No. It is exploring it in context of a fictional show in the future with new technology.Exactly, thus avoiding any exploration of the actual reality of being disabled and the challenges and stigma that go with it.
No. It is exploring it in context of a fictional show in the future with new technology.Exactly, thus avoiding any exploration of the actual reality of being disabled and the challenges and stigma that go with it.
No. It is exploring it in context of a fictional show in the future with new technology.
Squaring something away so that it has no impact isn't "exploring" it.
Thank you.
I'm bi polar, I'm also a mental health professional. The day a doctor in trek pulls out a tricorder and makes someone's mental illness just "go away" is the day I stop watching.
It's hard to understand why people don't get how offensive that would be.
Geordi had a visor to help him see and then ocular implants. It's called science fiction and is a story.
Crusher did that in First Contact, but it’s really only apparent in the novelisation based on the script. I think prior to her intervention, Zefram Cochrane had an implant, probably using lithium or similar.
I can see why you would find it offensive, but I think some people with the disorder or experience would see it differently.
Thanks for working in that area, it is a very very difficult condition sometimes, and working in it can seem a thankless task. Even if I like the idea that one day we can have more effective ways of treating mental health conditions, an opinion about Trek somewhat opposite to your own, I do really appreciate the effort people put in now to help people lead their lives now in our real world.
Please don't refer to me that way.You really don't have a clue do you?
What made Geordie so important was the fact he could have had normal vision restored, but chose not to because he was valued and worthwhile the way he was.
Please don't refer to me that way.
Thanks dude!
On balance though I'm really glad that wasn't used in the actual film as screened.
I’m fifty fifty on it. Gonna guess you are American? You have better treatment for the condition there (healthcare policy dependent at a guess.) Lithium is apparently very effective, and borderline natural (it comes out of the ground after all, and dissolves in water)
Here, despite our NHS, most treatments are all big-pharma drugs where it seems sometimes the side effects are almost worse (or in one experience, outright worse) than the condition. Getting Lithium is like getting blood out of a stone, and we have to resort to getting ahold of things like ‘health-supplements’ of lithium orotate via amazon or similar. I think it’s because of dodging the organisational expense of checking kidney function in a patient, versus taking the big-money kickback for the pharmaceutical company and just basically hoping for the best. It’s a longer story and discussion, but you certainly can deduce most of it, and can probably see why I would love the flashing lights on a stick all done approach, versus the side effects for some of the medicines themselves (not to mention the problems for the patient, and the people around them, when someone comes off the meds or tries to self medicate with alcohol or similar.) which may not always be necessary.
It’s a complex area, complicated by money and professional ego over here. Horrible.
Of course it may just turn out you are in a better postcode over here, and have better professionals in your neck of the wood, and therefore dodged my experiences in this area. XD
I reiterate my thanks though, the negative results that can occur in this area are harrowing, and it’s really tough to deal with it sometimes.
and have better professionals in your neck of the wood,
Au contrare I'm a brit (ironically I only removed my location a couple of hours ago on a whim having looked at the weather) and work in the NHS with forensic patients. To be honest I'd put our health provision ahead of the privatised US system any day of the week, most measurable outcomes which aren't biased by recording artefacts would tend to support that notion, although it is no exaggeration the effect cuts are having.
Lithium is far from being the final word in treatment, although as with all healthcare systems we are always going to be at the sway of pharmaceutical companies to some extent, more in terms of their tendency to incentivise certain medications rather than limit the availability of others.
I would normally agree. (Used to work in NHS too.xD) but having witnessed ME treatment (eep) and witnessed personality disorder treatment (and had a bad experience there, as you probably gather lol) I find it...angering.
You are right in that lithium isn’t the be all and end all, but given it’s potential side effects versus the other options, I can’t quite work out why it seems to not even be the starting point...working up to the other treatments if it proves necessary. Sometimes it seems like an approach akin to amputation being used to treat a grazed elbow. Guess I just got see a duff lot, though having seen the inside of the NHS I can’t help but feel the ‘saving money on tests’ is an issue. I have seen people spend a tenner to save five pence, then waste money in increasingly strange manners due to ideology or ignorance. (IT systems, the 2000s, decorations on a wall when a ward should probably be a better place to spend the money...the government changes, but the NHS just changes it’s acronyms in the departments. Aliens could invade tomorrow, take over the country, and the organisational structure of the NHS wouldn’t notice. Same people would be in charge, same money thrown down a pit in areas, same bunch of tired overworked underpaid staff, no matter who becomes Chief Imperatrix Of Health in the U.K Dominions of Lord Zarg)
Am glad your experience has been different. It’s like Trek. Gives me hope for the system lol.
Part of the caution shown around lithium as a mood stabiliser is it so often requires fairly high doses to reach therapeutic value (unlike it's usage within alcohol dependency for instance), doses which despite it's purpoted safety in general take one within spitting distance of toxicity. Combined with the fact it is rarely prescribed in isolation the effects of polypharmacy are also often on the mind of the clinician who will therefore opt for other options as a first line. It's actually really rather cheap compared to a lot of psychiatric medications, with the worst offenders often being the most potent antipsychotics (see clozapine).
Sorry to hear about your experiences. We aren't as good with personality disorder treatment as we'd like to be in the UK, but then frankly no one is. NHS Scotland do it slightly better than NHS England by redesignating PD treatment away from mainstream psychiatric services (we're slowly starting to make moves in that direction - I've recently been involved in the process of bringing some of our trust procedures in line with those of a neighbouring one ready for opening a new service more along those lines), although frankly even the best evidence in support of CBT or schema therapy is sketchy if truth be told and that's not localised to the NHS.
Quite. Plus, Geordi was thirty years ago, we really should be looking to improve on that representation, rather than use it as an excuse not to do it.You really don't have a clue do you?
What made Geordie so important was the fact he could have had normal vision restored, but chose not to because he was valued and worthwhile the way he was.
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