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I went to Woodbridge IMH and mingle with the lunatics and nearly lost my Brain!

Talking Donkey

Alfrescian (S)
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Feb 5, 2010
Messages
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Last weekend i attend a charity event organise by my gf Sharon Stone.
I really wanted to give her a kiss or bear hug but was gutted when her manager told us tat she as a ambassardor for AIDS want me to refrain from kissing and hugging her,only handshke is allow.
anyway i met alongtime DR friend of mine who is a volunteer with the Action Group For Mental Illness at IMH..he ask me to do something good in my life by visiting the mental patient or be a volunteer,i thought why not,i say i would like to go there and see see first,and beside i would like to give a field report to folks here,to find out the phenomenon rising cases of lunatics both in spore and SBF:o
On reaching the IMH,i was impress by the design and layout of the bulding..it look exactly like Bintan Lagoon Beach Resort in bintan island..the signboard say open by BG LHL in 1993.
I call my Dr friend and he issue me with a volunteer pass..intro me to staff and some sweet nusres..as he was quite busy with a meeting,he ask me to go on a tour of IMH on my own,i needed to have a nurse to guide me and answer question tat i needed badly.
now base on my experience and common knowledge among us tat only fat and ugly women tend to be more talkative,sociable,excited easily and spill the beans..so i switch on my radar and manage to detect on a miss muppet lookalike i shall call..here goes my eyewitness account...
 
You don't have to go to IMH. If you feel the need to mingle with lunatics, There are large numbers here.
 
Miss muppet was indeed very talkative..see experience count folks..we walk towards the wards where the lunatics are held..i ask her why are there so many cases of lunatics never seen before in recent times...can you believe what she told me..i was shock..she whiper quietly..she says here say here finish..you go and ask our PM lah..why..most of them goes into depression and snap because they cant get a job or lost their job to foreigners,houses,family break up..etc..
 
Mental Digest.
Before reaching the ward,miss muppet ask me to switch my brain to IMH frequency so as to blend in with them...near there i can hear shouting and screaming by some mental patients quite scary like scary movie.went in and saw..
Lunatic no1...a ex teacher shouting to himself I love singapore..
Lunatic no2..as i was walking..he came towards me say halo i am osama bin laden...may i know who are you..i quickly reply oh i am barrack ombama and he gave me a sacrastic look..i quickly walk towards miss muppet..she told me he has 5yrs already..his family MIA...
Lunatic no3...miss muppet told me this guy try to commit succide 3times by driking coke mix with shelltox found at east coast park wake up daze,body full of rashes,again drank bleach survive and jump down 7storey survive..his name is who..i call him "who am i" i ask him in hokkien why you want to kill yourself he reply back..i want to die but God dont want me to die.
we went to another ward..
Lunatic no4..as i walk this mad man show me his middle finger..miss muppet told me dont bother him..he is like tat..he is a engineer with a degree lost everything his job,shares,gambling..etc...i look at him again and was wondering could it be sbf bro upyozlo..again he give me a middle finger, kanenah..
Lunatic no5..i saw a young chap,miss muppet told me mindef sent him here for observation to see whether he can carry on doing his NS cause he went mad during training..again miss muppet whisper to me..here say here finish..we have cases of young boys pretend to kay seow(act blur)just to get exempted from NS...
ok tats it i have seen enough and as i walk out i saw lunatic no4 and again he show me middle finger and this time i raise both my hand and middle finger him back and quickly walk out..miss muppet saw and chided me for being disrespectful to the lunatic:confused:..i walk back to the clinic to where my Dr friend is..
 
we went to have lunch at the canteen and i ask my friend why do people go mad..he explain to me there are a few reason like..ok each and everyone of us like a computer had a memory GB in our Brain..some have 1GB,some have 2GB 3GB and so on...some try to be too smart lets say when you have a 2GB memory you cannot try to one shot upgrade to a 4GB or 5GB..what will happen..boom..memory crash.the wire snap...another reason is depression and insecurity...as i got an appt i take my leave and thank him for my field report and he gave me a T shirt with the words.."A hug a day keeps the psychiatrist away"..before leaving i went to thank miss muppet and ask her a few question..how do you all deal with hum sup patients..she says no problem we know who they are and we let the male staff manhandle them,and where are those hardcore lunatics held..she point to me over the other building and warn me dont ever go there i may not come out ALIVE!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzDedr9izWU&feature=related
 
