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Stephanie works to reduce stigma, and to create safe spaces for people to talk about their mental health.
Traffic jams. Parenting. COVID-19. Life is full of things that are out of our control, and that tends to create frustration and stress. But it doesn’t have to. Rogers' Dr. Lori Merling discusses radical acceptance and how it can help break the cycle of stress.
A unique conversation surrounding mental health in honor of Boys and Men of Color Month. This recording of a Facebook Live event features special guests NFL defensive tackle Solomon Thomas, and performances from the cast of Pieces: in My Own Voice.
For more than a century, Rogers has been fulfilling its not-for-profit mission of changing lives by providing access to our gold standard mental health and addiction care in communities across the U.S.
Besides the medal count, conversations about mental health took center stage during the 2020 Olympics Games after Simone Biles—the most-decorated American gymnast of all time—finished with a bronze medal after withdrawing from the team final and individual all-around gymnastics competition. Simone said she needed to focus on her mental well-being.
In 2008, Bebe Moore Campbell National Minority Mental Health Awareness Month was founded to create greater awareness of the mental health challenges many groups face. Marked each July, the month is now known as BIPOC (Black, Indigenous People, and People of Color) Mental Health Month.
How we talk to someone who is struggling with mental health can make the difference between someone feeling accepted and understood, or feeling labeled as a disorder first and a human being second.
June is Men’s Health Month, a time when men are encouraged to take better care of themselves, both physically and mentally.
Hear Rogers' experts Dr. Jerry Halverson, chief medical officer, and Sue McKenzie-Dicks, vice president of healthy culture, along with mental health advocate and morning show DJ at 103.7 in Milwaukee, WI, Riggs, discuss how we talk about mental health and why what we say can impact stigma. Our experts will review specific examples of what to say and what not to say to someone who is struggling.
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