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How to be a health advocate for a teen who is suicidal or depressed

How to be a health advocate for a depressed teen

What is a health advocate?

A health advocate is someone who has been appointed to help care for and manage the affairs of the sick individual. They do not need to have any medical qualification, just a commitment to help support the sick person.

Why health advocates are necessary for teens with depression

Here’s some advice I always give to people who are struggling with major depression, which explains why they need to appoint someone to be a health advocate:

When you were a kid your mom likely stayed home from work to take care of you when you were sick.  She made you chicken soup. She bathed you. She wrapped you up in a blanket. She kissed you.  She was in charge of taking care of you, so you could be in charge of focusing on getting healthy.

When you’re depressed it’s the same thing. You need help and care from those around you.  Though, you may be trying to do things yourself because when you don’t have physical symptoms you may think it’s up to you to “pull yourself together”. Teens especially need that support because they are still for all intents and purposes children, although they straddle the border between childhood and adulthood..

Depression is neurological disorder.  Depressed teens need to heal even if no one can see that they need to heal. Give them time.

Once anyone has been been labeled with a mental illness they can seen as “unreliable” and “unstable” in the eyes of the world.

Mood irregularity is a symptom and so, sometimes people think you can’t be trusted, and your teen may not be seeing things for what they really are.  Whether it’s true or not, this is what many people think and believe. That includes professionals.

If you appoint yourself or ask for permission to be a health advocate for your teen, here are some of the crucial roles you’ll need to play:

Character alibi: Vouch for their character and help explain their actions. This will help professionals understand what is “normal” behavior for them.

Safety monitor: You’ll need to keep an eye on them. Check on them frequently. Make sure they are safe. Ensure their environment is safe.

Someone to talk to who will listen and be supportive:  Sometimes they need to vent or share their pain with someone. It helps you get it out. And being listened to and understood can make them feel less alone and frustrated.

A second in command: As their parent you are used to taking over and performing specific tasks when they aren’t able to. You need to step this up if they are depressed. Do things like: Drive them to school, make sure they eat. Help them with everyday tasks.

Spokesperson: You can talk for them when they can’t – or won’t.

 

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