Wow, I didn't know IMH inmates now have access to the internet. How many terminals do you have in there or do you each have your own personal terminal? Wonder if the inmates' posts are monitored closely. Would probably help towards their rehabilitation. :D
 
we went to have lunch at the canteen and i ask my friend why do people go mad..he explain to me there are a few reason like..ok each and everyone of us like a computer had a memory GB in our Brain..some have 1GB,some have 2GB 3GB and so on...some try to be too smart lets say when you have a 2GB memory you cannot try to one shot upgrade to a 4GB or 5GB..what will happen..boom..memory crash.the wire snap...another reason is depression and insecurity...as i got an appt i take my leave and thank him for my field report and he gave me a T shirt with the words.."A hug a day keeps the psychiatrist away"..before leaving i went to thank miss muppet and ask her a few question..how do you all deal with hum sup patients..she says no problem we know who they are and we let the male staff manhandle them,and where are those hardcore lunatics held..she point to me over the other building and warn me dont ever go there i may not come out ALIVE!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzDedr9izWU&feature=related


They were using Microsoft operating system, never heeded Sam relentless campaign to buy a Mac and never look back...some never upgraded their hardware & software, still using DOS ver 2.0, with the 8088 processor..their entire system crashed..

Some were very advanced they bought the new Mac Book Air, with a 128GB SSD and tried to upgrade to the Toshiba 256GB SSD card..found out that the SSD was soldered on...so they were left without a 'storage' but more than enough RAM's...

Most of the loonies are found here & SAM is the head of the asylum..:D
 
we went to have lunch at the canteen and i ask my friend why do people go mad..he explain to me there are a few reason like..ok each and everyone of us like a computer had a memory GB in our Brain..some have 1GB,some have 2GB 3GB and so on...some try to be too smart lets say when you have a 2GB memory you cannot try to one shot upgrade to a 4GB or 5GB..what will happen..boom..memory crash.the wire snap...another reason is depression and insecurity...as i got an appt i take my leave and thank him for my field report and he gave me a T shirt with the words.."A hug a day keeps the psychiatrist away"..before leaving i went to thank miss muppet and ask her a few question..how do you all deal with hum sup patients..she says no problem we know who they are and we let the male staff manhandle them,and where are those hardcore lunatics held..she point to me over the other building and warn me dont ever go there i may not come out ALIVE!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzDedr9izWU&feature=related




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Bro I really like your postings especially those


that started with : " i just had dinner with "so and so"

or i just met "so and so " and he tells me ... "


so funny :D :D :D :D



Bro welcome to this online " IMH "



Sam's Alfresco Coffee Shop (SBF) = Online IMH




where doctors and nurses are also enjoying themselves ...:D:D:D







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... how do you all deal with hum sup patients..she says no problem we know who they are and we let the male staff manhandle them,and where are those hardcore lunatics held..she point to me over the other building and warn me dont ever go there i may not come out ALIVE! ...
1 hardcore humsup lunatic excaped from dat other bldg n went on 2 peddle porn on ze net ... :eek:
 
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Mentally ill a concern: MPs

Tue, Feb 10, 2009
The Straits Times



SEVERAL Members of Parliament questioned the adequacy of the rehabilitation of the mentally ill in Singapore on Tuesday, and called for more support to help them fully recover.

Among them, Dr Lily Neo (Jalan Besar GRC) asked if patients should be discharged by the Institute of Mental Health and live in the community, if they lacked family support to help them continue their medication and follow-up treatment.

And Dr Lam Pin Min (Ang Mo Kio GRC) asked if hospitals here had a system of monitoring patients' recovery processes in the community and intervening if they defaulted on their treatment.






