#1

Mental illness impact said to be bigger than cancer
Depression had the highest overall burden of mental illnesses

The burden of mental illness and addictions is more than 1.5 times that of all cancers, a new report suggests.

Wednesday's report, called Opening Eyes, Opening Minds, concluded that mental illness and addictions are often misunderstood, misdiagnosed and ignored, including in the health care system.

"People can often dismiss mental illnesses as, 'Oh, that person is just feeling a little blue,'" said Sujitha Ratnasingham, lead author of the report by the Institute for Clinical and Evaluative Sciences and Public Health Ontario.

"But they don't fully understand the impact it has on their life as a whole, their work, their social interactions, their family."

Ratnasingham and her co-authors calculated the burden of some mental illnesses and addictions based on early deaths as well as their impact on quality of life.

Many mental illnesses start in young adulthood, which contributes to their burden. (Courtesy ICES)
Since many mental illnesses manifest between the ages of 18 to 24, people may experience them over a long period with significant impact on social connections, educational goals and participation in the workforce, the report noted.

"If we are able to help people when they do have the early onset, we could prevent a lot of this burden," Ratnasingham said.

People may recover but relapses are also common, she added.

In Ontario, mental illness and addiction contributed to more than 600,000 health-adjusted life-years, a measure that incorporates both premature death and reduced functioning or suboptimal states of health associated with disease or injury.

The five conditions that had the highest burden were:

Depression.
Bipolar disorder.
Alcohol use disorders.
Social phobia.
Schizophrenia.
Depression had the highest overall burden, accounting for a third, the report's authors said.

Early detection key
In general, the burden declined with increasing age.

Bipolar disorder had the greatest impact among those aged 35 to 44.

Depression was the most common mental illness studied, said Sujitha Ratnasingham. (CBC)
Some cancers and infectious diseases may be more severe in terms of mortality rates, the authors said.

But the burden of mental illness and addiction in the province is more than 1.5 times that of cancer and seven times that of all infectious diseases when reduced functioning is considered.

Alcohol-related disorders were the exception, with those deaths accounting for 25 per cent of the burden of illness.

The authors recommended that early detection and timely intervention are critical, adding that effective treatments exist but only a small proportion of those affected receive them.

The Ontario figures are nationally representative, ICES said.

The authors did not consider co-morbidity, or suffering from more than one chronic condition at once.

Suicides and the impact of the illness on others, such as family members, were also excluded.

The researchers also relied in part on U.S. data.

Release of the report coincides with World Mental Health Day.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/health/story/2012/10/09/mental-illness.html

pretty much smoking gun evidence that my depression is worse than having cancer... i'll take your pity, and your paypal.

#2
Chemo and all those cancer drugs mess up your brain chemistry and give you depression so cancer is still probably a little bit worse, overall
#3
i should probably be treated for depression after reading your posts
#4

libelous_slander posted:

i should probably be treated for depression after reading your posts

we try to keep things light and positive on this forum. let's turn over a new leaf.

#5

libelous_slander posted:

i should probably be treated for depression after reading your posts


Please stop damaging Donald's self-esteem

#6

getfiscal posted:

'll take your pity, and your paypal.



only if you promise to spend it on extra large jeans for you and your genderfuck lover and not on another goddamn book about Eastern European socialist planning

#7
Usually when i get cancer im as happy as a clam lol
#8
i dont believe this article.

Source:
cant spell chemo without emo
#9

aerdil posted:

only if you promise to spend it on extra large jeans for you and your genderfuck lover and not on another goddamn book about Eastern European socialist planning

sure i'll buy jeans. i need jeans.

#10
the answer to both is smoke weed. funny how that works.
#11
I don't like jeans
#12
im almost certainly gonna get cancer at some point but i dont know which kind, so i smoke cigarettes to make sure it isnt a surprise
#13

Meursault posted:

Chemo and all those cancer drugs mess up your brain chemistry and give you depression so cancer is still probably a little bit worse, overall

Yes... on the idividual level.. not on the overall world level.... RTFA.....

#14
Getfiscal your life may be shitty and sad but you should know i respect your wisdom and wit; and even more admirable to me you appear kind. If yoi accomplish nothing else you have brought pleasure to one goons heart, and what more can one hope for?
#15
[account deactivated]
#16

Squalid posted:

Getfiscal your life may be shitty and sad but you should know i respect your wisdom and wit; and even more admirable to me you appear kind. If yoi accomplish nothing else you have brought pleasure to one goons heart, and what more can one hope for?


fail aids

#17
#18
Here's a cool way to cure depression: pray for the strength to self-improve
#19
self-flaggelation
#20

Squalid posted:

Getfiscal your life may be shitty and sad but you should know i respect your wisdom and wit; and even more admirable to me you appear kind. If yoi accomplish nothing else you have brought pleasure to one goons heart, and what more can one hope for?

my life isn't that shitty. and thank you.

#21
#22

Agnus_Dei posted:

Here's a cool way to cure depression: pray for the strength to self-improve



the guy is depression, the pug is your prayers
































this is the result......