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Let s Talk About Teen Depression Teen Depression Approximately 4 out of 100 teenagers get seriously depressed each year. Everyone gets sad now and then That s not ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Let


1
Lets Talk About Teen Depression
2
Teen Depression
  • Approximately 4 out of 100 teenagers get
    seriously depressed each year.
  • Everyone gets sad now and then
  • Thats not depression

3
What is Depression?
  • Depression is defined as an illness when the
    feelings of sadness, hopelessness, and despair
    persist and interfere with a persons ability to
    function.
  • Teenage girls are at especially high risk, as are
    minority youth.

4
Depression
  • Most people with depression can be helped with
    treatment. 
  • Most depressed people never get the help they
    need.
  • When depression isn't treated, it can get worse,
    last longer, and prevent you from getting the
    most out of your life.

5
Signs of Depression
  • When someone has five or more of these symptoms
    most of the time for 2 weeks or longer, that
    person is probably depressed
  • Frequent sadness, tearfulness, crying  
  • Hopelessness  
  • Social isolation, poor communication 

6
Signs of Depression
  • Decreased interest in activities
  • Inability to enjoy previously favorite
    activities  
  • Persistent boredom low energy 
  • Alcohol and drug abuse
  • Self-Injury
  •  

7
Signs of Depression
  • Poor concentration   
  • A major change in eating and/or sleeping
    patterns  
  • Talk of or efforts to run away from home  
  • Thoughts or expressions of suicide or
    self-destructive behavior  

8
Signs of Depression
  • Low self esteem and guilt  
  • Extreme sensitivity to rejection or failure   
  • Increased irritability, anger, or hostility
  • Difficulty with relationships  
  • Frequent complaints of physical illnesses, such
    as headaches and stomachaches  

9
WHEN YOU'RE DEPRESSED..
  • You feel sad or cry a lot and it doesn't go
    away. 
  • You feel guilty for no real reason you feel like
    you're no good you've lost your confidence. 
  • Life seems meaningless or like nothing good is
    ever going to happen again.

10
WHEN YOU'RE DEPRESSED..
  • You have a negative attitude a lot of the time,
    or it seems like you have no feelings.
  • You don't feel like doing a lot of the things you
    used to like-- like music, sports, being with
    friends, going out-- and you want to be left
    alone most of the time. 

11
WHEN YOU'RE DEPRESSED..
  • It's hard to make up your mind. You forget lots
    of things, and it's hard to concentrate.
  • You get irritated often. Little things make you
    lose your temper you overreact.

12
WHEN YOU'RE DEPRESSED..
  • Your sleep pattern changes you start sleeping a
    lot more or you have trouble falling asleep at
    night. Or you wake up really early most mornings
    and can't get back to sleep.
  • Your eating habits change you've lost your
    appetite or you eat a lot more.

13
WHEN YOU'RE DEPRESSED..
  • You feel restless and tired most of the time. 
  • You think about death, or feel like you're dying,
    or have thoughts about committing suicide

14
Why do people get depressed?
  • There is no single cause for depression. Factors
    include
  • genetics
  • environment
  • medical conditions
  • life events
  • certain thinking patterns that affect a person's
    reaction to events.

15
Brain's response to stressful events
  • Death of someone close to you
  • Relationship problems
  • Low self esteem
  • Poverty
  • Homelessness
  • Substance abuse

16
What Happens in the Brain
  • chemicals neurotransmitters assist in
    transmitting messages between nerve cells in the
    brain.
  • Certain neurotransmitters regulate mood.
  • When they are not available in sufficient
    quantities, the result can be depression.

17
Types of Depression
  • Major depression short lasting and severe
  • Dysthymia - longer-lasting but less severe
  • Adjustment disorder with depressed mood
    (depressive reaction to a specific life event)

18
Types of Depression
  • Bipolar disorder (also sometimes called manic
    depressive illness) involves periods of major
    depression mixed with periods of mania.
  • Mania is the term for abnormally high mood and
    extreme bursts of unusual activity or energy.