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Feb 11, 2009



budget debate: MINISTRY OF HEALTH



MPs raise concerns on proper care for the mentally ill


By Lee Hui Chieh

Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan acknowledged the MP's concerns, but stood by the practice of rehabilitating the mentally ill in the community rather than institutions. -- ST PHOTO: JOYCE FANG

SEVERAL Members of Parliament questioned the adequacy of the rehabilitation of the mentally ill in Singapore, and called for more support to be given to them to help them recover fully.

Their comments followed last month's attack on their parliamentary colleague, Mr Seng Han Thong (Yio Chu Kang), and a threat made against another, Ms Denise Phua (Jalan Besar GRC), by men who had been treated for psychiatric problems.

Among those who raised the issue was Dr Lily Neo (Jalan Besar GRC), who asked whether patients should be discharged into the community if they lacked family support to get them to continue with their medication and follow-up treatment.

'Is the best of care in the community for psychiatric patients with insufficient family or community support, or is the best of care in having regular follow-up with psychiatric nurses and psychiatric docs, even if it means institutionalisation?' asked Dr Neo.

Dr Lam Pin Min (Ang Mo Kio GRC) asked if hospitals here had a system of monitoring mentally ill patients' recovery in the community, and intervening if they defaulted on their treatment.

'This is important because the omission of any medication and necessary medical review by the professional can actually lead to other potential complications or even pose a threat to the safety of the patient or even the community at large,' he said.

'We have heard cases where patients were discharged, defaulted follow-up, omitted medication or were lost to follow-up until something big happened in the news.'

Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan acknowledged the MPs' concerns, but stood by the practice of rehabilitating the mentally ill in the community.

He said: 'We have been trying very hard over the years to de-stigmatise the mentally ill, and I was very worried that the (Seng Han Thong) case would push our efforts back several years...

'No doubt there are such patients out there who need help, but mental illness is a wide range of illnesses, and many are reversible if we give them a chance, if we give them jobs, if we are able to accept them in the community.

'You institutionalise them, lock them up in the mental asylum - which is a traditional way of doing things in the last century - they don't improve, they just go downhill.'

Things would hopefully improve after Medisave is extended to two common mental conditions - schizophrenia and depression - this year, he said.

The Health Ministry would be able to get an idea of how well patients were being managed in the community through progress reports from participating general practitioners and psychiatrists in private practice, and best practices could then be identified and shared, he said.

Madam Cynthia Phua (Aljunied GRC) called for more psychiatric day-care centres to be set up to provide support for the mentally ill in the community.

Mr Khaw agreed that more had to be done, not just by increasing resources, but also by improving coordination between the medical professionals and the voluntary community groups.

Madam Halimah Yacob (Jurong GRC) wanted dementia patients to be allowed to use Medisave for outpatient treatment, and mental conditions to be insured under MediShield, to ease the financial burden of 'a long-term, debilitating illness'.

Although he said he was 'sympathetic' to her cause, Mr Khaw was not in favour of implementing her suggestions for now.

Those from the middle-income group who can afford it can buy riders to cover mental illness, he said.

Besides, treatment of mental illnesses was more heavily subsidised than other conditions in public hospitals, he noted.

Saying that including mental illnesses would push MediShield premiums up, he added: 'I doubt this is the time to talk about raising MediShield premiums.'

Any revision would 'presumably be when the economy has fully recovered', he said, adding: 'We will put a file record for whoever is the health minister to take a look at mental illness.'

[email protected]




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Wednesday, October 06, 2010Sunday Times:





Help mentally ill get treatment





http://www.healthxchange.com.sg/News/Pages/Help-mentally-ill-get-treatment.aspx

Sunday, 03 l 10 l 2010 Source: The Sunday Times
By: Chong Siow Ann and Mythily Subramaniam


Next Sunday is World Mental Health Day. This day is supported by the United Nations to raise public
awareness about mental health issues worldwide through open discussions on mental illness and the
attendant problems and the measures – or lack of measures – taken to do something about them.





