Recognising a Mental Health Emergency in Someone You Love: Warning Signs, First Conversations, and Crisis Steps

Recognising the Moment Before a Crisis Becomes One Most family members of people with serious mental health conditions describe the same feeling about the days leading up to a major crisis: they could see something was wrong, but they could not name what it was, and by the time they understood what they were watching, … Read more

First-Episode Psychosis: Recognising It Early and Why the First 6 Months Determine 5-Year Outcome

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Marcus was nineteen, a sophomore at a state university in Columbus, Ohio, when his mother Denise drove four hours to bring him home for the weekend. She had not seen him in two months. The young man who opened the dorm-room door was thinner, paler, and would not meet her eyes. His curtains were taped … Read more

ICU Delirium and Mental Health: Why ICU Stays Cause Lasting Cognitive and Psychiatric Issues

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Linda Hawthorne, sixty-one, a fourth-grade teacher from Nashville, went into the medical ICU at Vanderbilt with a severe pneumonia and septic shock. She spent eleven days on a ventilator, six of them sedated with continuous propofol and fentanyl. She survived, walked out of the hospital nineteen days after she rolled in, and her daughter expected … Read more

Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome (NMS): A Rare but Fatal Antipsychotic Emergency

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Rosa was 28, a graduate student in Philadelphia who had been hospitalised for a manic episode with psychotic features and started on haloperidol with rapid dose escalation over four days. By the fifth day she had a temperature of 40.1°C, lead-pipe rigidity in all four extremities, blood pressure swinging between 180/110 and 90/60, and a … Read more

Serotonin Syndrome: Drug Combinations That Cause It and Emergency Recognition

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Daniel was 34, a software engineer in Austin, Texas, and had been on sertraline for eighteen months for generalised anxiety. On a Tuesday afternoon his orthopaedic surgeon called in tramadol after a knee scope. By Wednesday morning Daniel’s wife found him pacing the kitchen, sweating through his t-shirt, telling her the floor was vibrating. His … Read more

Naloxone Distribution: How Pharmacies Now Dispense It Without Prescription and Saving Lives

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Carla worked the late shift at a corner pharmacy in Camden, New Jersey, the kind of neighbourhood where the medical examiner’s van had become a familiar sight. On a Thursday in March, an older woman walked up to the counter holding a creased printout from a community group. She was 68, her name was Beverly, … Read more

Stroke Depression: 30% of Survivors Develop It and Why Treatment Matters Within the First 90 Days

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Eleanor Park, sixty-seven, retired from the Seattle public school system three months before her stroke. Her husband Daniel watched her right side go slack while she was making coffee one Sunday morning, dialed 911, and rode in the ambulance to Harborview. The clot-busting drug worked. Eleanor walked out of the hospital nine days later with … Read more

Acute Cannabis-Induced Psychosis: Emergency Treatment and the Connection to Schizophrenia Risk

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Devon was 22, a junior at Arizona State, the kind of student who built mechanical keyboards and ran a Discord server for indie game devs. He had used cannabis since high school. The change began the week he switched from flower to a 92 percent THC concentrate his roommate brought back from a Phoenix dispensary. … Read more

Lithium Toxicity: Recognising the Dosing Window and When Dialysis Is Required

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Margaret was 71, a retired librarian in Tucson, Arizona, who had been on lithium for forty-three years for bipolar I disorder. Her psychiatrist had retired the previous winter, and her primary care physician inherited the prescription without much review. In late August, during a heatwave, her cardiologist added lisinopril for blood pressure and a low-dose … Read more

Anorexia Medical Emergency: When Eating Disorders Become a Code Stroke / Code Sepsis Equivalent

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Marisol was nineteen, a sophomore at the University of Denver, when her residence director found her unconscious on the bathroom floor. Her roommate had called twice that week, worried. Marisol had stopped going to the dining hall in November. By February, she weighed 78 pounds. The paramedics noted a heart rate of 32 beats per … Read more