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المحتوى المقدم من Schizophrenia Care Project. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Schizophrenia Care Project أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door
وسم كل الحلقات كغير/(كـ)مشغلة
Manage series 2120907
المحتوى المقدم من Schizophrenia Care Project. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Schizophrenia Care Project أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door is a passion project by Dr. Ken Campos MD, DFAPA. Dr. Campos is on a quest to help caregivers of mental illness family members, specifically schizophrenia. After 25 years of helping patients in hospitals and prevention centers, he became passionate about helping the caregivers and family members that cope daily and wanted to provide a community to get them support. In this bi-monthly interview series, Dr. Ken Campos talks to practitioners, caregivers, non-profits, family members and other community support resources. He is driven to create a clearing for a balanced respectful life for those with schizophrenia and their caregivers internationally. Please Join him and share with other caregivers of schizophrenia.
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30 حلقات
وسم كل الحلقات كغير/(كـ)مشغلة
Manage series 2120907
المحتوى المقدم من Schizophrenia Care Project. يتم تحميل جميع محتويات البودكاست بما في ذلك الحلقات والرسومات وأوصاف البودكاست وتقديمها مباشرة بواسطة Schizophrenia Care Project أو شريك منصة البودكاست الخاص بهم. إذا كنت تعتقد أن شخصًا ما يستخدم عملك المحمي بحقوق الطبع والنشر دون إذنك، فيمكنك اتباع العملية الموضحة هنا https://ar.player.fm/legal.
HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door is a passion project by Dr. Ken Campos MD, DFAPA. Dr. Campos is on a quest to help caregivers of mental illness family members, specifically schizophrenia. After 25 years of helping patients in hospitals and prevention centers, he became passionate about helping the caregivers and family members that cope daily and wanted to provide a community to get them support. In this bi-monthly interview series, Dr. Ken Campos talks to practitioners, caregivers, non-profits, family members and other community support resources. He is driven to create a clearing for a balanced respectful life for those with schizophrenia and their caregivers internationally. Please Join him and share with other caregivers of schizophrenia.
…
continue reading
30 حلقات
كل الحلقات
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 HOPE29-The SP Care and Adverse Childhood Experiences 15:18
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Dr. Ken discusses the causes of psychosis. He explains what it actually means. He explains what causes diagnosis of schizophrenia. ©2019 Dr. Ken Campos
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

Dr. Ken reviews the book "Clozapine" by Meyer & Stahl. He explains the aspects of the book that might make you want to read it.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 HOPE27-A Balanced Healty Life with Terry Peterson 20:51
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Terry Peterson has been living with schizophrenia. He tells his story and explains how schizophrenia patients can achieve a balanced, healthy life.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 HOPE26-Dr Ken Reviews Surviving Schizophrenia 5th Edition by E Fuller Torey MD 16:05
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Dr. Ken reviews the book Surviving Schizophrenia by E. Fuller Torrey MD. Dr. Ken gives his understanding of the various aspects of the book's 5th edition. He goes through each part in detail.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

Dr. Ken Campos discusses his brand new video series, Hope at Home.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 A View from the Inside with Charles Sayer 26:35
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Today Dr. Ken talks to Charles Sayer about the environment inside of the hospitals. They also discuss legal matters surrounding patients of schizophrenia.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 Yoga for the Caregiver with Royal Fraser 27:19
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Dr. Ken is joined by Royal Fraser to discuss the use of yoga to help out the caregivers.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

Dr. Ken is joined by Steven Morgan to discuss Soteria House. Steven explains his experiences in the mental health system.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 Understanding Laws After a Hospital Stay with Adolph Vidal 25:10
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Dr. Ken is joined by Adolph Vidal, LCSW, for a discussion around the laws after a hospital stay. The discussion delves into what is legal and what is not surrounding medication. It is a lively and interesting discussion.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 The Drive Toward Destruction and Death 25:53
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Dr. Ken’s guest is a man who had a dark period in his life with hopelessness, lack of self-love, and suicidal thoughts. He is a personal acquaintance from a local club. This interview is to help bring awareness to the issue of suicide in the context of a caregiver of a loved one who is living with schizophrenia. It is the goal to gain a greater understanding of this difficult and somewhat mysterious topic of self-destructive urges, and what to do about them…
