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Question by Sean S: How Can a Woman with a Low Income Get Mental Health Care??
My wife suffers from life-long clinical depression. She was sexually abused as a child, then paraded around in Miss Teen USA pageants against her will. She has had teachers, parents and even a mental health counselor come on to her. She needs professional help to get over the depression and low self-esteem.

Is there somewhere she can go for a few weeks for an intensive sort of “rehab” as she calls it for depression for women? She wants a place that is safe from guys coming on to her. She just can’t take that again while she is trying to get better.

We are currently in NJ and we are residents of NH. I hate to admit it but we are poor. I was recently laid off and she has part time work. I am not back to work yet. We have no savings and no health insurance. I don’t know where to turn, but I need to help my wife. She is the most AMAZING person, and I’d do anything for her. I need to help her find a way to get help with this. Can anyone suggest anything? Thank you!
Wife does not drink, take drugs, etc… she is highly intelligent as was using the word “rehab” as an analogy to illustrate the type of facility. Sorry for any confusion with that terminology.

Also, write to Oprah?? Maybe I should just become a major league baseball player later this afternoon as well. Just about as good of a shot. Please… I need intelligent responses. We have suffered a financial setback at the worst time possible, but we’re not morons. Come on.

Best answer:

Answer by Joseph C
Send her to this site: http://www.fhu.com

It will help her more than the mental health people (some of whom are mentally ill themselves) and there’s a lot of low cost material available and some for free.

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QMC to close cardiac rehab, adult psych programs
The cash-strapped Quincy Medical Center has decided to close its outpatient cardiac rehabilitation program and its group-therapy program for adults. Steward Health Care, the for-profit company that runs Quincy Medical Center, said the resources devoted …
Read more on The Patriot Ledger

Survivors make lifesaving changes through Cardiac Rehabilitation Program
George Van Dyk finishes with a stationary bike and shifts to an elliptical machine as part of his twice-a-week workout at the Cardiac Rehabilitation Program gym at Summerville Medical Center (SMC). While sometimes reluctant to visit, he never regrets …
Read more on Journalscene.com

Group advocates better drug abuse treatment options
The Healing Place of Southwestern Virginia is a newly incorporated organization that hopes to open a peer-run residential program for substance abuse treatment. The Healing Place model was founded in Kentucky and spread to other states. Richmond is …
Read more on Lynchburg News and Advance

Politics of health care reform, cuts impact mental health, substance abuse
St. Marys Center for Recovery is a residential substance abuse treatment facility designed to help clients overcome addictions and transition to independence, security and good health. Laura Seitz, Deseret News. Summary. Given the uncertain landscape …
Read more on Deseret News

Church seeks to expand drug treatment in North Waco
HOME2. Mary Burt, left, and Brandy Honeysuckle both went through Grace House's yearlong residential treatment program for substance abuse. Buy this photo · HOME1. Staff photo— Jerry Larson …
Read more on Waco Tribune-Herald

Rep. Greg Harris Helps Fix Cook County's Obamacare Program
Because of an oversight in the newly minted Affordable Care Act, those who require a residential stay as part of their substance abuse recovery are unable to use the vast majority of Illinois drug treatment residential programs which have 17 beds or …
Read more on Huffington Post

Dual diagnosis rehab centers treat psychiatric illnesses, accompanied by substance abuse issues. Treatment at dual diagnosis rehab centers should address the mental health disorders along with the substance abuse issues like alcoholism and/or drug addiction. The centers that treat dual diagnosis conditions understand that both illnesses have deleterious effects on the psychological, spiritual, social, and physical well-being.

Diagnosing two illnesses

A person diagnosed with dual disorders is affected by two or more conditions that are different but interrelated. Treatment at dual diagnosis rehab centers addresses the symptoms of illnesses identified by the treatment providers in order to devise a unique treatment program that addresses those conditions. As multiple illnesses are present, the symptoms may and commonly do overlap contributing to the complexity of treatment.

