Mad in America: Rethinking Mental Health
Health & Fitness:Mental Health
In this podcast we discuss an educational program called Emotional CPR (eCPR), a form of peer support anyone can use to assist youth (or adults) in emotional crisis.
Our guests are Oryx Cohen and Briza Gavidia of the National Empowerment Center, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit whose mission is to carry a message of recovery, empowerment, hope, and healing to people with lived experience with mental health issues, trauma, and/or extreme states.
Oryx Cohen, M.P.A., is a leader in the international mental health consumer/survivor/ex-patient (c/s/x) or Mad Pride movement. Currently, Oryx is NEC’s Chief Operating Officer. Among other responsibilities, he organizes the national Alternatives Conference every three years and assists states that have an underdeveloped consumer/survivor voice to find that voice and then work toward transforming their mental health systems to become peer-driven and recovery-oriented. Oryx is also a lead trainer for Emotional CPR, or eCPR, and has conducted over 50 eCPR trainings around the world.
Prior to joining NEC, Oryx was Co-Director of the Western Massachusetts Recovery Learning Community. There, he helped to spearhead an innovative peer-run approach focusing on recovery, healing, and community. Oryx is also the co-founder of Freedom Center, the Pioneer Valley’s only independent peer-run support/activist organization.
Briza Gavidia is a certified Youth Emotional-CPR (eCPR) Educator. She is 21 years old and is a student at Fullerton College majoring in sociology. Briza is currently employed in a program assisting the elderly with daily activities. Her goal is to work in the mental health field so she can give young people real hope for a better future. She loves sharing her lived experiences with trauma and how she is tackling these challenges so she can become a stronger person.
Art and Transformation - Creating Justice in Mental Health Care
David Healy – Polluting Our Internal Environments: The Perils of Polypharmacy
Morgan Shields - Breaking Academia's Silence on Inpatient Psychiatry
Anders Sørensen - Tackling Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal Through Research and in Practice
Justin Karter - Exploring the Fault Lines in Mental Health Discourse
Jim Flannery - Sorry It's Not Funny – Comedy, Hip-Hop and Activism
Diana Rose - Is Service-User Research Possible in Mental Health?
Jon Jureidini – Evidence-Based Medicine in a Post-Truth World
Liam MacGabhann, Martha Griffin, Harry Gijbels and Elaine Browne - The Launch of Mad in Ireland
Beverley Thomson – Antidepressed - Antidepressant Harm and Dependence
John Read and Jeffrey Masson - Biological Psychiatry and the Mass Murder of “Schizophrenics”
Kaori Wada - How Grief Became a Disorder and What This Means About Us
Andrew Scull - Desperate Remedies: Psychiatry’s Turbulent Quest to Cure Mental Illness
Kristina Marusic - Pollution's Mental Toll
Jessica Taylor - Pathologized Since Eve - Women, Trauma, and Sexy but Psycho
Jock McLaren – The Biopsychosocial Model is a Mirage, Time for a Biocognitive Model?
Tara Thiagarajan - Mental Wellbeing Among Internet-enabled Populations of the World
Bruce Cohen - The Failings of “Mental Health”: How a Seemingly Benign Concept Might be Dangerous
Jennifer Barkin - New Tools to Support New Moms
Alice and Kenneth Thompson - Bringing Integrative Community Therapy to Pittsburgh
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Good Mood Revolution
Mental Health Insights
MQ Open Mind
Speaking of Suicide
The Suicide Prevention Movement
Depression Talks Podcast