Today was a big day for @diesel6751 and I. It was also #BellLetsTalk Day. Please read the thread to see how it unfolded...
Derek and I were up at 4am to arrive, in the dark, at @CAMHnews . I was able to join one of the @CAMHResearch doctors, Dr. Daskalakis, for an interview with @JamieGutfreund from @CP24Breakfast. We discussed #rTMS (Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation)...
Dr. Daskalakis discussed some staggering statistics about #mentalhealth. He said that if 350,000 people were waiting - and not receiving - cancer treatment, there would be an uproar. There are 350,000 people waiting for mental health treatment...
I then had the privilege of a private meeting with Premier @fordnation, Minister of Health @celliottability , and Minister of Infrastructure @MonteMcNaughton and Dr. Daskalakis...
Dr. Daskalakis talked about how their extensive research on rTMS has proven it to be a very beneficial treatment. That 1/3 of mentally ill patients don't respond to medication treatment. And that 50% of those treatment resistant patients would benefit from rTMS...
He made it clear how many people COULD be helped, having them back to work, back to participating in their families - back to life! Imagine how much of the burden could be lifted off of our healthcare system. We need to be more proactive, not reactive...
He discussed how the treatment itself is portable - the machine can be delivered anywhere. Even to remote locations (Minister @celliottability really responded to this)...
He surprised them with the fact that #rTMS is widely covered, available and accessible in the US (thank you in part to the research BY @CAMHnews ) and that it's also covered in Quebec and Saskatchewan.
He talked about the promising use of #rTMS for youth - and how if we can treat them early enough, we might be able to stop the advancement of the illness, and possible stop the progression of suicidal thoughts...
A novel approach for hard-to-treat depression in youth - A new study combines #rTMS with brain training to treat depression in youth camh.ca/en/science-and…
He revealed that new research shows incredible promise for #rTMSthetaburst stimulation. The original rTMS treatment that has been around for about 20 years is a 40 minute treatment, the theta burst treatment is delivered in ONLY THREE MINUTES...
Three-minute version of brain stimulation therapy effective for hard-to-treat depression - Three-minute version of a brain stimulation treatment was shown to be just as effective as the standard 37-minute version for hard-to-treat depression camh.ca/en/camh-news-a…
I was able to share my own perspective of #rTMS treatment. How I've searched for more than 20 years to find something that worked. Something that gave me my life - and my purpose - back...
I told them that medications never worked for me. That #ECT (electroconvulsive shock therapy) worked very well, but the memory loss and side effects were significant and catastrophic. I told them I'd do it again if I had to...
I told them I participated in studies for this 'new' #rTMS treatment as I was hoping there was another answer for me. I said this treatment became my answer. I said I felt grateful to live 'close' to such an incredible research and teaching hospital @CAMHnews...
I told them that every 7-8 months, I drive 3 hours a day, every day, for six weeks to receive this 3-minute treatment. They were shocked, but they aren't blind to the issues of accessible treatment...
I told them that #ECT was hard to manage and recover from. I had to organize rides, be there for hours each day to make sure I reacted fine to both the seizure and the anaesthetic I received. Then recovered for days, no, weeks, after...
It told them how cost saving it would be to treat a new patient every few minutes. That these patients could walk in and out on their own. That they could even potentially do at-home treatments to extend remission time - or possibly even eliminate their illness...
I told them that with such an 'affordable' and portable treatment, rolling it out across our province, or even our country, would literally be gifting life back to our families, friends and neighbours who are struggling with their mental health.
I had a private conversation with @fordnation. I told him that I get messages from people all the time who are struggling. Struggling with wait times, with communication between specialists, with advocating...
Struggling with finding treatment that works, while trying to maintain hope, their jobs, their families, their lives. Struggling with finding appropriate treatment for their teen. Struggling with the loss of their child - who died by suicide...
I told them that @CAMHnews, Dr. Blumberger, and the #rTMS team, saved my life. Multiple times. And that we need to start making life saving treatment available and accessible...
For me, today felt very focused on my own struggles and treatment, but I hope I was able to deliver the simple message that we NEED BETTER MENTAL HEALTH CARE. And on that note... good night!
A giant thank you to the team at @CAMHnews for the invitation and opportunity to share my journey today. I'm truly grateful and hope that maybe it will help someone who is struggling.
(1/8) I’ll take “Shitty Behaviour You (Shouldn’t) Have to Put Up With” for $500
I’m often mistaken for an employee at @CAMHnews, instead of the patient I am. (What does a #mentalhealth patient LOOK like anyways?). I don’t hesitate to correct someone because I’m not ashamed...
(2/8) ME: [standing in the parking lot by my car in-between #rTMS treatments]
MAN: [cutting through #CAMH grounds with walking group of seniors behind me] “...and here we are at the insane asylum, ha ha ha, if we’re lucky we’ll see some of the crazies doing their crazy shit...”
(3/8) If I wasn’t so exhausted (and nauseated), I’d have schooled you. Instead, I’ll wait outside every day in between treatments while I’m here, and maybe one day I’ll be lucky and you’ll walk by. And I’ll invite you to have a conversation. And I’ll share my history with you...
From @CAMHnews... According to the World Health Organization, around 450 million people currently struggle with mental illness, making it the leading cause of disability worldwide... #BellLetsTalk
Here at home, it affects more than 6.7 million of us. In fact, one in two Canadians have—or have had—a mental illness by the time they reach 40 years of age... #BellLetsTalk@CAMHnews
From camh.ca:
The Cost to Society Is Immense.
Mental illness is a leading cause of disability in this country, preventing nearly 500,000 employed Canadians from attending work each week. @CAMHnews#BellLetsTalk
This thread is about depression - but it isn’t ‘sad’. I've accepted that my mental illness was ongoing and cyclical. Caused by a faulty part in my brain. That’s ok! I could have had a pancreas that didn’t work or a heart that malfunctioned, too. But I got a broken brain...
Fine! Let’s deal with it. What does treatment look like for a broken brain? Last week, my brain received 72,000 ‘zaps’ through a magnetic coil to the part of my brain that’s ‘broken’. I’m weepy because I already feel a difference...
I’m weepy because I keep forgetting what it feels like to not be ‘sad’ all the time (it’s deeper than this). If we think of emotions as chemicals and electrical impulses, those zaps have encouraged the part of my brain that makes emotions happen to work again...