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

Dr Ken gives another short lecture on the SchizoPhrenia CARE project today. First, a little more on the cultural background of mental health. Traditional Western medicine is currently the main form of medical practice in the United States and the West today. Dr Ken spent four years doing lab research in brain chemistry related to psychosis. Please see the pdf document from Dr Ken on psychosis available at the website listed below. Some believe that severe mental illness is a myth. More on culture: the term "allopathic medicine” is typically used and mis-used to refer to traditional Western medicine. But it is not really allopathic at all, as that means a medicine based upon classical Greek practices which was based upon “humors,” and balancing them with treatments opposite to the symptoms. To begin to bridge the culture gap, since 1989 the NIH has been exploring and studying Traditional Chinese medicine and Hindu Indian Aruydevic medicine theory and practices. Today, this study group is become a formal center of NIH. It is named the National Center for Integrative and Complementary Medicine. The other podcast episode on the Soteria program shows how it represents an effort to change the Western medical cultural model to one of greater healing and compassionate management of those folks in crisis with psychosis. Another group of interest is The “Hearing Voices Network.” It is a movement started in the United Kingdom, in Manchester, England in 1988. One goal is to normalize the experiences of hearing voices, having visions, having tactile sensations and other sensory experiences. One of their aims is to promote and develop self-help groups. This group and movement also represents a big culture shift and change. More on the Schizophrenia Care Project. First, the name of the project. The word “project” comes from self-help and personal transformation groups and refers to a community based project which is not a personal goal or project. Also, it refers to bringing the possible into the realm of the real. The vision, goal or mission of the SchizoPhrenia CARE project is to promote and support balanced, healthful, meaningful, and respectful lives for those living with schizophrenia, hearing voices, or chronic psychosis and their caregivers. The first word is “Balanced.” This gets to the notion that life can be thought of as having areas in it that are like spokes on a bicycle wheel. Some of those spokes are health, fitness, diet, exercise, learning, productive activities, self-care, friendships, family, job or work, finances, fun things to do, hobbies, religious and spiritual activities, meditation, sleep and rest, etc. So, a balanced life is a life where a person strives to have the same length on the different spokes of the wheel, or parts of life. Next, the word is “Healthful.” Health is made up of at least three main parts. First is the physical body, diet, exercise, rest, and self-care. Next, the mental health, this is about a person’a habitual thoughts and attitudes, having lively friends and interests to keep the mind active. And third is spiritual health. This is one’s relationship to a Higher Power, or God, or for some folks, an active involvement in a supportive, loving and accepting church community. The word “Meaningful” refers to a humanistic idea that our lives are a story. There were events and things that happened in our childhoods, events at school. Perhaps for many listening to this podcast, events related to odd and frightening experiences and behavior, and even emergency contact with police and mental health hospital emergency rooms. After the Nazi holocaust in WWII, a prisoner who survived, a psychiatrist named Victor Frankl, wrote a book “Man’s Search for Meaning.” One of his questions was why did some prisoners wither and die while others lived while both were in those miserable conditions of cold and malnutrition. In his book, he states that finding meaning in one’s life is part of the answer. The other things are to be responsible for one’s self, and care for other people. The main reason for living is to find meaning in one’s life. Also, he adds that each of us has the freedom to find his or her own meaning in what we do, what we experience, and how we handle those experiences. So for the listeners, there may have to be a re-telling of your own life story, as you find new and acceptable meaning. The last word in the phrase is “Respectful.” This is the opposite of the shameful negative stigma. Many groups want to change the culture about stigma over mental illness. But rather that fight against it, the phrase Dr Ken has chosen for the project is “respectful lives.” So respectability is the goal, the thing we are striving toward for those living with schizophrenia, chronic psychosis and those who are hearing voices. Respectability is the new normal. Respectability begins with self-respect and self-love. The logo for the project is a heart-shaped partial outline surrounding a human head. Within the head are little triangles. These symbolize