MSM

Mens Sana Monographs 

A Monongraph Series Devoted To The Understanding of Medicine, Mental Health, Mind , Man And Their Maxtrix 

October 2024

Readers Respond

The Mens Sana Monographs are excellent, novel and with a different presentation from a new angle. I congratulate both of you for taking pains and making all the efforts to bring out such useful and informative monographs. – Dr. Indla Ramasubba Reddy* M.D. (Psych), D.P.M (NIMHANS), F.I.P.S. Psychiatrist, Vijayawada – President, IPS South Zone (1999-2000) – […]

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What Shall We Do About Our Concern with the Most Recent in Psychiatric Research?

Abstract Most clinicians and researchers are concerned with recent advances in psychiatry. This involves the danger whether something time-tested may get sidelined for extra-scientific reasons. That the pharmaceutical industry and superspecialist researcher may keep churning out new findings to impress audiences is only a partial truth. Research progresses by refutation and self-correction. Acceptance in science

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2) Suicide Rates Under-reported (In a communication, Prof. K. S. Jacob, M.D., Ph.D., Prof. of Psychiatry, Chris-tian Medical College, Vellore, shares the findings of their interesting rural study us-ing verbal autopsies conducted between 1994-9 as a collaborative study between their Dept. of Community Health and Dept. of Psychiatry. This was published in BMJ, Vol. 326,

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1) How do we account for deaths like Jñaneshwara’s and Rama’s?

I give below a few examples : Jñaneshwara, at the age of 22, entered Samadhi; Manek Prabhu, at the age of 40, did likewise; Raghavendra Swami, at the age of 71, entered Vrindavan; (Vaishnava equivalent of Samadhi); Vadiraja Swami, at age of 120, entered Vrindavan. There may be many more. They were all yogis and used to be in Asamprajñata Samadhi.

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Answering Two Serious Charges on Suicide Prevention

There are two serious, though well intentioned, charges on suicide prevention which deserve our equally serious consideration: Whatever we do, the rate of suicide in a particular society will remain fairly constant (Durkheim, 1952). Suicide is disturbingly ubiquitous and universal – across cultures and ages. Psychiatry does not seem (yet) to fare better than the

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Towards A Suicide Free Society: Identify Suicide Prevention As Public Health Policy

Abstract Suicide is amongst the top ten causes of death for all age groups in most countries of the world. It is the second most important cause of death in the younger age group (15-19 yrs.) , second only to vehicular accidents.Attempted suicides are ten times the successful suicide figures, and 1-2% attempted suicides become

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Readers Respond

I am writing this letter to express my appreciation of the work you are doing. It is something different form the routine medical articles in India and hence a refreshing and welcome change. N. N. Wig Prof. Emeritus, Psychiatry, PGIMER, Chandigarh I congratulate you for writing a very important document. As you know we have been

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