Inomedic Civilian Employee
Assistance Program
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Coping with Mental Illness in
the Family Many people fear people that are mentally ill, afraid that
they are violent, you most are not violent at all. Others believe
that someone that has recovered from a mental illness, like
a nervous breakdown remain mentally weak in some manner. This
is not true, people can fully recover from a mental illness,
just like any other disease. Finally, many people feel uncomfortable
when a mentally ill person behaves strange or unusual. With someone in your family suffering from a mental illness, the best thing a family member can do is learn and understand the illness. Check web sites, talk with physicians, and participate in self-help groups. Then you know what type of behavior to expect from the family member. Knowing the illness will help you cope and that will ultimately help your family member, since you will be able to communicate with the person, when, for example, the person is having hallucinations or delusions, or is depressed or is threatening suicide. If you are informed about the disease, you will not feel that you are responsible for the persons condition. Since multiple factors contribute to the cause of mental illness, the family should not feel that they are responsible for the mental illness, such as chemical imbalance in the brain, various life stresses like unemployment, financial and legal conditions, retirement and mental breakdown. No one is to blame for the illness neither the patient nor the family. |


