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Friday, August 31, 2012

DO NOT ABANDON YOUR MENTALLY ILL FAMILY MEMBER








This is the info they give on themselves:

Tell me you too, weren't overmedicated, threatened with hospital



All Life Is A Journey from Compass Health on Vimeo.


Compass Health is a private, non-profit, state licensed organization providing mental health and chemical dependency services.  We provide services in Island, San Juan, Skagit and Snohomish counties.  A volunteer board of directors guides our path.  Compass Health is a leader in the delivery of behavioral health services.  We provide quality, creative services to children, families and adults.  Our goal is to help people stay in their home and in their community, surrounded by family and friends who can support them during difficult times.

We have a broad comprehensive range of programs serving individuals of all ages, income levels and ethnic cultures.  Clients served may be chronically mentally ill; experiencing an episodic crisis; dual diagnosed or seeking assistance for an emotional or behavioral problem.  In addition to serving individuals and families, the agency provides consultation, training and educational services to other providers, law enforcement and correctional facilities, as well as the community at large.

Our Board of Directors consists of 10 community volunteers from Island, San Juan, Skagit and Snohomish Counties.
 
FACTS ABOUT US...
  • We counsel more than 13,000 children, adults and older adults every year.
  • Our counselors annually provide more than 75,000 hours of caring, compassionate and case-appropriate treatment.
  • We provide more than 500 adults/older adults with housing assistance every year.



History


Compass Health was first established as Parkland Lutheran Children’s Home in 1901.  The first house to care for orphaned children opened in the spring of 1902 in Parkland, Washington.  In 1953 we hired our first psychiatrist and took a turn towards providing mental health care for the children who lived at our home.  Today, we provide permanent, affordable housing and support services to approximately 237 individuals, we have a peer drop-in center which serves 75 to 80 homeless individuals daily, provide crisis services, and see over 11,000 people per year for behavioral health services, including case management and mental health services to children, adults, seniors, veterans, and incarcerated individuals in Island, San Juan, Skagit, and Snohomish Counties.  Clients and/or their families typically have incomes below 50% of area median income with many below 30%.
We exemplify excellence in our field because Compass Health has more than 100 years experience providing services to individuals in the communities we serve.  We are a flexible organization that is able to adapt to the ever changing needs of individuals in our community.  When we saw a need to not only provide a home for orphans and other forgotten and neglected children but also to provide for their mental health needs, we grew our organization to provide those services.  As time went on it became apparent that individuals who were homeless and receiving mental health services needed housing in order to assist in and maintain their recovery so we started a housing program more than 20 years ago.  Today, the integration of primary and behavioral health is the new wave of the future and to this end we collaborated with Molina Healthcare to open a primary care clinic at our Bailey Center located on Broadway in Everett, Washington


Yeah and gas stations have neater bathrooms.

 
For over 11 years, Compass Health has been providing quality continuing education opportunities at a reasonable price to behavioral health professionals, social service professionals and educators.   ***We are continually adding new trainings and classes so check us out!***  For additonal information about the class click on the REGISTRATION FORM.  If you would like to receive email about upcoming trainings, please send us an email to be added to our email distribution list.
  • Chidren’s Emotions: Helping Kids with their Emotions

    This one evening session will examine how children at all different developmental stages understand and handle their emotion.
    We will focus on learning how to support them and their feelings. How to be equipped when they react to anger, worry, sadness, grief and transition which may be due to loss, divorce, foster settings or a variety of life situations. This will be a fun experience for all who attend.
    Attend this class and learn:
    • Difference between good and bad scared
    • Manors and choices
    • What it is like to give versus expecting to always get
    • Respect for things (food, clothes), events (holidays/celebrations) and people/cultures that are different than what we have been raised with
    • How to look forward to and becoming hopeful when life’s ups and downs occur
    What attendees say about our Living Well classes:
    “There is something wonderfully contagious about Rick’s genuine caring, enthusiasm and humor.  He motivates his listeners to self-awareness, insights and even answers!  More importantly, he makes sense.”
    “This class really opened my eyes about a lot of things and I will use the things I learned for the rest of my life.”
    About The Speaker:
    Rick Pribbernow has more than 18 years of experience providing life skills training to adults, families and children. He holds degrees in education, curriculum development, and counseling. His unique presentation style is both creative and interactive.  Rich has the ability to quickly communicate difficult concepts in simply ways. He helps individuals get in touch with their feelings, and teaches simple guidelines for understanding and effectively dealing with those emotions.

