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Grey Matters - Mental Health in the Old Pueblo

Seeing Pink

by on Oct. 27, 2009, under bi-polar, brain disorders, depression, General Mental Health, Health, health care reform, insurance, mental illness, mental illness research, Obama, parity, Politics, PTSD, recovery, schizophrenia, stigma

Head_logo-blueAm I being sensitive, but is anyone tired of the pink ribbon campaign? I just returned from a conference in North Carolina and even the flight attendants were wearing pink t-shirts, scarves and/or dresses. It seems like the marketing department for breast cancer research has become overly obsessed with getting their message out. I wonder just how much of the money they raise goes to pay their salaries?

Perhaps I’m just jealous, and I know this blog is probably going to cause many people to be angry with me and I apologize for that. It’s not that I don’t believe in breast cancer awareness (my grandmother had to have a double mastectomy), but as an advocate for people with mental illness I wish there was more awareness and less stigma about mentall illnesses that effect 25% of our population in any given year and causes more disability that any other illness. Yet, with proper treatment, 70-80% of people living with mental illness do recover! Still, no one knows about it! Even the National Mental Illness Awareness Week the first part of October was totally overshawdowed by “pink ribbons.”

The National Alliance on Mental Illness has called for an increase in research spending for the National Institutes for Mental Health.  Below is the statement from their website.
Please take the time to register your thoughts.

NAMI Calls for Increase in NIH Funding
NAMI is joining advocates from across the nation in asking President Obama to make medical research for improving health care a priority and support robust funding for the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).
NAMI and other illness and patient advocacy groups are rallying advocates to contact the White House this week in support of significant annual increases for NIH.
“NAMI is pleased to join other disease advocacy organizations in support of the ‘Research Means Hope’ movement to ensure that the president’s FY 2011 budget meets the goal of making biomedical research funding a national priority,” says Michael J. Fitzpatrick, NAMI Executive Director. “Investment in medical research is the source of hope for people living with serious mental illness.”
“Direct and indirect costs of mental illness impact the federal budget overall and state and local communities nationwide, including a substantial and growing burden imposed on “default” systems such as emergency rooms, homeless shelters, police, jails and prisons.”
“Adequate investment in research on schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, major depression and other disorders is essential for our nation to address these human and financial costs. The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) has received more than $368 million in ARRA funding to support meritorious grants and invest in new ‘challenge’ grants and ‘grand opportunity’ grants.”
President Obama needs to continue this investment in his FY 2011 budget proposal.”
How you can help
Now is a particularly important time for President Obama to hear from advocates because he is working with his administration to determine the FY 2011 budget priorities.
• Take Action: Send a message to President Obama on NIH funding.
• Learn more: Details on Proposed Mental Illness Research Funding.

You can access direct links for taking action on the blogroll lists on this site.


  • greymatters

    I just heard from a friend that “60 Minutes” did a story last Sunday about research for epilepsy.  It gets only 10% of the funding that breast cancer recieves, yet it, like mental illness effects a much wider percentage of the population.

  • Shirley B

    Yes, like you I am sick of all the pink stuff, it is getting ridiculous, pink phone, pink everything.  Get a mamogram, get a mamogram everywhere you go and just the other day The American Cancer Society came out and said mamograms don’t save lives.  Move on to something else. Autism, Humane Society or something else your interested in.  Give it a break

  • http://www.ryngargulinski.com Rynski

    some food had pink packaging and ribbons in a big display i saw at fry’s recently.

  • leftfield

    It’s not impossible that we as a people could raise awareness of both mental illness and breast cancer simultaneously. 

    • Susan

      I couldn’t agree more, leftfield, but the msm doesn’t get it.

  • tiponeill

    Everything is politicized – so when something “safe” comes along that no one could possible criticize, businesses jump on it.

    • Susan

      are you suggesting that mental illness is politicized?  If so, I agree!  And, that’s a shame!

  • http://www.namisa.org Judi M

    I am so glad someone else is tired of the pink! I want to see NAMI’s royal blue and gold colors when I walk into a store.

  • JeanV

    No you are not sensitive nor alone.  I was in the super market yesterday and saw these weird looking pink balloons–kind of like distorted upside down letter “U”.  It took me about 30 seconds to realize that they were meant to look like the pink ribbon symbol–they didn’t achieve it.  They just looked strange and rather silly.
    I am tired of all the marketing hoopla and the media manipulative warm and fuzzy stories taking the place of an actual single payer health care system that would privide health care, including mammograms, for all.  If we had a single payer system, it might free up money for research in eplilepsy and bi-polar conditions and other mental health conditions that affect millions.


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