19
Treatment for Depression
  • Having depression doesn't mean that a person is
    weak, or a failure, or isn't really trying... it
    means they need TREATMENT.
  • Most people with depression can be helped with
    COUNSELING, provided by a professional
    psychologist

20
COUNSELING
  • Means talking about feelings with a trained
    psychologist who can help you change the
    relationships, thoughts, or behaviors that are
    causing the depression
  • When you're depressed, you're in a rut, and you
    can't see anything good.

21
MEDICINE
  • Used to treat depression that is severe or
    disabling.
  • Antidepressant medications are not "uppers" and
    are not addictive.
  • Medication might be necessary, in addition to
    counseling.
  • Most often, counseling alone is sufficient.

22
  YOU ARE NOT ALONE!
  • With treatment, most depressed people start to
    feel better in just a few weeks.
  • There's help out there

23
Myths about depression
  • MYTH It's normal for teenagers to be moody
    Teens don't suffer from "real" depression. 
  • FACT Depression is more than just being moody.
    And it can affect people at any age, including
    teenagers

24
Myths about depression
  • MYTH Telling an adult that a friend might be
    depressed is betraying a trust. If someone wants
    help, he or she will get it.

25
Myths about depression
  • FACT Depression, which saps energy and
    self-esteem, interferes with a person's ability
    or wish to get help. It is an act of true
    friendship to share your concerns with an adult
    who can help. No matter what you "promised" to
    keep secret, your friend's life is more important
    than a promise.

26
Myths About Depression
  • MYTH Talking about depression only makes it
    worse. 
  • FACT Talking about your feelings to someone who
    can help, like a  psychologist, is the first step
    towards beating depression.

27
Myths About Depression
  • Talking to a close friend can also provide you
    with the support and encouragement you need
  • Talk to your parents or school counselor about
    getting evaluated for depression.

28
The Link Between Depression and Suicide
  • Majority of suicide attempts and suicide deaths
    happen among teens with depression
  • About 1 of all teens attempts suicide and about
    1 of those suicide attempts results in death
    (that means about 1 in 10,000 teens dies from
    suicide)

29
The Link Between Depression and Suicide
  • For adolescents who have depressive illnesses,
    the rates of suicidal thinking and behavior are
    much higher.
  • Most teens who have depression think about
    suicide, and between 15 and 30 of teens with
    serious depression who think about suicide go on
    to make a suicide attempt.

30
The Link Depression and Suicide
  • It's not hard to see why serious depression and
    suicide are connected.
  • Serious depression (with both major depression
    and bipolar illness) involves a long-lasting sad
    mood that doesn't let up

31
The Link Depression and Suicide
  • Depression also distorts a person's viewpoint
  • They focus only on their failures and
    disappointments
  • Exaggerate these negative things.
  • Depressed thinking can convince someone there is
    nothing to live for.

32
The Link Depression and Suicide
  • Loss of pleasure in things you once enjoyed.
  • Involves thoughts about death
  • Negative thoughts about oneself
  • A sense of worthlessness

33
The Link Depression and Suicide
  • A sense of hopelessness
  • Low energy
  • Noticeable changes in appetite or sleep.

34
The Link Depression and Suicide
  • The hopelessness can make it seem like there will
    be nothing good in the future

35
The Link Depression and Suicide
  • Helplessness can make it seem like there's
    nothing you can do to change things for the
    better.
  • And the low energy that is part of depression can
    make every problem (even small ones) seem like
    too much to handle.

36
What Else Puts Teens at Risk for Suicide?
  • Teens with conduct disorder are at higher risk
  • Teens with conduct disorder have problems with
    aggression and may be more likely than other
    teens to act in aggressive or impulsive ways to
    hurt themselves when they are depressed or under
    great stress

37
What Else Puts Teens at Risk for Suicide?
  • Substance abuse problems also put teens at risk
    for suicidal thinking and behavior

38
What Else Puts Teens at Risk for Suicide?
  • Alcohol and some drugs have depressive effects on
    the brain.
  • Misuse of these substances can bring on serious
    depression, especially in teens prone to
    depression because of their biology, family
    history, or other life stressors.

39
What Else Puts Teens at Risk for Suicide?
  • Alcohol and drugs alter a person's judgement
  • Interfere with the ability to assess risk make
    good choices, and think of solutions to problems.

