SoberRecovery Alcohol Drug Treatment Directory
Home
Find Alcohol Drug Treatment Help Medical
Find Help
Online Counselors Intake Coordinators Interventionist
Get Help
Addicted Addiction Treatment Articles
Articles
Treatment Facility News Information Marketing
Blogs
SoberRecovery Community Forums
Forums
SoberRecovery Chat
Chat
World Famous SoberTime Calculator
Sober Time
Join SoberRecoverys Growing Community
Join
Contact Us SoberRecovery
Contact

 

alt text dummy

 


Archive for the ‘Depression Treatment’ Category

Major Depression and Complicated Grief

Monday, November 29th, 2010

Depression Treatment
It is common for people to have sadness, pain, anger, bouts of crying, and a depressed mood after a loved one dies. It is important to know about normal grief responses so that you can know if the bereaved person might be getting worse — going into a major depression.
About 1 in 5 bereaved people will develop major depression (also called clinical depression). This condition can often be treated by therapy and medicines. People at highest risk for clinical depression include those who have been depressed before, those with no support system, those who have had problems with alcohol or drug abuse, or those who have other major life stresses. Symptoms of major depression not explained by normal bereavement may include:
Constant thoughts of being worthless or hopeless
Ongoing thoughts of death or suicide (other than thoughts that they would be better off dead or should have died with their loved one)
Being unable to perform day-to-day activities
Intense guilt over things done or not done at the time of the loved one’s death
Delusions (beliefs that are not true)
Hallucinations (hearing voices or seeing things that are not there), except for “visions” in which the person briefly hears or sees the deceased
Slower body responses and reactions
Extreme weight loss
If symptoms like these last more than 2 months after the loss, the bereaved person is likely to benefit from depression treatment.
In some people, the grieving process can go on for a long time. This happens more often in those who were very close to the deceased. It is most often caused by attempts to deny or get away from the pain or trying to avoid letting go.
Complicated grief
If normal mourning does not occur, or if the mourning goes on for a long time without any progress, it is called “complicated grief” or “unresolved grief.” Symptoms of this may include:
Continued disbelief in the death of the loved one
Being unable to accept the death
Flashbacks, nightmares, memories that keep intruding into thoughts over time
Severe and prolonged grief symptoms: anger, sadness, or depression
Keeping a fantasy relationship with the deceased with the feeling that he or she is always present and watching
Continuous yearning and searching for the deceased
Unusual symptoms that seem unrelated to the death (physical symptoms, strange or abnormal behavior)
Breaking off all ties to social contact
For some people who are taking care of a loved one with a long-term illness, complicated grief can actually start while their loved one is still alive. Caregivers under severe stress, especially if the caregiver’s outlook is bleak, may be at higher risk of having abnormal grief even before the death.
If you or anyone close to the deceased has any of the above symptoms of major depression or complicated grief, talk with a qualified health or mental health professional. Treatment is important, since people with complicated grief are at risk of their emotional illness getting worse, and are at higher risk of committing suicide.

Contributed and published with permission:
Depression Treatment at Beachway Therapy Center

Depression Treatment Program

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Interested in a Depression Treatment Program?

A depression treatment program will help you through your depression.  A program can be as simple as a prescription drug regimen or it could be one on one therapy with a counselor or it could be group therapy.  It could also be a combination of all of them. As you seek treatment, you and you doctor will decide which programs are working best for you as each of us will respond differently to different types of treatment.

Get Involved in a Depression Treatment Program

To be successful in depression treatment program, you must take the program seriously and use the program to its full advantage to get through treatment while yielding the best results for you.  If you do not take the program seriously, you will draw out the process making your recovery much longer than it needs to be.

SoberRecovery.com has several links for depression.  Follow these links to begin the path of recovery from depression.  A faster recovery means you will be healthier and your friends and family will be happier as well. Depression can be so severe, it can tear families apart and make friends become distant.

For a successful recovery from depression, find the depression treatment program that is right for you.  The quicker you recover, the better you will be.  You will also be less likely to fall further into depression which may lead to drug and alcohol addiction and temptation to harm yourself or those around you.

Depression Treatment

Monday, June 15th, 2009

Depression Treatment Assistance

Depression affects many Americans each year.  Depression can be caused by events such as losinga loved one or losing a job.   Depression can also be a result of a chemical imbalance with no other outside sources bringing it on.  Proper depression treatment will help find the root cause or causes of the issue.  This will help you begin the healing process, which can include therapy or a prescribed drug regimen.  Sometimes it can include a combination of both.

Find Depression Treatment

Depression treatment is important to both you and to those around you.  Your depression can take a toll on your health by causing stress.  Long term depression can eventually lead to worse things like drug addiction and harming yourself, sometimes just to get attention or cry out for help.  Depression may also cause you to act out on those you care for. Examples may be lashing out on a loved one or withdrawing yourself from social functions with your family and friends.

