Miranda Dale had her first breakdown during her freshman year at the
University of Virginia in Charlottesville. It was 2 a.m. on a Saturday,
and she hadn't left her dorm room in days.
"I honestly didn't
know what to do," says Dale. "I heard rumors that at a big university
you're just a number and you're not going to get through to anyone" at
the university counseling center.
But when she called the
school's counseling line, someone answered right away. Dale got help
getting a prescription for medication, and she was booked for an
appointment that Monday. She was eventually diagnosed with bipolar II, a mood disorder that usually requires medication.
Over the past decade, colleges and universities across the country have seen an influx of students like Dale with mental health needs.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2013/01/07/168618329/triage-system-helps-colleges-treat-mentally-ill-students
Monday, January 7, 2013
Wayne State med students care for homeless, others on Detroit's streets
First the left arm. Then the right.
Jonathan Wong, a 29-year-old Wayne State University medical student, moved the blood pressure cuff from one of Thomas Wise's arms to the other to get a better reading. Then, another medical student tested the 45-year-old's cranial nerve response -- could he puff his cheeks? Could he move his tongue?
The students were at St. John Congregational Church in Detroit on Friday, treating some of the men in the church's shelter as part of a new venture between about 100 Wayne State medical students and the Neighborhood Service Organization (NSO).
Called Street Medicine Detroit, the program takes doctors-to-be such as Wong and Paul Thomas, 25, out of the clinic and into the city, treating homeless people in the shelters, parks and underpasses where they often live.
http://www.freep.com/article/20130107/NEWS01/301070047/1001/news
Jonathan Wong, a 29-year-old Wayne State University medical student, moved the blood pressure cuff from one of Thomas Wise's arms to the other to get a better reading. Then, another medical student tested the 45-year-old's cranial nerve response -- could he puff his cheeks? Could he move his tongue?
The students were at St. John Congregational Church in Detroit on Friday, treating some of the men in the church's shelter as part of a new venture between about 100 Wayne State medical students and the Neighborhood Service Organization (NSO).
Called Street Medicine Detroit, the program takes doctors-to-be such as Wong and Paul Thomas, 25, out of the clinic and into the city, treating homeless people in the shelters, parks and underpasses where they often live.
http://www.freep.com/article/20130107/NEWS01/301070047/1001/news
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)