40
What Else Puts Teens at Risk for Suicide?
  • Many suicide attempts occur when a teen is under
    the influence of alcohol or drugs.
  • Teens with substance abuse problems often have
    serious depression or intense life stresses, too,
    further increasing their risk.

41
What Else Puts Teens at Risk for Suicide?
  • Social, academic, and personal pressures such as
  • Physical or sexual abuse
  • Witness one parent abusing another at home
  • Lots of arguing and conflict at home.
  • Violence in their neighborhood

42
What Else Puts Teens at Risk for Suicide?
  • Parent with a drug or alcohol addiction
  • Struggles with concerns about sexuality and
    relationships

43
What Else Puts Teens at Risk for Suicide?
  • Body image and eating problems
  • Learning problems or attention problems that make
    it hard for them to succeed in school
  • A recent loss or crisis

44
Types of Suicidal Behaviours
  • Teen girls attempt suicide far more often (about
    nine times more often) than teen guys
  • Guys are about four times more likely to succeed
    when they try to kill themselves.
  • Teen guys tend to use more deadly methods, like
    guns or hanging.

45
Types of Suicidal Behaviours
  • Girls who try to hurt or kill themselves tend to
    use overdoses of medications or cutting.
  • More than 60 of teen suicide deaths happen with
    a gun.
  • Suicide deaths can and do occur with pills and
    other harmful substances and methods.

46
Types of Suicidal Behaviours
  • Sometimes a depressed person plans a suicide in
    advance.

47
Types of Suicidal Behaviours
  • Many times, though, suicide attempts are not
    planned in advance, but happen impulsively, in a
    moment of feeling desperately upset.
  • Suicide attempts can occur under conditions like
    the following because some teens - at least for
    the moment - see no other way out

48
Types of Suicidal Behaviours
  • Situations like
  • a breakup,
  • a big fight with a parent
  • an unintended pregnancy,
  • being harmed by abuse or rape
  • being outed by someone else
  • being victimized in any way can cause a teen to
    feel desperately upset.

49
Types of Suicidal Behaviours
  • Sometimes teens who feel or act suicidal mean to
    die and sometimes they don't.
  • Sometimes a suicide attempt is a way to express
    the deep emotional pain
  • Hope that someone will get the message they are
    trying to communicate.

50
Types of Suicidal Behaviours
  • Teens who attempt suicide as an answer to
    problems tend to try it more than once
  • Suicide attempts are highest during middle
    adolescence

51
Types of Suicidal Behaviours
  • By 17 or 18, the rate of teen suicide attempts
    lowers dramatically
  • With maturity, teens learn to tolerate sad or
    upset moods, learn how to get support, develop
    better coping skills to deal with disappointment
    or other difficulties.

52
Warning Signs - What to Look For
  • Pulling away from friends or family and losing
    desire to go out
  • Trouble concentrating or thinking clearly
  • Changes in eating or sleeping habits

53
Warning Signs - What to Look For
  • Major changes in appearance (for example, if a
    normally neat person looks very sloppy - as if
    they're not taking the usual care of themselves )
  • Talk about feeling hopeless or feeling guilty
  • Talk about suicide

54
Warning Signs - What to Look For
  • Talk about death
  • Talk about "going away"
  • Self-destructive behavior (drinking alcohol,
    taking drugs, or driving too fast, for example)

55
Warning Signs - What to Look For
  • No desire to take part in favorite things or
    activities
  • Giving away of favorite possessions
  • Very happy and cheerful moods after being
    depressed or sad for a long time (this may mean
    that a person has decided to attempt suicide and
    feels relieved to have found a "solution")

56
Getting Help
  • If you have a friend or classmate who you think
    is considering suicide, get help right away
    rather than waiting to see if he will feel
    better.

57
Getting Help
  • Even if your friend or classmate swears you to
    secrecy, you must get help as soon as possible -
    your friend's life could depend on it.
  • A person who is seriously thinking about suicide
    is depressed - and isn't able to see that suicide
    is never the answer to his problems.

58
Getting Help
  • Suicide isn't the answer - it's a permanent
    solution to a temporary problem.
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