Wow, so many people criticizing her presentation skills. She’s not an entertainer, she’s an academic professional. She spends the majority of her time educating herself and learning how to apply that towards helping people. Maybe we should be grateful that she devotes her life to helping people rather than tear her down for not speaking perfectly. Have some perspective people.
36:00 "Can't let them leave" when she's talking about a patient that has expressed suicidal ideation. This is why the mental health profession will never be trusted by anyone with real problems. Ever.
2-6% of population suffers w/BPD yet there are 5 comments and only a some thousands subscribers. So yes we need grass roots approach to creating substantially more awareness and dismantle the stigma. Unfortunately we are only at the beginning of more scientific research. I sincerely hope that is only the beginning. Yes it is a complex disorder and I would find it only necessary to attempt a comprehensive and more evidence based Therapie, long term approach of treatment rather than anything else. This is a question of integration rather than trying to fit one in all. Like Marsha figured it IS about acceptance and validation. It is about healing.
This video was posted by Yale University, with comments turned off. What a low blow to the sufferers to silence them. Yale university was just is afraid of being called out.
But then you get into the weird moral questions of control over one's own life and when it ends. I guess the same question could be asked about alcohol or drug use that doesn't harm others.
I’m sorry but as someone with personal experience in regards to this topic and also someone who has sat through many lectures in this field This particular presentation was awful I appreciate that she acknowledged the diagnosis of BPD and suicide ideation/intent/self harm but it was so rushed if I didn’t already know this information I would I have taken nothing important said on board , left feeling almost confused about the direct correlation between BPD and suicide, confused about the differences made between BPD/suicide vs major depression/suicide, it was all over the place, the constant um’s were so distracting I wanted to count those rather than take in important information etc I understand she is obviously more so on the research side of the profession now rather than the direct treatment of patients suffering with suicidal tendencies but if you’re going to give lectures and presentations on something as serious as suicide regardless of the disorder or illness you need to stop trying to throw in bits and pieces of you’re research or skim over you’re research and instead not fumble over you’re words so they make an impact, are memorable, are exactly to the point and pick one topic which I assume she was attempting to do in regards to safety plans but it truly fell short I’m sure she is beyond amazing in her field otherwise Yale would not even choose her to give a lecture/presentation But if I was feeling literally exhausted and overwhelmed at the information that was fumbled and thrown at me even though a lot of this I already learnt/knew/experienced first hand
A lot of really good information just kind of hard to stay following along with the lecture however because of all those um's um's um's really is nerve racking...makes me inclined to stop listening to it
lord it‘s so hard to watch this presentation because of the uhms and sooo‘s. It would be great if someone with better skills could do the actual presentation
Wow, so many people criticizing her presentation skills. She’s not an entertainer, she’s an academic professional.
She spends the majority of her time educating herself and learning how to apply that towards helping people.
Maybe we should be grateful that she devotes her life to helping people rather than tear her down for not speaking perfectly. Have some perspective people.
36:00 "Can't let them leave" when she's talking about a patient that has expressed suicidal ideation. This is why the mental health profession will never be trusted by anyone with real problems. Ever.
2-6% of population suffers w/BPD yet there are 5 comments and only a some thousands subscribers. So yes we need grass roots approach to creating substantially more awareness and dismantle the stigma. Unfortunately we are only at the beginning of more scientific research. I sincerely hope that is only the beginning. Yes it is a complex disorder and I would find it only necessary to attempt a comprehensive and more evidence based Therapie, long term approach of treatment rather than anything else. This is a question of integration rather than trying to fit one in all. Like Marsha figured it IS about acceptance and validation. It is about healing.
This video was posted by Yale University, with comments turned off. What a low blow to the sufferers to silence them. Yale university was just is afraid of being called out.
I have ideation with complex trauma
But then you get into the weird moral questions of control over one's own life and when it ends. I guess the same question could be asked about alcohol or drug use that doesn't harm others.
Around 46:00 never disclose any history or records to a clinician, because nobody is above the power of suggestion.
And um and um and um and um and um
Wow ! Hundreds or thousands of and ums
Informative, however, narrator keeps using filler words. I.e. um, a lot. It is distracting.
23:30 (around that time) she asks what's going on biologically with self-injury. It could be a primitive need to see blood.
I’m sorry but as someone with personal experience in regards to this topic and also someone who has sat through many lectures in this field
This particular presentation was awful
I appreciate that she acknowledged the diagnosis of BPD and suicide ideation/intent/self harm but it was so rushed if I didn’t already know this information I would I have taken nothing important said on board , left feeling almost confused about the direct correlation between BPD and suicide, confused about the differences made between BPD/suicide vs major depression/suicide, it was all over the place, the constant um’s were so distracting I wanted to count those rather than take in important information etc
I understand she is obviously more so on the research side of the profession now rather than the direct treatment of patients suffering with suicidal tendencies but if you’re going to give lectures and presentations on something as serious as suicide regardless of the disorder or illness you need to stop trying to throw in bits and pieces of you’re research or skim over you’re research and instead not fumble over you’re words so they make an impact, are memorable, are exactly to the point and pick one topic which I assume she was attempting to do in regards to safety plans but it truly fell short
I’m sure she is beyond amazing in her field otherwise Yale would not even choose her to give a lecture/presentation
But if I was feeling literally exhausted and overwhelmed at the information that was fumbled and thrown at me even though a lot of this I already learnt/knew/experienced first hand
34:00 "Talking about [X] is required" No, nothing is required. That's how you get fired.
Om Om Om......so annoying
A lot of really good information just kind of hard to stay following along with the lecture however because of all those um's um's um's really is nerve racking...makes me inclined to stop listening to it
50:10, Unfortunately, she's taking it into her own hands to violate constitutional rights (the highest level in the land)
#1 suicide trigger in this video is the "verbal pause"
lord it‘s so hard to watch this presentation because of the uhms and sooo‘s. It would be great if someone with better skills could do the actual presentation