Thursday, August 9, 2012

FREE Mental Health Educational Program - OCT. 9, 2012 Charlotte, NC

Choices In Recovery:


Support and Information for Schizophrenia, Schizoaffective and Bipolar Disorder 

October 9, 2012 - Charlotte, NC  






> LINK to Flyer (PDF) 


NOTE: this announcement shared by NAMI-Charlotte - for more information "About Us", please visit our website: NAMI-Charlotte.org


 

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

NAMI Charlotte Event - AUG 2012 "Jam for Cam" Benefit Concert


CHARLOTTE, NC -- Jam for Cam is a FREE benefit concert being held on Saturday, August 25th from 5:00 to 7:00 PM at The Saloon, located in the NC Music Factory. 


This concert, hosted by the Shelton family to benefit the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), is being held in remembrance of Cameron Shelton. 
Donations to the Charlotte Chapter of NAMI will be accepted.

Cameron Wade Shelton, a 23-year-old student at UNC-Charlotte, passed away on June 22nd. Cameron was working toward his bachelor’s degrees in Finance and English. He was an avid surfer and talented musician with a love for guitar. Cameron was a kind person with a thirst for knowledge and an inspiration to all who knew him.


NAMI, the National Alliance on Mental Illness, strives to educate the community about mental illness and provide resources for those coping with it. There are over 200,000 people in Mecklenburg County with a mental illness, many of whom suffer in silence and without resources. NAMI’s goal for this concert is to ensure that the community knows where to turn in the event that they are in need of these resources.
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NAMI Charlotte -- Charlotte, NC Affiliate of the National Alliance on Mental Illness

Friday, August 3, 2012


Tar Heel Footprints in Health Care
A periodic feature that recognizes individuals whose efforts—
often unsung—enhance the health of North Carolinians
Cherene Allen-Caraco, QMHP, QDDP
When Cherene
Allen-Caraco moved
to Charlotte, North
Carolina and observed
gaps in the state’s
mental health system,
she quickly became
involved in efforts to
identify solutions in the Mecklenburg County community.
In her role as director of Mecklenburg’s
PROMISE, Allen-Caraco promotes the concept
of mental health recovery. Where traditional
approaches emphasize stabilization and maintenance,
this recovery model for mental health treatment
differs in that its primary emphasis is on hope
and the ability of an individual to thrive and lead a
productive, meaningful, and valued life despite his/
her mental health condition.
Allen-Caraco’s combination of professional
and lived mental health experience gives her valuable
perspective. Kim Franklin, PhD, a colleague at
Meridian Behavioral Health Services, speaks highly
of Allen-Caraco’s passion and commitment as well
as her strength as a credible and articulate consumer
advocate. She says, “Cherene is one of the
strongest recovery champions in North Carolina. …
She knows how to wrestle with the complex issues
the state is facing.”
About 6 years ago, Allen-Caraco helped to
found Mecklenburg’s PROMISE, a peer-run mental
health community resource. Staffed by individuals
in recovery themselves, Mecklenburg’s PROMISE
not only serves as a leader and resource for recovery
in the community, but it is also a striking
example of what recovery and wellness can look
like for individuals with mental health conditions.
Mecklenburg’s PROMISE offers recovery education
and training to behavioral health professionals and
paraprofessionals, individuals in recovery, and the
community in addition to peer support programs.
Mecklenburg’s PROMISE promotes collaboration
between behavioral health professionals, individuals
in recovery, and their family members and
serves as a resource for any member of the community.
In 2007, it was named the North Carolina
Program of Excellence for Consumer-Directed
Support.
In addition to her work at Mecklenburg’s
PROMISE, Allen-Caraco serves as a mental
health consultant with The Council on Quality
and Leadership (CQL), which offers consultation,
accreditation, and training services to organizations
across the nation. She consults with groups
such as provider organizations, state and local
governing authorities, advocacy and peer organizations,
and hospital systems. She helps the
committed organizations integrate principles of
recovery into their services and cultivate recovery
culture through both practice and organizational
change.
Colleagues speak highly of Allen-Caraco’s
efforts and her contribution to mental health initiatives
throughout North Carolina. Franklin says,
“Cherene has been instrumental in keeping North
Carolina accountable and focused on recovery.”
Another colleague, Debbie Dihoff, MA, from the
National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) North
Carolina says, “Cherene does a wonderful job orienting
everything to achieve the best possible
health for people. She always finds time to do the
extra work that makes a big difference in the lives
of people with mental illness in the state.”
Allen-Caraco earned her bachelor degree at
the University of Syracuse, and is currently studying
psychiatric rehabilitation at the University of
Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.
Electronically published June 7, 2012.
Ms. Anne M. Williams, North Carolina Institute of Medicine,
630 Davis Dr, Ste 100, Morrisville, NC 27560 (anne_williams
@nciom.org).
N C Med J. 2012;73(3):158. ©2012 by the North Carolina
Institute of Medicine and The Duke Endowment. All rights
reserved.
0029-2559/2012/73319

Thursday, August 2, 2012


I have copied and pasted the following blog from NAMI NOW. 
Michele Brown
Anonymous said...
I believe Mr. Fitzpatrick's comments are appropriate for what is known at this time. One of NAMI's main roles is to educate about mental illness. He clearly achieves that. I also agree that diagnosing through media reports is inappropriate. Yet my heart yearns for more. Why?

How many parents know the bewilderment and pain of getting that phone call from their child's university that something is terribly wrong? Your son/daughter, who is a top notch academic achiever, is behaving very strangely and needs help.
How many of us have experienced OR  our loved ones first major episode when  stress levels were "off-the-charts?"

How many of us feel like "we know?" When this young man's brain should have reached maturity at 24 and his frontal lobe executive function blossomed to complement and regulate overall brain function, something went dramatically wrong. And, "we know" because recent brain science tells us, that his chemistry was probably awry long before this tragic and senseless behavioral manifestation.
How many of us know our own loved ones descent into darkness, which began when the instrument of their greatest achievements, and their most intimate friend, THEIR BRAIN, became their ultimate betrayer? Their mental illness captured them, buried who they really are, and drove their behavior. Ensnaring family, loved ones, and our world into our own private hell.

My HEART aches -- for the victims: the dead, the wounded, their families, those who were there... for this young man and his family.

Nothing excuses what happened nor mitigates the unfolding of informed justice. We are all responsible for the behaviors that manifest from our own private hell.

My heart aches. My sympathy and compassion pour forth. I meditate and pray.