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Multimedia | Audio




Teens and Depression

Out of the Shadows: Battling the Stigma of Depression, Part II


Presented by Consumer Health Interactive

Until recently, researchers believed that only adults suffered from depression. We now know, however, that teenagers and even children can suffer from it. At any given time, about 8 percent of America's children and teens are struggling with major depression, but many of them are not getting the help they need.

The most tragic result is suicide -- the third and fourth leading cause of death respectively for young people between the ages of 15 and 24 and 10 to 14, according to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. In this special report, Laurie Udesky talks with three young people who planned to kill themselves as teenagers. They're now trying to reach other adolescents to let them know they too can recover from depression. In this piece, Laurie Udesky stresses that depression or talk of suicide in teens should always be taken seriously -- and that professional help and open communication between parents and their children can help prevent tragedies.

Among those interviewed is John Kevin Hines, 22, who threw himself off a 4,200-foot suspension bridge in September 2000. The moment that he jumped, he realized he wanted desperately to live. Although he shattered several vertebrae and was given only a 50 percent chance of survival, he made a good recovery. Hines has bipolar disorder, a mental illness that can cause extreme mood swings and suicidal depression, and now educates other youth about his illness through a northern California-based organization called Stamp Out Stigma.

Other people interviewed include a young woman treated for depression after a suicide attempt and Samuel Judice, MD, of the Langley Porter Psychiatric Institute at the University of California at San Francisco. Also featured is 25-year-old Ross Szabo, the president of his senior high school class, who was treated for suicidal depression at a psychiatric facility at the age of 17. When he returned to school, he says, he was "the psycho, the crazy kid, the loon, the person that people made fun of." Szabo won over his ignorant peers, however, and is now the youth outreach director for the National Mental Health Awareness Campaign.

Click to listen to Consumer Health Interactive's in-depth audio report (8:57 min).

If you'd like to read the audio script, click here.

Click here for Part I: Men and Depression

Click here for Part III: Bipolar Disorder

Digital Audio Team

Reporter and writer: Laurie Udesky

Producer: Laurie Udesky

Script Editors: Diana Hembree and Barbara Jamison

Introductory Narration: Michael Johnson

Sound Engineer: Michael Johnson

(If you don't hear anything, try turning up the volume of your computer speakers. If you don't notice anything loading at all, you probably need to download and install the free Flash Player. Click on one of the buttons to get the free software from Macromedia Inc.)

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Our reviewers are members of Consumer Health Interactive's medical advisory board.
To learn more about our writers and editors, click here.

Last updated January 29, 2009
Copyright © 2003 Consumer Health Interactive


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