    Date(s): Tuesday, October 23, 2012 6-8pm, Compass Health 4526 Federal Ave Everett, WA $20 each

    Please click below to view class details and sign up options:

    Online Registration & Payment

    Download Mail in Registration Form
  • Using DBT Skill Curriculum with General Therapy Clients

    This training will prepare you to use the DBT (Dialectical Behavior Therapy) skill training modules to increase coping skills with general therapy clients. Attend this training and discover the keys to using the four DBT modules:
     
    Highlights:
     
    Day 1
    • What is DBT and what is not DBT; deciding to adopt or adapt.
    • Learn the core skill of mindfulness.
    • Learn to design and present mindfulness exercises through frequent practice.
    • Learn Interpersonal Effectiveness skills.
    • Put skills into practice using interactive exercises.
    • Practice, Practice, and more Practice
     
    Day 2
    • Learn theory and science of emotions
    • Learn emotion regulation skills.
    • Learn to describe the experience of various emotions.
    • Increase your emotional vocabulary.
    • Learn what is a crisis and skills to survive a crisis without making it worse.
    • Learn the concept of radical acceptance and how to put it to work for long term   and difficult problems.
    • Practice and still more practice!!! 

    By attending this training you will become:
    • Familiar with the four DBT skill training modules
    • Able to set up and offer a three quarter sequence of skill groups to assist groups   of clients learn coping skills
    • Skilled to coach clients during individual sessions; either to reinforce learning    from group training or to assist clients who need the skills now, before they       learn it in a group
    • Able to develop mindfulness exercises and homework assignments to enhance client learning experience

    Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) addresses problems in regulating emotions, behavior and thinking. It was developed by Dr. Marsha Linehan and her colleagues at the University of Washington.
     
    About the Speaker: Catherine Naiad MA, LMHC, MHP has been trained        as a DBT therapist and Skill Trainer since 1998 and completed the DBT Intensive training in 2003/2004. She is a Compass Health clinical supervisor     at the Everett Adult Services Program and is a partner in private practice at Sound DBT in Shoreline, WA.



    They forgot the part where everyone enrolled in DBT has to, by definition, be diagnosed with borderline personality disorder and that is not, I repeat, NOT anything ANYONE wants following them or their loved ones is if they've been diagnosed AND/OR treated to get if it is the WRONG diagnosis, and at Compass, statistically, even higher numbers of men are diagnosed as BPD, and not the other way around.  

    If it were me?  I would jump off a cliff before I set foot in that shit and let crap like that be wrote about me because none of it would be true: it wasn't except in the beginning when you and mother decided to throw me to the when she threw me to the wolves?

    tHE REST OF THEIR FAKE BULLSHIT AND DOGMA CAN BE FOUND HERE:

    http://www.compasshealth.org/about-us/about-us/

You're 38? Way??? Me too!


 


The Grace of Kat's Heart
 

I want to finish off with a video: first a slide show, if I can find her and expose the potentially painful truth about community mental health centers' abuse of patiets via chemical restraint, be they're aware that it is, and also just plain abuse of patients, their rights, and the literal legal control that patients are kept under when otherwise mentally healthy, people are forced back into bad points of their lives, and held into the system so that the state dollars per patient for example-who say, was diagnosed with bipolar and borderline personality type people running the program, as such-and then not only were her rights then taken away as she was forced into a "Community/shared housing where every move you make is observed, they demand, though HIPAA laws helped-Obamacare has essentially turned it to cheap toilet paper, sorry sweetie, but Shea has affected all of us.

People like myself: who have been treated like animals, right down to being tied down-and to get medications that turn them into a person and a place they don't want to be, listen to my story-you know the seizure thing-there's more.

 Having had the number of psychomotor seizures:





 My first question is how many patients in locked seclusions and/or battered and bruised for fighting back-just for moving the wrong way, saying the wrong thing.

