t be all things to all people, so it’s impossible to do everything all the time. How do we encourage youth to prioritize and take advantage of the most relevant opportunities, instead of trying to do all of them, especially in an age of multi-tasking that drives stressors more than ever before?

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