Positive #2 Lunch Hour!!

This week I built lunch hours into my schedule. I can’t believe what a great boost it has been for … More Positive #2 Lunch Hour!!

Positive #1

Today I am glad that all the people in the car accident outside my office were able to walk away. … More Positive #1

Positive #2 India Arie’s Video

This is one of my wife’s favorite songs right now. I love the words. It’s all about just accepting one’s … More Positive #2 India Arie’s Video

Positive #3 JJ Abrams

JJ Abrams on Ted. There have been times that I have looked at a blank piece of paper with such … More Positive #3 JJ Abrams

Positive #1

Katrina Holgate Miller. I got an hour of Katrina Miller all to myself today! What an amazing person and conversationalist. … More Positive #1

Positive #1

Saw the Mayor Peter Corroon today. He was at the open house for Optum Healthcare, the country and NAMI. One big … More Positive #1

Positive #2 Post Digger

I’m digging the posts to make a retaining wall for a garden for my wife. Digging that hole would be … More Positive #2 Post Digger

Positive #2 Special Burritos

Today I made myself a very special burrito consisting of three scrambled eggs, cottage and feta cheese (warmed) avocado (not … More Positive #2 Special Burritos

Positive #1

Today I want to acknowledge a very special person in my life. I know I can always go to him … More Positive #1

Antidepressants don’t appear to work for most Utahns

Published on KSL
Let me start by saying a person should never, never, never go off their medications without talking to their prescriber. It is dangerous and potentially lethal.

According to the Behavioral Risk-Factor Surveillance System, Utah is currently the happiest state in the union. It is also one of the saddest. Utah sits right in the middle of the “suicide belt,” which stretches along the Rocky Mountains from Wyoming and Idaho, through Utah and Nevada and down to Arizona and New Mexico. As of 2008, the mortality rates gathered from the U.S. census indicated that Utah ranked ninth in the nation for suicides. In September 2010, the Utah Department of Health declared that Utah was the fourth greatest consumer of antidepressants in the nation with 12.71 percent of residents being prescribed antidepressants.

The problem is that these medications do not work on most of the consumers to whom they are prescribed. Continue reading Antidepressants don’t appear to work for most Utahns