the thoughts, ideas, memories and experiences (both inner and outer experiences) of the person living with schizophrenia and those hearing voices. The heart outline symbolizes the core value of the project & staff. That is the value of care & love, bridge building, of seeing the person living with schizophrenia as not fundamentally different from one’s self. Caring for and loving one’s fellow human being in the same degree that one loves and cares for oneself is a moral value. It is a moral value which requires growth, stability and support to live and act at that particular level of moral development. This is a stage of development beyond and above the selfish and only self-serving moral level. The short hand logo name is SP-CARE. That is a funny abbreviation of SchizoPhrenia as SP. That’s kinda like spelling schizophrenia with a capital S at the beginning and a capital P in the middle. But it works. The next big arena for the project is adding its weight to the already existing support and empowerment groups. The idea here is that there are many ideas which can help the family or the board and care staff take care of someone who is living with schizoiphrenia. Many people already know what to do. The challenge is to embody what we know, to keep up the motivation to act on what we know and to live the values and principles to help all involved. This has started with an online accountability FaceBook community public group. The crowning achievement envisioned for the project is local and international sets of long term residential, education, support and empowerment homes for those living with chronic psychosis, living with schizophrenia, and those hearing voices in acute crisis. The homes have the name of New Hope Campus, and the goal is to have sets of three in a community staffed with a good number of folks who will care for, support and form meaningful relationships with the residents over time. There will be diet and exercise support. Outside holistic psychiatrists will be used to oversee any who may require medications. Funding through large scale international charitable donations was discussed. Lastly the audience is invited support the vision of balanced, healthful, meaningful and respectful lives for those living with schizophrenia and to subscribe to the websites below.…
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

This is first talk on the Schizophrenia Care Project. The theme will be the project’s goals, vision, sub-parts and mission. First language and “words” were discussed. There is a theory of human communication that holds that the words we use have an impact on our sense of identity, our place in the world, our self-esteem and things of that nature. The word “psychosis” was reviewed in some detail. It is a medical word, a jargon, a technical word. Psychosis is a word like the word “fever.” It describes a set of experiences, reported perceptions / senses and observed behaviors. Just like “fever” the medical word “psychosis” does not imply or define a specific diagnosis. Of considerable interest are those reported perceptions, experiences of the person having them, that are not shared with others in the immediate vicinity. Some would classify ESP, extra-sensory perception, clairvoyance, and such as hallucinations. Hearing the voice of “God” as some religious mystics hear is also in this category of an experience that is not shared by others in the same room, or right nearby. Regarding disease or pathology, the definition of schizophrenia as a phenomena was reviewed. It is also in the PDF report available at the www.DrKenCampos.com website. Some religious and spiritual systems include experiences that could be termed hallucinations and delusions. For those appropriate sub-cultures, this is not a problem, not an illness. Religious experiences that occur in those accepting group settings, that is in a church or spiritual community, were not considered to be part of illness. Examples were given. So, one might conclude that a certain sub-set of fevers or of psychotic experiences can be part of the normative human life. It leads one to a question. What can the family, the community, and the mental health practitioners do about this. The World Health Organization studies of those with a schizophrenia diagnosis were discussed. Narrative reframing and motivational interviewing were both discussed. The group called the “Hearing Voices Network” which exists as part of the “Hearing Voices Movement” seeks to raise awareness that there unusual experiences in any of the five senses, are not in themselves pathological, and do not immediately qualify as a diagnosis of schizophrenia. They aim to re-define the “psychotic experiences” of their members and normalize them. They generally avoid the word “psychosis.” Indeed, severe mental illness had carried strong negative connotations and negative associations both in our Western and American culture, and results in unnecessary suffering on the part of some people who are living with such symptoms, diagnoses, and labels. The SchizoPhrenia CARE Project is an umbrella for several things, first is this podcast aimed at educating and supporting the caregivers of some loved on who is living with schizophrenia or who is “hearing voices.” Next, the project is a platform