What if it;s seizures?  My neurologist went over the 2 admits in 7 years in one, there was a seclusion: I had a temporal lobe psychomotor seizure: NOT a psychiatric thing, as my neurologist decided after viewing the psychiatric unit's own tape/

Nice-Thanks Compass!


To Paula: a Thing or Two about CRPS


HYPERACUASIS

  What is Hyperacusis?
Imagine being at a movie where the sound track is turned to the highest volume. Actors' voices are screaming at you. After five minutes, you leave holding your ears and cursing the theater for its poor judgment. Turning newspaper pages, running water in the kitchen sink, your child placing dishes and silverware on the table - all are intolerable to your ears. A baby cries or a truck screeches its brakes to a halt and the sound is excruciating. What has happened to my ears?
The person who has hyperacusis can't simply get up and walk away from noise. Instead, the volume on the whole world seems stuck on high. Hyperacusis is defined as a collapsed tolerance to normal environmental sounds. Ears also lose most of their dynamic range.  What is dynamic range?
Dynamic range is the ability of the ear to deal with quick shifts in sound loudness. Suddenly everyday noises sound unbearably or painfully loud. The disorder is often chronic and usually accompanied by tinnitus (ringing in the ears), but can occur in patients who have little or no measurable hearing loss.
Hyperacusis differs from recruitment, which is an abnormal growth in the perception of loudness accompanied with hearing loss. With recruitment, loud noises are uncomfortable. With hyperacusis, all sounds are too loud.
Most patients also experience inner ear pain or a feeling of fullness (pressure) in the ears.  This pressure in the ears can best be described as the feeling one normally gets when descending in an airplane.  Hyperacusis can be devastating to the patient's career, relationships, and peace of mind. Finding the proper diagnosis is difficult because few doctors understand hyperacusis.
A LIFE ALTERING CONDITION
Hyperacusis makes living in this noisy world difficult and dramatically changes the patient's pattern of life. Moving about, traveling, and communicating with others is challenging. Ear protection must be worn in areas that seem too loud. This includes earplugs, industrial earmuffs or both if necessary.
Even then, many vocational and recreational activities must be curtailed or eliminated because, although protection reduces the noise entering the ears, it sometimes seems insufficient to block out certain frequencies or noise intensities. The things most of us take for granted, such as driving a car, walking down the street, riding a bicycle, listening to the TV, stereo, someone speaking over a telephone or microphone, shopping, attending indoor events, dining at restaurants, taking vacations, or participating in group activities often are difficult or impossible. Many have difficulty using a vacuum cleaner, a hammer, a lawn mower, power tools, ride a motor boat or motorcycle.
Most jobs involve some level of noise. In some cases, the patient may need to seek other employment or attempt to secure disability with the help of an understanding doctor. Loud noise exposure generally makes the condition worse and exacerbates the accompanying tinnitus. Patients report they perceive sound - even their own voice - as uncomfortably loud and this not only causes tinnitus to increase but may also cause inner ear discomfort or a popping reflex in the ear.  In fact some patients actually try to change the pitch of their own voice to accomodate their ears.  This may help their ears but a patient can become hoarse in the process.
In cases not involving aural trauma to the inner ear, hyperacusis can also be acquired as a result of damage to the brain or the neurological system. In these cases, hyperacusis can be defined as a cerebral processing problem specific to how the brain perceives sound. In rare cases, hyperacusis may be caused by a vestibular disorder. This type of hyperacusis, called vestibular hyperacusis, is caused by the brain perceiving certain sounds as motion input as well as auditory input.  In some cases, vestibular hyperacusis can affect the autonomic system and cause problems such as loss of consciousness, mental confusion, nausea, or extreme fatigue.

For more information visit this link:
 http://www.hyperacusis.net/hyperacusis/home/default.asp


SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS, HOW BAD IT CAN GET...





Add caption

Severely infected and swollen foot gram negative infection with greenish pigment. A pseudomonas infection. Stage III of RSD.



