Mental health disorders are some of the most common health conditions in the United States. In addition to changing the way you think, feel, and behave, mental health disorders can profoundly affect your day-to-day life and your relationships with others. Even though these conditions can have many different causes, many people wonder if mental health disorders are genetic. Understanding mental health disorders and their wide range of causes can help answer this question.
Mental health disorders are conditions that affect how you think, feel, behave, and interact with other people. Mental health disorders can also affect your mood, well-being, and quality of life. These conditions can be chronic, long-lasting, or can occur occasionally.
There are several different types of mental health conditions, even though all mental health disorders can interfere with your ability to function in different ways.
Out of the 200 types of mental health disorders that exist today, some of the most common include:
Mental health disorders don’t start suddenly. In the early stages, you may begin to notice small changes that affect your thinking, feelings, or behavior. These changes can include:
If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, please contact your healthcare provider or the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800-273-8255.
Mental health disorders can also cause physical symptoms such as stomach or back pain, headaches, muscle aches, and other unexplained aches and pains.
Mental health disorders are the most common health conditions in the United States. According to the Center For Disease Control and Prevention (CDC):
There is no single cause for mental health disorders. Several factors can cause these conditions, including:
Research also shows that your genes and family history can contribute to mental health disorders.
Genes carry the information that determines the traits, features, and characteristics you inherit from your parents. But that’s not all. The DNA in a gene has specific instructions for making particular proteins in your body. Those proteins help the body grow, work properly, and stay healthy. In the same way that you can inherit healthy genes, you can also inherit altered or mutated genes, affecting the proteins in your body.
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) research has found that certain genes and gene variations are associated with certain mental health disorders. Inheriting those genes and gene variations can increase your risk of developing a mental health disorder, but not everyone who inherits a gene variation associated with a mental disorder develops that condition. Remember, a variety of factors cause mental health conditions.
In short, mental health disorders are not caused by genetics, but your genes and family history can be contributing factors.
Here at StoneRidge, we care about your mental health. We know how much your mental health can affect how you think, feel, and act. That’s why all of our treatment programs combine compassionate clinical care with the world’s best brain science. Don’t continue to face mental health challenges alone. Let us help you.
Contact us today if you or someone you love needs a treatment center that cares enough to meet your specific needs.
Because mental health and addiction concerns are so often interconnected, we utilize research-based approaches with evidence-based outcomes that promote overall healing and recovery.
This low-impact magnetic stimulation activates neurons inside the brain, relieving symptoms associated with depression and anxiety.
Using brain scanning and readings, we create a map of our patients’ brains, helping us develop more targeted and effective treatments.
This process assists patients in visualizing their own brain functionality through continuous EEG readings.
We use carefully monitored doses of Spravato to help patients struggling with complex mental health disorders, including severe depression.
Patients use this practice to help reframe intrusive or negative thought patterns and develop coping techniques for long-term recovery.
This practice helps patients learn to regulate emotions, communicate more effectively, and process their own thoughts and feelings..
Licensed and trained therapists guide patients through this technique for managing stress and anxiety on an ongoing basis.
Patients experience one-on-one therapy sessions with a licensed therapist to provide a safe and private place to recover and heal.
Patients can practice the skills and techniques they have learned in treatment with others in a safe, therapist-guided space.
5940 E. Copper Hill Dr. Ste B & E, Prescott Valley, AZ. 86314
928-583-7799
We exercise progressive, leading brain science in our treatment approach for patients in our community and across the country who are struggling with mental health and addiction challenges.
We exercise progressive, leading brain science in our treatment approach for patients in the Prescott Valley community and across the country who are struggling with mental health and addiction challenges.
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