
“For Keats, it is only our acceptance of the suffering that is an inevitable part of life, and death, that can really open our eyes to the beauty that surrounds us, thereby enabling us to grow”
Author Archives: pfmarchive
We can’t ignore this silent crisis in men’s mental health
June 9th, 2017 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on We can’t ignore this silent crisis in men’s mental health)
June 13th is Men’s Mental Health Awareness Day, lying in the middle of Canadian Men’s Health Week. This is a chance to discuss what many see as a silent crisis in men’s mental health.
Both the federal and provincial government have official strategies to promote mental health. These strategies include suggestions and targets to improve the mental health of the whole population. They also include measures directed at high-risk specific sub-populations; including immigrants, youth and First Nations. Read the rest of this article at HuffPost Canada…
Grade 9 student asks, “When did good mental health become a luxury?”
June 8th, 2017 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Grade 9 student asks, “When did good mental health become a luxury?”)
Quinn, a grade 9 student in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, concludes that mental health care is not very easily accessible for everyone, “even though when it comes down to it, it’s simply health care”
Study asks people using drugs to shape their primary care
June 6th, 2017 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on Study asks people using drugs to shape their primary care)
Primary health care delivered with understanding and compassion for people who use drugs is the focus of a new Greater Victoria patient-oriented research study funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research
It’s time to recognize mental health as essential to physical health
May 31st, 2017 | Posted by in uncategorized - (Comments Off on It’s time to recognize mental health as essential to physical health)
The treatment of mental illness has long been held back by the sense that disorders of emotion, thinking, and behavior somehow lack legitimacy and instead reflect individual weakness or poor life choices
The human brain is a wonder. Through folds of tissue and pulses of electricity, it lets us perceive, attempt to understand, and shape the world around us. As science rapidly charts the brain’s complex structures, new discoveries are revealing the biology of how the mind functions and fails. Given the centrality of the brain to human health, its malfunctions should be a priority, separated from stigma and treated on par with the diseases of the body. We aren’t there yet, but the transformation is underway. Read the rest of this article at statnews.com…


If the human obsession with achievement is a subconscious attempt to deny–and transcend–mortality, what impact does it have on our beliefs, philosophies and societies?