TMC PULSE

May 2015

Issue link: https://tmcpulse.uberflip.com/i/515661

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 3 of 43

t m c » p u l s e | m a y 2 0 1 5 2 TMC | PULSE Vol. 2 No. 4 May 2015 Robert C. Robbins, M.D. President and Chief Executive Officer Amanda D. Stein Editor astein@texasmedicalcenter.org Shea Connelly Associate Editor sconnelly@texasmedicalcenter.org Alex Orlando Staff Writer aorlando@texasmedicalcenter.org Alexandra Becker Staff Writer abecker@texasmedicalcenter.org L. Morgan Farrar Business Strategist Contributing Photographers Scott Dalton Nick de la Torre NEWSROOM 713-791-8812 news@texasmedicalcenter.org ADVERTISING 713-791-8894 newsads@texasmedicalcenter.org DISTRIBUTION 713-791-6130 distribution@texasmedicalcenter.org Texas Medical Center Pulse is a monthly publication of the Texas Medical Center, in Houston, Texas. Permission from the editor is required to reprint any material. Editorial/advertising information available on request. Texas Medical Center News is a member of: Houston Press Club, American Medical Writers Association, Association of Healthcare Journalists, and American Advertising Federation PRESIDENT'S PERSPECTIVE ROBERT C. ROBBINS, M.D. President and Chief Executive Officer, Texas Medical Center I t is hard to believe this issue marks one year since the beginning of TMC Pulse. Over the past year, we have tried to really bring attention to those people who have made the Texas Medical Center the incredible place that it is. We look forward to continuing to tell those stories as this campus grows in new and exciting ways. May is a particularly important month because it is observed as Mental Health Awareness Month. The Texas Medical Association reports more than 4.3 million individuals—1.2 million of them children—live with a mental health disorder in the state of Texas. That's a considerable demand for mental health care and resources, many of which are not readily available due to insufficient funding. It is critical that these needs be addressed, not only in Texas—a state that has consistently ranked below most others in dollars per capita allocated for mental health services— but across the country. This month's Pulse features a story about how our own local hospitals are attempting to shoulder a burden too large for any single institution to manage alone. We are a community that is looked to as a leader in health care, and that is every bit as true when it comes to mental health. Every day across our campus, individuals seek treatment for serious mental illnesses—PTSD, depression, bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and eating disorders, among others. We have the opportunity together to do more than treat these patients who come to our hospitals. We must also be willing to engage in those difficult conversations about funding, help destigmatize these disorders, and actively collaborate to improve the mental and physical health of our city.

Articles in this issue

view archives of TMC PULSE - May 2015