That such a day needs to be commemorated attests to the peculiar status the mentally ill have in society. They constitute a sort of helotry: a sub-class that is often invisible, at times visible for the wrong reason as when some crime or apparently gratuitous act of violence has been committed, and it is deemed notable,
newsworthy or explanatory to mention that the alleged perpetrator is mentally ill.

What is less known and less aired is their (and their family’s) daily struggle just to get on.

Yet – here are the alarming figures – the number of people with mental illness is sizeable. Up to 30 per cent of the population worldwide is estimated to have clear-cut mental illness each year, and in every country studied at least two-thirds of them receive no treatment. This under-treatment occurs even in rich countries with the best resources. In the world’s most powerful economy, 31 per cent of Americans are affected by mental illness every year, but 67 per cent of these individuals are not treated.

Often it is not just their mental illness that is not treated. They are also more likely to be physically unwell
and their average expected life span is shorter than in the general population. Mental illness and physical illness often interact: One can be the consequence of the other – as in the case where stress and
anxiety can lead to heart disease, which in turn leads to higher rates of depression.

What is particularly disturbing is that people with mental illness often do not receive good physical health care. This may be due to the effects of the mental illness, which leads to patients not seeking care, or adhering to treatment, or assuming unhealthy lifestyles.

However, research has also shown that when they do present themselves, doctors might actually feel ill-equipped, uncomfortable or have a tendency not to engage with them to the same extent as their other patients.

Poverty is another bane of the mentally ill who are often among the poorest in a country. Individuals with disabling mental disorders are less likely to be working and, if employed, tend to be underemployed and underpaid.

Their low rate of employment is due to a number of reasons. Most mental illness occurs early in life (50 per cent of mental illnesses have their onset by the age of 15, 75 per cent by the age of 25).

The emergence of a serious illness at that critical period in the individual’s life often disrupts schooling. The consequence is that many lack the necessary education and training required to build careers. A number of the serious mental illnesses tend to be chronic. Persisting in adulthood, these uncontrolled symptoms and impaired intellectual functioning hinder advancement and success at work.

The stigma of mental illness can be as disabling as the illness itself – preventing people from seeking help, eating away at their selfconfidence, hampering their reintegration into the community and entrenching them firmly on the fringe of society.

The discrimination may be actual – in surveys done in a number of countries over the past five decades, employers are far more reluctant and negative about hiring people with psychiatric disabilities than almost any other group. In times of economic downturn, the first to be laid off are those with mental illness.

The stigma may also be perceived. This is a sort of debilitating self-consciousness. Those with mental illness are fearful of being found out as mentally ill and therefore do not want to look for a job.

They are often caught in a vicious circle: The illness causes disability and subsequent financial hardships, and these in turn cause or exacerbate emotional and psychological distress. The straitened economic circumstances almost always lead to dependence on others and reliance on public assistance – if available.

In a World Health Organisation survey of 74 countries, more than a quarter do not provide state or public
disability benefits for mental illness. Among those where benefits are available, many provide limited assistance in the form of a small monetary amount.

It is a level of assistance that often results in what policy analysts have referred to as a “poverty trap” where income levels are inadequate to help them meet basic daily needs, let alone for education, job training and job seeking. So mired, they cannot dig themselves out of this hole.

Things are getting better here in Singapore. The first ever National Mental Health Policy and Blueprint was rolled out by the Government with relatively little fanfare in 2007, but it signified a watershed in
the perception and commitment of decision-makers on mental health.

The aims of this blueprint are to promote mental health and, where possible, prevent the development of mental health problems and reduce the impact of mental disorders. Among the various values embodied in this policy are that mentally ill individuals should not be discriminated against and that there must be continued efforts to destigmatise and create awareness of mental disorders in the general population.

Improving the lot of those with mental illness will almost certainly need more resources, ideally allocated in a rational, fair and appropriate manner and guided by good quality data and statistics on the state of mental health of the population.

At present, much of this data is still not available but the blueprint has also emphasised enhancing the
monitoring of the status of mental health in the population and the quality of services.

