Please don't jump to conclusions before clicking away... This is a serious question.
Do you or someone you know have someone in their household between the ages of 19-25 that were doing well with holding down a job, paying bills, active life etc like interested in video games, bowling anything..... Then one day, within the last year or so, became more or less manic depressive? Unable to get out of their own head? Constantly talking about themselves and ghostly pains. Not able to work, gets paranoid of old past times like gaming etc and purely focused on their "pains" with no interest or capability to even think like a normal person anymore?
Is this happening allot out there but as most families would do, just deal with it? Obviously if your still reading I could admit this has affected by family, BUT ALSO in my Career. All early 20s kids are fucked up. I'm just wondering if there's an underlying reason for NOT being able to find employees that could be tied to a possible Nationwide issue regarding our next generation of adults.
Input needed, direction requested. Probably wrong sub but honestly I'm here more than anywhere else.
Anybody else have anyone in their circle that has a young adult suddenly have mental issues? Is this happening to everyone else and nobody is putting this together yet?
Honest HELP Needed. And in my case I'm talking about a non poked person. No jabby.
Thanks for taking the time....
Carry On!!!
Good, good. Get his ferritin levels checked. Does he get enough zinc and copper foods?
I will have to check...we all really don't go to doctors very often...I do labs and checkups, but he probably has no reason to go since he is generally pretty healthy and we treat everything alternatively. What is the association with ferrin levels and mental health? I know we take a multi without iron because it interferes with absorption of something or other. I will have to check this all out...he lives 4 hours away so I don't see him too often.
Go research low iron and mental illness.
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/pcn.12656
Zinc, too...
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3868572/ - Zinc Deficiency Is Common in Several Psychiatric Disorders
I'd also look at iodine intake.
God bless you.