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Research and Clinical Trials for Children with Bipolar Disorder

By David Oliver

Scientific research on children affected with Bipolar Disorder offers great hope to families. Participation in these studies can enable these families to contribute directly to research that may lead to discoveries that may lessen the burden of Bipolar Disorder for both current and future generations.

Although not all studies will include treatment – benefits may include: a chance to be evaluated by experts on Pediatric Bipolar Disorder; for your child to try a new medication not currently or widely available yet; for your child to receive free treatment (including additional diagnostic tests) during the period of the study; and a period of follow-up care.

Before putting your child in a clinical study, though, the Child and Adolescent Bipolar Foundation (CABF) suggests that you ask questions to learn about the study and to help you determine whether having your child be in the study is in your child’s best interests.

The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) suggests the following Checklist of Questions for people before they enter a study (you can tailor them for your child):

  1. Why do you want me in your study?
  2. What is the research about? How will this research help in treating or understanding my disorder?
  3. What do I need to do and how much time will this take?
  4. How might this study help me, my relatives, or other people with my disorder?
  5. What possible risks are there to me or my relatives if I take part?
  6. How will this be different from the care I am getting now, and do I have other options or choices?
  7. Could my illness become worse during the study? What will happen if it does?
  8. What will happen to me at the end of the study?
  9. What should I do if I want to drop out of the study?
     
  10. May I get back to you after I discuss this with my family/friend/case manager/doctor?

About the Author

David Oliver is the founder of FreeBipolarCourse.com, a one-stop source of information on how to cope and deal with bipolar disorder. Sign up for one of his FREE Mini Courses on bipolar by visiting FreeBipolarCourse.com

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This Week's Bipolar News

Most important things we can give: love, time
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Dr. Paul Keck Jr. is president and CEO of the $28 million, 64-bed Lindner Center of Hope in Mason and executive vice chairman and Lindner Professor of Psychiatry & Neuroscience in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine. A graduate of Dartmouth College and the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Keck is an expert in bipolar disorder and has published more ...

Discrimination at Work
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... is really disturbing that an employer could be so crass. Have you told your employer about having bipolar disorder? What has your experience been with this?

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Dear Annie: Three months ago, my husband and I accompanied my 71-year-old mother to our home in California. She was released to my care because the authorities in Pennsylvania felt she could no longer manage on her own. She has a history of mental...

Man gets 30 years for murdering mother
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Cliff Newcomer suffers from bipolar disorder, the release said. The mangled body of Marilyn Newcomer, 55, was discovered about 11:45 pm on Jan. ...

Many Famous People Suffer With Bipolar Disorder
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Writers have been some of the most famous people with bipolar disorder. Mark Twain was one such writer. He, like many other writers, was highly functional ...

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Featured Article:

TAKE ACTION!

I received an email from a person the other day. She asked me why so many great successful people, leaders, business people, etc. have Bipolar Disorder. I have long had a theory (but I don't have any kind of study to point to which would prove my theory). Here's what I think, though:

In order for you to start something, whatever it is: open a daycare center, write a book, build a website, go to college, discover the cure for cancer, create world peace – you have to do something really important. Know what it is?

You have to TAKE ACTION!

Click here to read the entire article.

Featured Article:

Why People with Bipolar Disorder
Don't Take Their Medications

The word used to describe not taking your medications is called "noncompliance." When you are noncompliant with your medications, you could be causing great danger to yourself (and possibly others), and it could even be fatal.

Studies show that roughly 25 percent of medications are not taken as prescribed. As far as psychiatric medications, this number is doubled. With bipolar disorder, one in two patients will stop their medication in the first 12 months of treatment; usually because they will experiment with their dosage and/or go off their medication altogether (many because they enjoy their manic "highs"). Click here to read the entire article.

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