RSD SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS: HOW BAD CAN IT GET?? I MEAN REALLY/ PART II


Anchoring fibril deficiency. The patient sheds all of the skin from her arms and upper body. Stage III of RSD








Add caption
Blisters and livedo reticularis in Stage III of RSD




Atrophic skin of stage III patient Combination of loss of hair and increased thickness of hair

Demonstrates brawny edema Reddened thickened skin Increased nail growth of the great toe Deep ulcerated lesion on the top of the foot. Stage I of RSD







Anchoring fibril deficiency. The patient sheds all of the skin from her arms and upper body. Stage III of RSD

Example of deep ulcer stage III.

Commonly seen small punctate skin lesions that will ulcerate Stage III of RSD

Very severe bilateral RSD stage II Severe brawny edema, ulcerations, thickened curly hair

Severely infected and swollen foot gram negative infection with greenish pigment. A pseudomonas infection. Stage III of RSD







SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS OF RSD./CRPS; diagnosis and how bad it can get-Part I

Diagnosis

If one can demonstrate major nerve damage associated with the development of RSD / CRPS symptoms, the condition is called complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) type II or causalgia. Generally, causalgia provides more objective evidence of disease due to neurological changes (numbness and weakness).

The terms complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) type I and type II have been used since 1995, when the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) felt the respective names reflex sympathetic dystrophy and causalgia were inadequate to represent the full spectrum of signs and symptoms. The term "Complex" was added to convey the reality that RSD and causalgia express varied signs and symptoms. Many publications, particularly older ones, still use the names RSD and causalgia. To facilitate communication and understanding the designation RSD / CRPS is generally used throughout these practice guidelines. The principles applicable to the diagnosis and management of RSD are similar to those principles applicable to the diagnosis and management of causalgia.

To make the early diagnosis of RSD / CRPS, the practitioner must recognize that some features/manifestations of RSD / CRPS are more characteristic of the syndrome than others, and that the clinical diagnosis is established by piecing each bit of the puzzle together until a clear picture of the disorder emerges. Often the physician needs to rule out other potentially life-threatening disorders that may have clinical features similar to RSD / CRPS, e.g. a blood clot in a leg vein or a breast tumor spreading to lymph glands can cause a swollen, painful extremity. Indeed, RSD / CRPS may be a component part of another disease, (e.g. a herniated disc of the spine, carpal tunnel syndrome of the hand, heart attack). Thus, treating RSD / CRPS will often be directed to treating clinical features rather than a well defined disease. When RSD / CRPS spreads the diagnosis can be more complicated. For example, if it spreads to the opposite limb, it may be more difficult to establish a diagnosis because there is no normal side (control) to compare for objective findings. On the other hand, the spreading of RSD / CRPS symptoms may actually facilitate the diagnosis of RSD / CRPS because spreading symptoms is a characteristic of the disorder. (See below).


Importance of Objective Findings

Many patients who develop RSD / CRPS as the result of an injury do so in the context of legal liability. Some patients can be expected to defend their rights in courts of law. It is not uncommon for the defendant to accuse the patient of faking their condition, especially if there are no objective findings for RSD / CRPS documented on the medical record. Therefore, the evaluating physician must assess more than just subjective complaints (medical history). The physician must aggressively seek and document objective findings. For example, about 80% of RSD / CRPS cases have differences in temperature in opposite sides that may be either colder or warmer. These temperature changes may be associated with changes in skin color. Furthermore, the temperature differences are not static. The skin temperature can undergo dynamic changes in a relatively short period of time (within minutes) depending critically on room temperature, local temperature of the skin and emotional stress. In some cases, the differences in temperatures may fluctuate spontaneously even without any apparent provocation. 4 Thus, the objective finding of differences in temperature and color of the skin can be missed by the physician if only a single physical examination is made. A useful and relatively inexpensive instrument to have available at the time of the physical examination is a portable infrared thermometer to measure differences in skin temperature. Changes in skin temperature and color are only two examples of several objective findings that should be sought in the patients with RSD / CRPS.

