April 18, 2007 (Press Release) --
As the media profiles Cho Seung-Hui citing notable professionals in the mental health community ranging from characteristics of a troubled child to a mass murderer, there are people like him leading productive and well adjusted lives because of the diagnosis of Dissociative Identity Disorder (formally known as Multiple Personality Disorder) along with its treatment, often in the form of inexpensive anti-depressants.
Shauna Anderson, author and entrepreneur, issued a press release on January 12, 2007 concerning Dissociative Identity Disorder and the impact it has on our community and the future of our children. She warned that people could lose their lives over this disorder if untreated. In Anderson’s book, Offal Great: A Memoir from The Queen of Chitlins, she wrote of her self-discovery of the disorder, her fight for diagnosis, and the triumph she made over it.
“Hui exhibited most of the characteristics of this disorder from referencing trauma and sexual abuse in his writings to signing his name on a class attendance form with a question mark. Every symptom is being described on major news outlets but being incorrectly labeled and identified. Sadly this could very well happen again if not properly addressed”, says Anderson.
Anderson is working with top ranking police officials in several jurisdictions in the Washington Metropolitan Area on tailoring a program to identify, treat and train area residents suffering with DID.
Shauna Anderson
240-602-2686
202-635-0909
Washington DC
www.offalgreat.com
Shauna Anderson, author and entrepreneur, issued a press release on January 12, 2007 concerning Dissociative Identity Disorder and the impact it has on our community and the future of our children. She warned that people could lose their lives over this disorder if untreated. In Anderson’s book, Offal Great: A Memoir from The Queen of Chitlins, she wrote of her self-discovery of the disorder, her fight for diagnosis, and the triumph she made over it.
“Hui exhibited most of the characteristics of this disorder from referencing trauma and sexual abuse in his writings to signing his name on a class attendance form with a question mark. Every symptom is being described on major news outlets but being incorrectly labeled and identified. Sadly this could very well happen again if not properly addressed”, says Anderson.
Anderson is working with top ranking police officials in several jurisdictions in the Washington Metropolitan Area on tailoring a program to identify, treat and train area residents suffering with DID.
Shauna Anderson
240-602-2686
202-635-0909
Washington DC
www.offalgreat.com

A $10 monthly prescription could saved 33 lives. Multiple Personality Disorder (now referred to as DID-Dissociative Identity Disorder)is suspected to have been the result of Hui's rage
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