Depression is still the most misunderstood of illnesses

Updated: 2016-01-11 07:58

By Chang Kwun - Hei(HK Edition)

  Print Mail Large Medium  Small 分享按鈕 0

Nov 11, 2015 - "HKU medical professor found hanging in flat". Oct 29, 2015 - "Pregnant woman with two young children jumps to death in Mong Kok". Sept 14, 2015 - "Mother who battled depression for 10 years " These are some of the newspaper headlines from the past three months in Hong Kong. Undoubtedly they are just the proverbial tip of the iceberg, as many more less dramatic suicides went unreported.

But there seems to be incontrovertible evidence of at least one suicide case per month due to depression. These deaths show a clear link between depression and suicide.

Hong Kong College of Psychiatrists spokesman Chan Lap-kei has said these tragedies highlight the prolonged shortage of psychiatrists in public hospitals. The city is short of around 400 psychiatrists when measured against World Health Organization standards. This acute shortage of mental health professionals at public hospitals is forecast to continue for 20 years. The intake of students to study Master of Science in Clinical Psychology at both the University of Hong Kong and the Chinese University of Hong Kong is limited to 19 students respectively per year. What is the reason for such restrictions on the course when the city is so short of mental health professionals? The only reason I can think of is that we do not fully understand depression and underestimate the negative impact of mental disorders.

"You do not want to go to the toilet, you do not want to make yourself food. It is so terrifying," said one of my patients. "It is not nice to have people thinking that I am a mental case or a failure. You won't understand the feeling. Only someone who has had it knows how paralyzing depression can be. Every day, I have gone through death with this disorder," my patient added.

There is a one-in-four chance that depression will affect you at some stage in your life. It is bad enough to get it, but the stigma can make you feel much worse.

There is a significant number of people who are suffering from depression, yet so many people will feel the need to hide it. Why? It is because of its stigma. People with depression are judged to be weak, or mentally unbalanced. Others have gone so far as to deny the existence of such illness.

For those not able to see depression as an illness, it is important for them to see what is actually happening inside the head. The part of the brain responsible for memory and emotion is the hippocampus. Neuroimaging shows the hippocampi in depressed people behave differently than those in people without the illness. There has been research to show that depression does not only affect how the brain works but actually has an impact on the structure of the brain, and these changes can be seen through brain imaging. The hippocampus is a brain area that has been most recently found to be smaller in people with depression.

Another brain area, the amygdala, is also found to behave differently in depressed people. The amygdala is a tiny area of our brain. Research scientist Catherine Harmer of the Oxford Centre for Brain Research took a sample of depressed people and showed them negative images as she was scanning their brain. Her results show that depressed people's brains exaggerate negative images.

Many experts are already showing evidence that science can detect little changes in the brain in depressed people, and yet there are still many very educated people questioning whether depression actually exists and remaining completely ignorant about its manifestations. Some commentators even described it as a designer illness, using phrases like "depression is the new black". In the past, people with depression were called lunatics. But now, the people who do not recognize depression should be called lunatics.

Depressed people are not crazy, they are just sick with an illness that is mostly controllable, if not curable - but which potentially can lead to tragic consequences if left untreated.

The author is a UK-qualified neuropsychologist with years of experience in treating mental illnesses, including depression.

Depression is still the most misunderstood of illnesses

(HK Edition 01/11/2016 page9)

主站蜘蛛池模板: 精品一区二区三区中文字幕| 7m精品福利视频导航| 欧美MV日韩MV国产网站| 办公室开档情趣内衣做爽视频| 中文字幕动漫精品专区| 性欧美18-19sex性高清播放| 亚洲AV无码国产精品永久一区 | 天海翼被施爆两个小时| 国产丝袜视频一区二区三区| 一本色道无码道在线观看| 最近中文字幕在线mv视频在线| 伊人久久大香线蕉综合AV| 性满足久久久久久久久| 女女女女BBBBBB毛片在线| 亚洲国产一二三| 高分少女免费观看第一季| 成人性开放大片| 亚洲欧美另类专区| 精品无码成人久久久久久| 国产成人精品无码片区在线观看 | 国产乱人伦AV麻豆网| 手机看片福利日韩国产| 天天av天天av天天透| 亚洲av永久无码精品古装片| 男人边吃奶边激烈摸下面的视频 | 一定要抓住电影在线观看完整版| 日本精品3d动漫一区二区| 亚洲人成7777| 精品国产成人亚洲午夜福利| 国产色视频网免费| 一区二区三区观看| 无遮挡无删动漫肉在线观看| 亚洲VA中文字幕| 欧美日韩色综合网站| 你是我的城池营垒免费观看完整版| 羞羞的漫画sss| 国产精品国三级国产av| 久久久久av综合网成人| 欧美xx性在线| 六月婷婷激情综合| jizz中文字幕|