“Through understanding, compassion is possible and with compassion, great change can happen.” – Melinda Raebyne Films MeaningfulMoviesProject Manager #meaningfulmoviesproject # TACID #TheGrandCinema #tacomawa #TacomaEvents #BeTheChange #documentaryfilm #meaningfulmoviestacoma #meaningfulmoviesgighabor #Mentalhealthawareness #melindaraebynefilms #mentalhealthsupport #OrchestratingChange. MMP is bringing communities together through film and safe and open dialogue. TRAILER: youtu.be/dzgAwZ_g5m0 ALL Meaningful Movies screenings are FREE, so no one is ever turned a way because of financial difficulties. The mission of the orchestra is to erase stigma one exhilarating concert at a time. Co-founded by Ronald Braunstein, once a world-renowned conductor whose career was shattered when his diagnosis of bipolar disorder was made public. ORCHESTRATING CHANGE tells the inspiring story of Me2/Orchestra, the only orchestra in the world, created by and for people living with mental illness and those who support them. Last month Meaningful Movies Tacoma, Meaningful Movies Gig Harbor along with TACID (Tacoma Area Coalition of Individuals with Disabilities) and The Grand Cinema hosted a thought provoking film that looks at people with disabilities, ORCHESTRATING CHANGE. Karoline Mortensen, Assistant Professor of Health Services Administration, University of Maryland ATTEND ONLINE VIA ZOOM: us02web.zo.om.us/j/87929718047?pwd=NmwvcmdqdnZEYWJiS0t3ODRZWFhKQT09 Facebook page: MeaningfulMoviesProject To learn more about this and other online events, go to: /. The Waiting Room offers a glimpse into the struggles of patients who are terrified about not only the crisis that brought them into the emergency department, but how they are going to pay for the care once they leave.” -Dr. Zoom information below! Reviews “An excellent, riveting documentary, revealing the raw compassion of health care providers trying their best to deliver care in a broken safety-net system. Join us for a viewing and a discussion on this emotional film on 7:00 PM, Tuesday, ApPST. The documentary is not just about a single hospital but also highlights the diverse community it serves and how our shared susceptibility to sickness unites us as human beings. At the center of the film is the ER waiting room, which vividly depicts the challenges faced by millions of Americans living without health insurance. Through a combination of cinema verité and voiceovers from various characters, the film presents an unfiltered, personal, and even heartening portrayal of how patients, staff, and caregivers handle disease, bureaucracy, and difficult choices. The Waiting Room, a documentary film, delves into the struggles of an American public hospital in caring for uninsured patients. Join the Bellevue Meaningful Movies Zoom Event this Tuesday. (no registration is required for the Zoom meeting) Use the link you receive to watch the film on your own device any time between 6:00 PM on Sunday, November 13 and 6:00 PM on Monday, November 14Īt 6:30 PM on Monday, November 14, join us on Zoom for our community discussion with representatives from the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) of Jefferson County using this link:.After registering you’ll receive an email containing a link to watch the film.Instead, you’ll register and watch the film on your own and then join the Zoom meeting for our community discussion with representatives from the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) of Jefferson County at 6:30 PM on November 14. PLEASE NOTE! This film will not be shown during the Zoom meeting. This is a journey with a man who has dedicated his life to understanding the connection between illness, addiction, trauma and society. Gabor Maté to explore why our western society is facing such epidemics. In The Wisdom of Trauma, we travel alongside physician, bestselling author and Order of Canada recipient Dr. The autoimmunity epidemic affects 24 million people in the USA. Drug overdose kills 81,000 in the USA annually. Suicide is the second most common cause of death in the US for youth aged 15-24, and kills over 800,000 people a year globally and 48,300 in the USA. One in five Americans are diagnosed with mental illness in any given year. The interconnected epidemics of anxiety, chronic illness and substance abuse are, according to Dr Gabor Maté, normal.
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