for written educational material, including periodic newsletters, and an initial book on Hope and advice for the caregivers to find a foundation of support in their own lives so that they may more effectively care for the loved one living with schizophrenia or “hearing voices.” Online support groups are another spin off of the podcast and SP CARE project. Dr Ken envisions both moderated and unmoderated purely peer led groups for empowering the caregivers. Additionally, the is to be a private level support and empowerment group. Accountability and support to implement the practices of both self-care and new ways of supporting their loved one who is living with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or who is “hearing voices” is the key here. The word “eccentric” was reviewed and discussed, too. Dr Ken reviewed some of his hospital based experiences, too. Like aspirin or tylenol for a fever, the acute use of the dopamine blocking medications, the anti-psychotic medications is a very humane thing to offer. Despite the importance of self-determination, there also exists a group of people who are at risk for sever or damaging consequences of their unusual experience as well. This smaller group is the set of people who require a paternalistic intervention with the use of anti-psychotic medications for the short term at least. Safety is key. Lastly the residential care part of SchizoPhrenia CARE project was discussed. “New Hope Campus - with the neighborhood or city name attached” are the names of such houses. The goal here is to help people with supportive, holistic and well staffed group home for long term residence.…
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 The Triad of Self-Care with Dr. De Long 27:34
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Dr. Byron G. De Long joins Dr. Ken to discuss the triad of self-care. He goes into detail on each of the three aspects of self-care and how they can help the caregiver a great deal.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

Today's episode of Hope on the Other Side features Dr. Ken Campos and a discussion of Soteria House. Dr. Ken discusses the history and benefits of Soteria House in this, the first part of this series.
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HOPE: On the Other Side of the Door

1 Diet & Exercise With Schizophrenia With Ed Gain 20:08
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The focus is on food and diet at home as a way toward balanced, healthful, meaningful, and respectful lives for the person living with Schizophrenia and their caregivers, too. In psychiatric and neuroscience research it is clear that schizophrenia is caused by different problems in the mechanisms of brain function and brain anatomy. One of particular note is inflammation in the brain. This can be thought of as an inappropriate immune response in the brain. Some of the antipsychotic medications side effects were reviewed again, as in a previous podcast. Risk-Benefit analysis logic was reviewed: There is a RISK that based upon positive symptoms (hallucinations & delusions) that a person may engage in harmful behaviors toward self or other people. In many if not most cases this benefit outweighs the serious but lesser risk of the side effect of the medications. Changes in the way a person’s body processes food was one particularly important side effect. This results in something called the “metabolic syndrome.” It is a cluster of conditions — increased blood pressure, high blood sugars, excess body fat around the waist, and abnormal cholesterol and / or triglyceride levels. When they occur together they increase the risk of heart disease, stroke and diabetes. Diabetes, type II used to be called “adult onset diabetes” is caused by a person’s genetics and lifestyle including diet. There is insulin resistance, and that means that your body does not respond to insulin which is a hormone that allows cells to take in sugar (glucose) from the blood as nutrition. There can be excessive chronic thirst, frequent urination, and unexplained weight loss. Later there are long term problems such as organ damage, particularly the kidneys and the eyes. Healing cuts and wounds can be slow or impossible. The Schizophrenia Care Project is setting up accountability groups to help folks actually use these diets in their day to day lives at home. The hope is to make these accountability groups for Caregivers and folks living with schizophrenia fun and game-like. First, become aware of what meals are served at home, and the eating habits and snacking habits, of the loved one living with schizophrenia, is important. A food and meal diary can be useful here. Exercise levels may be low to start with because of both the so-called negative symptoms which involve lack of drive and initiative, and due to the sedating quality of some of the medications. Regular mealtimes and eating moderate amounts of the healthiest foods is advised. Bringing back the “family dinner time” home meal ritual is a way to keep positive meaning, health and respectfulness in people’s lives. Second, if you have the luxury of getting a registered dietician’s services that would be great, and possibly the hospital dietician can give a consultation on the way back home. Personal