
National Mental Illness Awareness Week October 3-9, 2004, National Breast Cancer Awareness Month
HealthWatch for October 2004
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HealthWatch from ideastream recognizes National Mental Illness Awareness Week, October 3-9, 2004. This observation is designed to educate the public on what is mental illness, how to recover, and how to reduce the stigma that surrounds mental illness. With an early diagnosis, mental illness is treatable. Mental illness is any diagnosable mental, behavioral, or emotional disorder that interferes with a person’s ability to live, work, and play. It includes depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, panic disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, autism, and Alzheimer’s disease. It affects how a person eats and sleeps, self-esteem, and cognitive ability. Mental illness is not a sign of personal weakness. A person needs treatment in order to get better.
Sources: SAMHSA’S National Mental Health Information Center, Cuyahoga County Community Mental Health Board, Calendar of Activities
For more information and resources:
Akron General Medical Center, Your Good Health Calendar
The Cleveland Clinic Information Center, Mental Wellness & How to Achieve It
Lorain County Mental Health Board
The Nation’s Voice on Mental Illness
NetWellness, Community Health Information
Ohio Department of Mental Health
Summit County Board of Alcohol, Drug Addiction, and Mental Health Services
The 2004 World Mental Health Day Project
University Hospitals Health Systems, Health Information
World Federation for Mental Health
National Breast Cancer Awareness Month
HealthWatch from ideastream recognizes National Breast Cancer Awareness Month. October 15, 2004 is National Mammography Day. To locate discounted or free screening mammograms in your area, review the accredited facilities that participated in 2003.
Both women and men can develop breast cancer. This year, an estimated 211,000 women and 1,600 men will learn they have breast cancer. Women and men at any age may develop breast cancer. However, 77% of women are age 50 or older when diagnosed and men are generally diagnosed between 60 and 70 years of age.
Sources: American Cancer Society; National Breast Cancer Awareness Month; Y-Me National Breast Cancer Organization
To learn more about breast cancer, call the American Cancer Society at (800) ACS-2345 or the National Cancer Institute at (800) 4-CANCER.
To participate in the American Cancer Society Cancer Survivors Networksm, visit http://www.acscsn.org or call 1-877-333-HOPE.
Information and Resources:
Akron General Medical Center, Pink Ribbon Project
American Cancer Society, Make a Pink Lapel Pin
Breast Cancer Resource Committee, A Beacon of Hope for African American Women and Men
Cancer Research and Prevention Foundation
Cleveland Clinic Breast Center
Men Against Breast Cancer, Caring About the Women We Love
National Breast Cancer Foundation
National Cancer Institute, Male Breast Cancer
National Cancer Institute
NetWellness, Community Health Information
The Gathering Place
University Hospitals Health System, Health Information
University Hospitals Health System, MacDonald Women’s Hospital
University Hospitals Health System, Ireland Cancer Center
Y-Me National Breast Cancer Organization
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