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There are 8 comments on Escaping the “Gray Zone” of Mental Illness

  1. As a social work clinician, I couldn’t agree more with the focus of this article and the need for more attention to mental illness and the needs of people who have mental illness. Our systems need to provide attention to medications and to the responses of people who are taking these medications. For most people, a single medication does not resolve the symptoms of mental illness for life. Revisions, changes take time and patience and perseverance. Both the client and the practitioner need to work together as a team. Unfortunately the system does not always support this process. My best to Mr. Delman in his work and doctoral program.

  2. This work is of extreme importance. As an interdisciplinary researcher in neuroscience and mental illness, it is encouraging to see such active advocacy for incorporative, multi-dimensional and patient based treatment in the BU community; a true center for research on neuroscience, psychology and psychiatry dedicated to the enormous public health problem of mental illness in our country. This article highlights the unfortunate pitfalls of mental health care that stem from a lack of clear etiological understanding and the all too common ignorance of the patient’s experience. My own research addresses the necessity that the field take a veritable interdisciplinary and integrative approach in it’s research and treatment if patients are every going to be free from the perils of the “Gray Zone” that continues to characterize the phenomenon of mental illness itself. Congratulations and gratitude to Mr Delman for his courage! -msimes@bu.edu

  3. I have personal experience with these medication issues as well, having been kept on medications which I have had bad reactions to, or having the clinician tell me that I am reacting to the medication in a different way than I actually am. Input into the medication process by patients is often interpreted as “resistance to treatment” or “paranoia”, when it is often nothing more extreme than a patient trying to communicate discomfort with the medication.
    I am surprised and pleased to see this kind of research and advocacy going on. I think it is a great project to find ways to help clinicians and patients work together more coherently, as they have the same goals. I would love to learn more about your project, and I wish you well!

  4. Thank you to Mr Delman for his advocacy and to BUToday for drawing our attention to this important issue. Readers of this article might be interested to know what work of this nature has been taking place in other areas at Boston University. Specifically, for a number of semesters I’ve followed the work of UNI Professor Liah Greenfeld who in her interdisciplinary Modernity Seminar examines this “Gray Zone” of mental illness through the lens of a mentalist, sociological perspective. By incorporating a study of culture its relationship to the human mind, Professor Greenfeld’s research project brings together a number of specialists from relevant areas of mental health and engages in discourse that seeks to identify and eliminate factors contributing to the “Grey Zone” experienced by so many patients – a disproportionate amount of whom are college-age Americans with much to contribute to the dialogue.

  5. I am very moved by this article. My son has struggled with bipolar condition, and has not yet made a career for himself. This story is inspiring. Keep up the good work Mr. Delman.

  6. Congratulations, very well done Mr. (almost Dr.) Delman! It is fantastic that you have been able to transform your very difficult experiences into a way to improve the field and help others. I too have Bipolar Disorder, and live fairly successfully with it after some very difficult years. I’m well-educated, have a professional job, and volunteer in mental health advocacy organizations. But I have yet to find a way to transition my skills into mental health advocacy as a full-time profession. In the meantime, I continue to be inspired by stories like this where people with mental illness are making wonderful contributions to the world — and are willing to admit their own illnesses. Congrats!

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