food likes and dislikes are important, note any food allergies. The goal for the loved one living with schizophrenia is to enjoy and to live the best life possible. Mealtime fellowship and good food is part of a good life. Brain research exists on inflammation & immune system over-reaction in a sub-set of people living with schizophrenia. Aspirin and some other anti-inflammatory meds have been used as part of the treatment. Check with your doctor about this for you. The Mayo Clinic recommendations were reviewed for eating healthy carbohydrates, fiber-rich foods, heart-healthy fish, and the “good” fats. Those things include starches and fruits, vegetables and whole grains, legumes (beans, peas and lentils). Also, low fat dairy products are recommended….but some in the anti-imflammatory camp recommend no dairy at all. Their recommendations also include fiber-rich foods such as nuts and legumes. For meat eaters, heart healthy fish are a good alternative to high-fat meats. Those fish include cod, tuna, halibut. The ones rich in omega-3-fatty acids which promote heart health are salmon, mackerel, tuna, sardines and bluefish. The good fats are monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats that can lower cholesterol levels. They include avocados, almonds, pecans, walnuts, olives. Also oils such as canola, olive and peanut. It is good to avoid saturated fats in animal proteins, beef, hot-dogs, sausage and bacon. Also avoid trans-fats in processed food snacks, and baked goods made with shortening. Limiting your cholesterol intake is another basic Mayo Clinic recommendation: So you may wish to limit your eating liver, egg yolks, and organ meats. The two foods most associated with inflammation are gluten and dairy (particularly high fat content dairy, such as certain cheeses). Gluten, a wheat, barley and rye protein has received a lot of attention in recent years. There is a serious condition affecting several different ethnic groups, not just those folks of northern European descent. Spice up your meals with turmeric. This is common in Indian cuisine and it is a wonderful anti-inflammatory spice. Also, yogurt, and pro-biotics have been shown to reduce stress and anxiety, which are very common concerns for those living with schizophrenia. Serotonin from the gut, from the intestines is key to avoid depressed mood states, which can be associated with schizophrenia, too. So, probiotics are important. “Nutritional psychiatry” has become a trend in recent years in the field; little by little psychiatrists are including diet as part of mental health. Sugars and sweeteners are a controversial area of interest. Cane sugar, table sugar, beet sugar is “sucrose” made up of glucose and fructose. Sucrose is broken down into those 2 sugars in the body. Our normal human brain cells use glucose almost exclusively for energy and normal functioning. The “high fructose corn syrup” has been outlawed in human foods in several European nations because it alters insulin metabolism, and causes more triglyceride and lipid formation by the liver, leading to metabolic syndrome. On Exercise: A very basic exercise is walking. It is commonly recommended to walk for at least 20 minutes as a time, working up a light sweat as a simple form of aerobic exercise. A nice family walk can help build rapport, help in bridge-building and lead to a meaningful and supportive home life or life in a board and care house or a group home. Yoga style stretching is very popular these days, videos, classes and groups are readily available in many towns and cities. Do exercises that you & your family enjoy doing. Harm reduction was addressed. Avoiding meats is recommended and any vegetarian restaurant will have balanced, healthy, tasty meals which are meat free & fish free. “Relative Risk,” is a phrase used by epidemiologists to describe an association between two things. There may not be a scientifically known mechanism for one thing causing the other, but there is an association. For example NIH, the National Institutes of Health, and the WHO, World Health Organization, and Harvard medical researchers show a clear and convincing association between eating meat and an increased colon cancer risk. There is one meat related disease mechanism known: the high fat content of meat and animal products increases certain hormone production in humans and thus increases the risk for breast and prostate cancer. Group that eat very little or no meats have much lower rates of cancer, than groups that routinely consume meats. The interview recapped and concluded with three recommendations: Enjoy regular meals together that contain plant based whole-foods, and by reducing or eliminating coffee, alcohol and nicotine consumption. Limit, reduce or eliminate sugars such as high fructose corn syrup and artificial sweeteners. Include moderate exercises, like walking, into the caregiving routine. These walks can be a time to build rapport and create meaningful lives with each other. Help your loved ones stay on their medications and to keep their doctors appointments.…
مرحبًا بك في مشغل أف ام!
يقوم برنامج مشغل أف أم بمسح الويب للحصول على بودكاست عالية الجودة لتستمتع بها الآن. إنه أفضل تطبيق بودكاست ويعمل على أجهزة اندرويد والأيفون والويب. قم بالتسجيل لمزامنة الاشتراكات عبر الأجهزة.