Why Students Should Have Mental Health Days: 1. Mental disease is becoming more and more popular among kids, while youth mental health isn't being cared for enough. 2. Mental health affects all of us, people who have brains to be cared for. 3. Suicide is the second most way that peopl...
School can be rife with stress, anxiety, panic attacks and even burnout -- but there's often no formal policy for students who need to prioritize their well-being. Hailey Hardcastle explains why schools should offer mental health days and allow students time to practice emotional hygiene without...
It's like by giving advice, people think you're putting yourself on a pedestal, and so people try to knock you down. For instance, one of the things I've talked about a lot is the possibility for Indonesian students to...
I supported many undergraduates with their mental health challenges. I saw African students struggle and unable to speak to anyone. Even with this knowledge and with their
1. When people think of "mental", a dirty, bumbling and hair-locked man may come into their mind. People have a bad impression on patient with mental health, because they equal 'mental' with 'mad'. People laugh at the patients struggling in mental torturing, while they never laugh at ...
Nearly 450 million people are affected by mental illness worldwide. In wealthy nations, just half receive appropriate care, but in developing countries, close to 90 percent go untreated because psychiatrists are in such short supply. Vikram Patel outlines a highly promising approach -- training memb...
10. Hailey Hardcastle: Why students should have mental health days. If you’re concerned about your kids, then this talk from teen mental health advocate Hailey Hardcastle should probably be your first watch. Per the video description: “School can be rife with stress, anxiety, panic a...
Top 150+ TED Talk Topics for Students The Impact of Artificial Intelligence on Future Careers Unlocking Creativity: The Power of Imagination in Learning Sustainable Living: Small Steps, Big Changes Overcoming Adversity: Building Resilience in Students ...
We need to see mental health as important as physical health. We need to stop suffering in silence. We must stop stigmatizing disease and traumatizing the afflicted. Talk to your friends. Talk to your loved ones. Talk to health professionals. ...
and then it was my turn to talk about my journey to a dining table in the hygienic community area of the mental health wing of a mountain-town hospital. I took too many sleeping pills, and after they treated me for that, they were like, "Hey, we would love it if you would be our...