Aging...the new Adolescence

This month we will be blogging about getting older. We will be asking daily thought starter questions that will inspire all of us to explore our assumptions and beliefs about aging, in ways that will hopefully transform some of the unexamined ideas we bring to that idea.

Look for challenge questions like: When I can't remember something, should I be worried? I never was motivated to go to the gym...and it's not getting any easier. What do I do? Is it too early to talk to MY aging parent about death?


You know, easy stuff like that...


Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Health Care Reform

Re: Health Care Bill: even Maureen Dowd, the ever acerbic columnist for the NY Times is admiring the strength of the Democrats in "standing up to the Republican bullies."
But I went to a Harvard Medical School thing last night and witnessed some of the best medical minds in the world talking about some of the toughest diseases, saying "the only thing we know works is diet and exercise." I think those things are free. Stay out of McDonald's and take a walk. By the way, the Dean of the Harvard Medical School could use more spinach and some time on the treadmill himself.
And we talked about a burger tax...I would definitely vote for that. And maybe we could get people to slim down by doing what we did with cigarettes: no eating in restaurants.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Critical need for mental health services in Haiti

International experts are encouraging the Haitian Health Ministry, which they say is receptive and eager for help, to incorporate mental health care into the primary health care system and to make it available throughout the country.
Right now, though, the need for psychological first aid and emergency psychiatric treatment is so acute that foreign psychiatrists are seeing patients, setting up programs and rapidly training Haitian doctors, nurses and community workers in everything from psychopharmacology to group relaxation techniques. (Before the quake, there were only about 15 psychiatrists in all of Haiti.)
The foreign psychiatrists emphasize that they have found Haitians to be impressively resilient, but the disaster has nonetheless set off reactions ranging from anxiety through psychosis. Most worrisome are cases like that of Guerda Joseph, a 41-year-old woman who tumbled into a catatonic depression shortly after she was pulled from the rubble of her home. Mute and nearly immobilized ever since, she lies on floral sheets at the General Hospital, her Bible tucked beside her pillow, her 25-year-old adopted son by her side day and night.
More common, though, is what Dr. Lynne Jones, a child psychiatrist and disaster expert with the International Medical Corps, calls “earthquake shock,” a persistent sensation that the earth is still shaking, which makes the heart race and causes chest pain.
“This is an understandable response, and it’s important to let people know, ‘You are not crazy,’ ” Dr. Jones said. “I use a kind of metaphor: ‘Your body has a very effective fire alarm. One of the reasons you’re alive today is that it went off during the earthquake. You ran out of that building. Great, you survived. Unfortunately, the fire alarm is now sensitive and goes off when you don’t want it to, or maybe it never shut off.’ ”