Making the Diagnosis of RSD / CRPS

The diagnosis of RSD / CRPS can be made in the following context. A history of trauma to the affected area associated with pain that is disproportionate to the inciting event plus evidence at some time for one or more of the following:
  • Abnormal function of the sympathetic nervous system, e.g., abnormal changes in skin blood flow, sweating or goose flesh.
  • Swelling.
  • Movement disorder.
  • Changes in tissue growth (dystrophy and atrophy).
Thus patients do not have to meet all of the clinical manifestations listed above to make the diagnosis of RSD / CRPS. Note also that the criteria state "evidence at some time" for the clinical findings. This does not mean that the evidence for the clinical finding listed has to be constant. This explains why swelling, abnormal sweating, abnormal skin temperatures, etc., are not reported by the physician on some visits. Sometimes weather plays a factor or emotional stress or the patient may be in a flare-up or a remission stage. Patients have good and bad days.
 
The RSD / CRPS diagnosis is precluded by the existence of known pathology that can be explained by the observed symptoms and degree of pain. The pain and symptoms of RSD / CRPS may exceed both the magnitude and duration of symptoms expected from the normal healing process anticipated from the inciting event. There seems to be a small group of patients whose pain following trauma resolves over time, leaving the patient with more of a movement than a pain disorder.


 
Clinical Features of RSD / CRPS
  1. Pain - The hallmark of RSD / CRPS is pain and mobility problems out of proportion to those expected from the initial injury. The first and primary complaint occurring in one or more extremities is described as severe, constant, burning and/or deep aching pain. All tactile stimulation of the skin (e.g. wearing clothing, a light breeze) may be perceived as painful (allodynia). Repetitive tactile stimulation (e.g. tapping on the skin) may cause increasing pain with each tap and when the repetitive stimulation stops, there may be a prolonged after-sensation of pain (hyperpathia). There may be diffuse tenderness or point-tender spots in the muscles of the affected region due to small muscle spasms called muscle trigger points (myofascial pain syndrome). There may be spontaneous sharp jabs of pain in the affected region that seem to come from nowhere (paroxysmal dysesthesias and lancinating pains).

  2. Skin changes - skin may appear shiny (dystrophy-atrophy), dry or scaly. Hair may initially grow coarse and then thin. Nails in the affected extremity may be more brittle, grow faster and then slower. Faster growing nails is almost proof that the patient has RSD / CRPS. RSD / CRPS is associated with a variety of skin disorders including rashes, ulcers and pustules. 9 Although extremely rare, some patients have required amputation of an extremity due to life-threatening reoccurring infections of the skin. Abnormal sympathetic (vasomotor changes) activity may be associated with skin that is either warm or cold to touch. The patient may perceive sensations of warmth or coolness in the affected limb without even touching it (vasomotor changes). The skin may show increased sweating (sudomotor changes) or increased chilling of the skin with goose flesh (pilomotor changes). Changes in skin color can range from a white mottled appearance to a red or blue appearance. Changes in skin color (and pain) can be triggered by changes in the room temperature, especially cold environments. However, many of these changes occur without any apparent provocation. Patients describe their disease as though it had a mind of its own.



    Photo Gallery of Skin Lesions Associated with RSD / CRPS:   Dr. Robert J. Schwartzman, whose name is synonymous with RSD / CRPS, has contributed a photo gallery to the Clinical Practice Guidelines. His photos illustrate some of the objective findings that may be observed in patients with RSD / CRPS. It should be emphasized that patients with RSD / CRPS may not present with these objective findings, especially during the early stages of the disease.

    Dr. Schwartzman is Professor and Chairman of the Department of Neurology at Hahnemann School of Medicine in Philadelphia, PA, USA. He is a member the Scientific Advisory Committee. Through his numerous publications, lectures, and research efforts, he shares his clinical experience by making others aware of the effects of RSD / CRPS. Dr. Schwartzman has received several honors and awards, including the Mayo Clinic Neurology Teaching Award and the Dean's Special Award for Excellence in Teaching from Hahnemann University of Medicine in both 1998 and 1999
 RSD PHOTO GALLERY, PER RSD FOUNDATION:

Anchoring fibril deficiency. The patient sheds all of the skin from her arms and upper body. Stage III of RSD
Atrophic reddened skin. Shiny skin that later desquamated. Stage III of RSD

Atrophic skin of stage III patient Combination of loss of hair and increased thickness of hair

Demonstrates brawny edema Reddened thickened skin Increased nail growth of the great toe Deep ulcerated lesion on the top of the foot. Stage I of RSD

Example of atrophic skin with deep ulcer on the top of the right foot.  Atrophic skin, loss of hair on the affected, or unaffected limb

Example of Gardner-Diamond Syndrome

Commonly seen small punctate skin lesions that will ulcerate Stage III of RSD

Example of deep ulcer stage III.