The goal of dual diagnosis rehab centers is overcome the substance abuse issues and properly manage, and ideally overcome, the mental health issues. Treatment requires time and significant commitment on the part of the patient and the treatment provider at dual diagnosis rehab centers. If all conditions are not discovered and address, relapse is very likely.

Finding the right dual diagnosis rehab centers

Dual diagnosis is a complex illness that requires proper care and attention from appropriately trained and experienced health care professionals. Families and patients, themselves, are advised to carefully select only dual diagnosis rehab centers that provide all of the necessary treatment services required to achieve symptomatic relief and management of the conditions. A comfortable, safe, and conducive environment is a significant aid in promoting wellness and healing.

Dual diagnosis Miramar Recovery Substance Abuse and Dual Diagnosis Treatment Center is located at Laguna Beach. It is a facility that provides rehabilitation programs for clients suffering from drug abuse and alcoholism. We are fully licensed by the Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs of the State of California to provide chemical dependency rehabilitation and detoxification for our patients. To ensure that our clients are getting the best quality of treatment from medical professionals, our staff members are all certified, licensed, and accredited. Our medical expertise allows us to treat co-occurring issues that have been caused by drug or alcohol addiction.

For more information on Dual Diagnosis Rehab Center visit Alcohol Rehab Center

Bangor conference sheds light on drug, alcohol addiction treatment differences
BANGOR, Maine — When it comes to drug and alcohol addiction, there are differences between men and women, and that means treatment programs need to be different, local substance abuse providers learned Friday at a conference about addiction and …
Read more on Bangor Daily News

Millions more to get coverage for addiction, alcoholism treatment, but can the
CHICAGO — It has been six decades since doctors concluded that addiction was a disease that could be treated, but today the condition still dwells on the fringes of the medical community. Only 1 cent of every health care dollar in the United States …
Read more on Washington Post

'Addicted man of Europe': Study says drug, alcohol addiction a crisis in UK
“The government has backed away from an alcohol pricing strategy; there should be an additional tax for alcohol, which could then be used for treatment for alcoholics. Our intervention is rubbish; the number of alcoholics in treatment is considerably …
Read more on RT (blog)

Gene Combinations Help Predict Treatment Success for Alcoholism Medication
Aug. 2, 2013 — An experimental treatment for alcohol dependence works better in individuals who possess specific combinations of genes that regulate the function and binding of serotonin, a brain chemical affected by the treatment, according to a …
Read more on Science Daily (press release)

Question by karen star: How would “reconciliation” work in the current health care debate?
I have read about filibuster, and recall some filibusters from days past, the gang of 14, and so on, but can someone explain this in simple terms for me? (Wiki articles were not particularly helpful, so just a clear explanation will be good.) I’m not looking for partisan bickering, but for simple direct explanation of the process. Thanks, in advance, for civility.

Best answer:

Answer by titou
How about “rehabilitation”? After all, the requisite for any recovery is first admitting that there is a real problem. To hear the politicians and insurance companies, as well as some health-care professionals who know which side their bread is buttered on — you’d think that what is called for in the catastrophic US health-care industry (sic) is just some fine tuning. As someone experienced with the phenomenon, I can tell you it rings like an alcoholic explaining and adjusting his drinking habit. I’ve even heard the claim that “We have the best health care in the world.”!
Right. And my drinking is OK because it’s top shelf.

ENOUGH verbiage and self-promotion in the guise of negotiation. This sophomoric nonsense has led too often to the logical conclusion: “The operation was a success, but the patient died.” No exaggeration: that is exactly what happened to my own mother. Diagnosed with Stage 3 metastatic breast cancer, such was the juggernaut of bureaucratic red-tape and protocol (not to mention physicians and hospitals lining their pockets and covering their own asses) that by the time anyone got around to actually helping her, she was dead.

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