The Singapore Mental Health Study, which is a nationwide study that is currently under way, will have, on its completion by early next year, detailed information on the rates of mental disorders and the treatment gaps, on the use of existing services and the barriers to care.

To be sure, it would not have gathered all we need to know but it would have enough to give us a good idea of the lay of the land, and help to formulate and implement better policies to improve not only the lot of the mentally ill, but also the mental health of the populace and their understanding of its importance and commonality. And that is as good a start as any.

Associate Professor Chong Siow Ann is vice-chairman, Medical Board (Research), Institute of Mental Health
Dr Mythily Subramaniam is deputy director of research, Institute of Mental Health

NATIONWIDE STUDY TO BE COMPLETED EARLY NEXT YEAR



Launched in 2008 by the Government, the Singapore Mental Health Study is a nationwide survey that sets to establish the rates of mental disorders in the adult Singaporean population. It will also examine how the mentally ill are using the medical services and the barriers to seeking treatment.

This study is led by a research team from the Institute of Mental Health and also comprises local and international researchers from RAND Health, Singapore’s Ministry of Health, Nanyang Technological University, and National University of Singapore. RAND Health, a non-profit body based in the United States, carries out research and analysis on health and health behaviours that helps towards better
policy and decision making.

The team will also develop a culturally appropriate instrument to measure the level of positive mental health in the Singapore population.

The findings of this study, which is expected to be completed by early next year, will give health-care workers and the Government a good understanding of the state of mental health of the country and provide a wealth of hitherto unavailable information that will help formulate policies and develop better and cost effective
programmes.

It is funded by the Singapore Millennium Foundation (SMF) and the Ministry of Health of Singapore. The SMF is a non-profit charitable organisation which was established in 2001 to promote and advance scientific progress in Singapore and raise Singapore’s international visibility as a centre of knowledge creation.

The study is a part of the five-year National Mental Health Blueprint which will focus on:
Mental health education and promotion;
Integrated mental health care;
Developing mental health professionals; and
Developing mental health research.

A taskforce comprising mental health professionals and medical administrators from the Ministry of Health is charged with executing and evaluating the various initiatives of this blueprint.
Posted by Kelvin Ng at 4:21 PM
Labels: Associate Professor Chong Siow Ann, mentally
 
Last weekend i attend a charity event organise by my gf Sharon Stone.
I really wanted to give her a kiss or bear hug but was gutted when her manager told us tat she as a ambassardor for AIDS want me to refrain from kissing and hugging her,only handshke is allow.
anyway i met alongtime DR friend of mine who is a volunteer with the Action Group For Mental Illness at IMH..he ask me to do something good in my life by visiting the mental patient ....





Picture of a Brain :


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brain



Re: I went to Woodbridge IMH and mingle with the lunatics and nearly lost my Brain!
 
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychopathology



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Psychopathology




Psychopathology is the study of mental illness, mental distress and abnormal, maladaptive behavior. The term is most commonly used within psychiatry where pathology refers to disease processes. Abnormal psychology is a similar term used more frequently in the non-medical field of psychology.
 
Wow, I didn't know IMH inmates now have access to the internet. How many terminals do you have in there or do you each have your own personal terminal? Wonder if the inmates' posts are monitored closely. Would probably help towards their rehabilitation. :D

Yes,there is a desktop computer for the lunatics to use in the lounge where they can watch tv,read newspaper,drink kopi..etc..miss muppet told me the desktop computer too suffer a breakdown and has since been sent for repair at the computer shop...she shake her head and told me most of these lunatics lost their pin number(memory)and no medicine in the world can cure them..only miracles.
Before i leave i donate $300 to IMH for its upkeeping and hopefully they can buy a new brain scanning machine to get help these poor folks find back their pin number.

Seriously one day if all else fail for me,i might consider to retire there where i can have chio nusres to look after me,bath me and sayang me without having to worry about outrage of modesty of them(molestation is not in the dictionary of lunatics),they will be thrown out of the subordinate court windows..yes the IMH is indeed a Bintan Lagoon Beach Resort,they have tennis court,football field i can form a soocer team there too..too bad i cant see a lagoon there though.
 
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