Dr. Matthew Lynch

Dr. Matthew Lynch
Location
Langston, Oklahoma, USA
Birthday
December 31
Title
Professor
Company
Langston University
Bio
Dr. Lynch is a Chair and Associate Professor of Education at Langston University. He spent seven years as a K-12 teacher, which gave him an intimate view of the impediments that hinder genuine education reform. He has focused the second stage of his career on researching topics related to educational policy, school leadership and education reform, particularly in the urban learning environment. His writings regular appear in the Huffington Post, Diverse: Issues in Higher Education, Education Week, and Education World. Dr. Lynch’s scholarship is intended to make a redoubtable, theoretically and empirically based argument that genuine school reform and the closing of the well-chronicled achievement gap are possible. His research and commentaries have been featured in publications throughout the United States and have centered on issues ranging from school reform to politics. Throughout his career, he has been interested in developing collaborative enterprises that move the field of education forward. Dr. Lynch is the author of It’s Time for a Change: School Reform for the Next Decade, the newly released A Guide to Effective School Leadership Theories, the forthcoming The Call to Teach: An Introduction to Education (Pearson, January 11, 2014), and Pass or Fail in America's Schools: How Social Promotion and Academic Retention are Destroying Public Education (Praeger, November 2014). In addition, he is the editor of the following projects; Before Obama: A Reappraisal of Black Reconstruction Era Politicians (Praeger, October 31, 2012), the book series Studies in Anti-Intellectualism and Academic Disengagement (Rowman & Littlefield), and a forthcoming book entitled Reimagining School Reform and Innovation (Sense, 2014). Please visit his website at www.drmattlynch.com for more information.

Dr. Matthew Lynch's Links

My Links
JULY 11, 2012 4:21PM

Compassionately Dealing With Mental Illness in America

Rate: 1 Flag
Take a look around the office because, statistically speaking, one out of every four adults will experience a mental health disorder in any given year. It's a common occurrence, yet we live in a country where mental illness comes with a side of stigma and a second helping of hardly anyone caring. Sounds harsh, but when you look at the facts, it's clear to see that we are a nation that is failing those who are in desperate need of some professional help.

What we as a country desperately need is to provide those who have mental illnesses with the help that they need. Doing so will benefit our communities, because those people will most likely become productive members of society once again. Mental illnesses, by definition, are serious mental health conditions that people cannot overcome on their own or simply by summoning up more willpower. They include such issues as panic disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, schizophrenia, borderline personality disorder, depression, etc.

These conditions affect nearly 58 million adults per year, as well as 10 percent of children and adolescents, and that's something that can successfully be helped. An estimated 70 to 90 percent of those who get the professional treatment they need will go on to experience a better quality of life, as well as a reduction in their symptoms. Unlike some diseases, where we are waiting for a cure or some effective help to come along, we already have that for the majority of mental health disorders.

So, if we are not giving mental health issues the funding they need, and not giving people the support that is essential, what exactly is happening to all those people? Not a whole lot, unfortunately. Many of those with mental illnesses are cast aside, and ending up living on the streets. In fact, it's estimated that roughly 25 percent of all homeless persons suffer from a mental illness.

It gets even worse. Just down the road from the White House, there are plenty of homeless individuals who suffer from mental illness. Shockingly, just steps from the most important office in the land, and perhaps the whole world, where decisions could be made to help people, those in power literally drive right past the homeless on the way to their comfortable offices. It makes you wonder who's not thinking clearly. Most people feel that mental illness is a problem that happens somewhere else, to some other families, and impacts someone else's community. But that's just not the case.

Mental illness doesn't care what you look like, how much money you have in the bank, or how well educated you are. It is something that can happen to anyone, anywhere, regardless of age, race, and creed. Indeed, mental illness impacts our own families, our friends, and people in our community. It's time to start helping those with mental illnesses, so that they can rejoin our communities and feel good about who they are.

When it comes to mental illness, we need more tolerance, empathy and compassion. We need to remove the barriers to help, and remember that if it were our family member or friend who had such problems, we would view things with a lot more compassion. We have an obligation to help them while they are in a position where they cannot help themselves. Let's all stand together and show our support for our mentally ill neighbors and community members. If not now, when? The sooner we help people who are suffering from mental illness, the sooner they will be able to enjoy life again, and be a vital part of our community.

For more by Matthew Lynch, Ed.D., click here.

For more on mental health, click here.

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Comments

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I agree with this excellent post...so much heartache and disability could be prevented by early care and treatment. Besides the stigma, I think many people just don't recognize when they or a loved one has a mental illness; and then it can be very hard to find good and affordable care. Sometimes going to a regular medical clinic can be a good place to start. Thanks for writing about this.