Ligature signs, bilaterally below the knees Nothing had been placed on the legs  Stage III of RSD

Example of early lesions that become ulcerated in latter stages. Stage I of RSD-yeah, doesn't itch either



 How BAD CAN it really get???

See the next post.







 

Thursday, August 30, 2012

WHAT ARE HER SYMPTOMS AND SIGNS

Paula, your actions haven't just affected PAULA.  CRPS, or RSD is a nightmare to live withm but when drones like you mucik up care for those of us who suffer with it:

I will show you a slide show of my most recent visit with my pain team...  The visit where I waaaas told that I had (personally and intentionally) "failed" conventional treatmentments." and that my "prognosis was very poor, if the Level System Were still used, I would be a Grade 4-since my RSD has gone full body-and let me show you the symptoms: see, we all can say "Horrible, nauseatingly painful jabs, etc that she has so perfectly (been coached?  Rehearsed?  It has been in some way studied, because ou fake it real well: and frankly I am sick of your shit-this has been my fun with CRPS: first subjected to intolerablle exam, kinda like this:


The Elizabeth Weiss Story Part I


The Elizabeth Weiss Story, Part II

Paula on Entertainment tonight





A webcam response to the Elizabeth Weiss video



My own video response took weeks to make--because since then?  This was what I got when trying to bring up a formerly good website on RSD with good and reliable information, and got this:

Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome

Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome Causes, Symptoms and Treatment and Related Disorders

Important

It is possible that the main title of the report Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy Syndrome is not the name you expected. Please check the synonyms listing to find the alternate name(s) and disorder subdivision(s) covered by this report.
  • Algodystrophy  (definition:  algodystrophy
    [al′gōdis′trəfē]
    a painful wasting of the muscles of the hands, often accompanied by tenderness and a loss of bone calcium. The condition may begin in the hand or in the shoulder and spread over the entire limb, causing contractures, edema, and cyanosis of the skin. It may also occur in the feet or legs. It may be associated with injury, heart disease, stroke, or a viral infection. Also called complex regional pain syndrome. See also reflex sympathetic dystrophy.
  • Algoneurodystrophy- 
  • Complex regional pain syndrome/Reflex Sympathetic Dystrophy (CRPS/RSD)
    Classification and external resources
    ICD-10 M89.0, G56.4
    ICD-9 337.21, 337.22, 354.4, 355.71
    DiseasesDB 12635 16345
    eMedicine pmr/123
    MeSH D020918
    Complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS) is a chronic progressive disease characterized by severe pain, swelling and changes in the skin. There is no cure. The International Association for the Study of Pain has divided CRPS into two types based on the presence of nerve lesion following the injury.
  • Type I, formerly known as reflex sympathetic dystrophy (RSD), Sudeck's atrophy, reflex neurovascular dystrophy (RND) or algoneurodystrophy, does not have demonstrable nerve lesions.
  • Type II, formerly known as causalgia, has evidence of obvious nerve damage.
The cause of this syndrome is currently unknown. Precipitating factors include injury and surgery, although there are documented cases that have no demonstrable injury to the original site.
  • Causalgia Syndrome (Major)
  • Reflex Neurovascular Dystrophy
  • RSDS
  • Sudeck's Atrophy
  • Complex Regional Pain Syndrome
  • None


 
 
CRPS, RSD, Complex regional pain syndrome, reflex sympathetic dystrophy, chronic pain, rsds, nerve pain, ketamine, RSDHope, RSD Hope, blocks, what is crps, crps symptoms, mcgill pain index, crps treatment, crps research,
 
http://www.rsdhope.org/what-is-crps.html    RSDHope.org