For assistance on treating your depression, check out SoberRecovery.com to help guide to through treatment options and even help locate professionals who can help you through your recovery.

Depression treatment will not only increase your quality of life by making you a healthier, happier person, but it will also boost your relationship with those around you as well.  The sooner you seek help, the better you will feel and your loved ones will thank you for it.  Depression affects everyone around you.

Depression Rehab

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

We know when we’re sad. We don’t need the dictionary definition of depression, “a mental state characterized by a pessimistic sense of inadequacy and a despondent lack of activity” to explain the condition. But when it is truly an illness, not just a passing emotion, doctors do a complete physiological evaluation to determine the extent of the problem, whether it is a mild case of depression or an extreme condition that would require depression rehabilitation.

We are fortunate in this century, that getting help for depression no longer means getting shock treatments or a frontal lobotomy. The father of the lobotomy “Walter Freeman believed lobotomies worked because the procedure severed connections between the frontal lobes of the brain and the thalamus, thought to be the seat of human emotion, which the mentally ill apparently had in overabundance. ”

Success with Depression Rehab

Luckily, that treatment is now recognized to be the barbaric procedure it is, and doctors have turned to actual science for answers.

Nowadays the cause of depression is thought to be due to chemical imbalances in the brain. Contemporary scientists have come up with a variety of medications to correct those imbalances. Doctors select antidepressants based on their patient’s symptoms but there’s no one magic pill or one magic protocol. The drug side effects differ, as do their effectiveness. Dosages and prescriptions are adjusted over time as doctors use their best judgment on which specific medications the symptoms respond to–or don’t respond to.

Depression rehab is not limited to drugs, however; it is combined with a variety of supportive practices, such as psychotherapy, cognitive and even physical therapy. The point of depression rehab is to treat not just the body, not just the mind, not just the symptoms, but instead to treat the whole person.

Ecstasy a Deadly Tour

Wednesday, October 29th, 2008

Ecstasy users all around the world consider this illegal drug as “the hottest drug going now” and as the decade’s version of LSD. Also it is one of the deadliest drugs. This drug is widespread and is associated with open-to-the-public teen dance parties–or “raves”–federal officials say the drug also known as MDMA (and most commonly called “X” on the street) is so readily available that teens can easily buy it on the street or even on their school’s campus. A recent survey of teens conducted by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse found that one in four questioned said they had a friend or class mate whom they knew had used Ecstasy, and 17% said they knew more than one user.Some of the slang terms for Ecstasy include: B-bombs, Disco biscuit, Essence, Go, Hug Drug, Love drug, Scooby snacks, Sweeties, Wheels, “X”

Adding to the already existing dangerous potential of Ecstasy is the fact that, increasingly, other drugs altogether are being passed off as Ecstasy and that Ecstasy pills are sold heavily laced with other dangerous drugs such as PCP. “When somebody tells me they’ve taken Ecstasy these days, I have no idea what they’ve taken,” says Dr. Grob, director of child and adolescent psychiatry at the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Torrance, California. Grob, who conducted the first Food and Drug Administration-approved study of MDMA’s effects in the mid-90’s, says the growing furor surrounding the illegal use and abuse of the drug has overshadowed its potential as a legitimate, professionally monitored psychiatric treatment for such ailments as posttraumatic stress disorder.
Some of the Facts about Ecstasy

Ectasy is MDMA

When most people refer to Ecstasy they are usually referring to 3,4- methylenedioxymethamphetamine, or MDMA. Patented in Germany before World War I, MDMA was not tested on humans until the 70’s. Chemically, it’s structurally similar to both amphetamine and mescaline, a hallucinogen; In 1985, the Drug Enforcement Administration ordered that MDMA be classified as an illegal drug. However, that did little to stop its spread on the black market. By the mid-90’s, Ecstasy had become a popular “club drug” in Europe, the U.S., and other parts of the world.

A dangerous trend has become pervasive and often proves fatal: In attempts to prolong the effects of the drug and enhance the “I love everyone” feelings, “stacking”–using multiple doses in one night–or combining Ecstasy with alcohol or other drugs is becoming increasingly widespread; Medical experts are also alarmed by commonly used impure forms of Ecstasy (laced with other drugs), as well as look-alike pills. Other critical concerns include the drug’s capacity to accelerate dehydration and overheating, which, especially at crowded dance clubs, has been the cause of death in some cases; If you or someone you care about is using Ecstasy, consider getting immediate and confidential help from your doctor or local therapist. There are a number of ways with which you can feel euphorically high and that won’t risk your life.