
A Debilitating Condition
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For 8 years, Matthew Rosenberg has dealt with a debilitating form of OCD.
For 8 years, Matthew Rosenberg has dealt with a debilitating form of OCD. He hyperventilates throughout the day and is in near-constant pain. having tried numerous therapies and medicines with no results, his last hope is the high-tech surgery he’s waiting for, where electrodes will be transplanted into his brain.
Funding for Mysteries of Mental Illness is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Johnson & Johnson, the American Psychiatric Association Foundation, and Draper, and through the support of PBS viewers.

A Debilitating Condition
Clip | 2m 13sVideo has Closed Captions
For 8 years, Matthew Rosenberg has dealt with a debilitating form of OCD. He hyperventilates throughout the day and is in near-constant pain. having tried numerous therapies and medicines with no results, his last hope is the high-tech surgery he’s waiting for, where electrodes will be transplanted into his brain.
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Mysteries of Mental Illness is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
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Share your story of dealing with mental illness through textual commentary, a still image, a short-form video — however you feel most comfortable — using the hashtag #MentalHealthPBS on social media.Mysteries of Mental Illness | Preview
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Mysteries of Mental Illness explores the story of mental illness in science and society. (32s)
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Learn about a mysterious illness known as 'Brain on Fire'. (4m 8s)
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https:/Mia Yamamoto spent most of her life being made to feel like she was 'mentally ill'. (2m 5s)
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Olympic boxer Ginny Fuchs shares a little of what it's like to live with OCD. (4m 15s)
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Army Veteran Ryan Mains has struggled to accept his diagnosis of PTSD. (2m 29s)
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How do the beliefs of the day shape our understanding of mental illness? (3m 59s)
Michael Walrond and Depression
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For years Michael Walrond battled depression, and for years he suffered in silence. (2m 34s)
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Five people from the series Mysteries of Mental Illness talk about their struggles. (2m 30s)
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Scientists are searching for trauma's biological fingerprints, to understand PTSD. (3m 29s)
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Hear Cecilia McGough talk about her struggles with schizophrenia. (2m 34s)
Psychedelics and Mental Illness
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A chemist accidentally created the psychedelic, LSD, while searching for new medications. (3m 18s)
New Frontiers in Mental Health Care Access
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A psychiatrist works to bring informal healthcare to culturally relevant settings. (4m 1s)
The Mass Incarceration of the Mentally Ill
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Asylums were closed down, but the mentally ill are still being institutionalized. (2m 55s)
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In 1936, neurologist Walter Freeman performed the first lobotomy in the U.S. (5m 28s)
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Kirkbride's 'hospitals for the insane' were built for those who had nowhere else to go. (3m 8s)
Experimental Treatments and the Rise of Eugenics
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What gave rise to the Eugenics program in the United States? (5m 47s)
Episode 4 Preview: New Frontiers
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A look at today’s most cutting-edge treatments for the mentally ill. (32s)
Episode 3 Preview: The Rise and Fall of the Asylum
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Learn about the asylum, and its rise and fall as a place for treating the mentally ill. (32s)
Deep Brain Stimulation Surgery
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Matthew Rosenberg is having deep brain stimulation surgery to help his OCD condition. (2m 55s)
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For 8 years, Matthew Rosenberg has dealt with a debilitating form of OCD. (2m 13s)
Cynthia Piltch and Electroconvulsive Therapy
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Cynthia is turning to ECT, or Electroconvulsive Therapy, to manage her severe depression. (3m 54s)
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How did prisons and jails become a frontline treatment for the mentally ill? (4m)
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Some 30,000 patients came through the Mississippi State Asylum, and many never left. (5m 21s)
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What is mental illness and who's normal? This clip considers how we define these queries. (1m 30s)
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For a long time, Cecilia McGough found talking about her hallucinations very difficult. (3m 14s)
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In the U.S., as recently as the early 1970's, homosexuals were considered mentally ill. (4m 13s)
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An Olympic boxer struggles with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder. (2m 25s)
Episode 2 Preview: Who's Normal?
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How did we develop mental illness standards rooted in empirical science rather than dogma? (31s)
Episode 1 Preview: Evil Or Illness
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Episode 1 explores ancient ideas of mental illness and the establishment of psychiatry. (2m 25s)
Decolonizing Mental Health | Overview
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Experts like Shawna Murray-Browne speak to what the current mental health field lacks. (2m 46s)
Decolonizing Mental Health | Preview
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DECOLONIZING MENTAL HEALTH calls for a redress of ways we define and treat mental health. (36s)
Providing Support for PBS.org
Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorshipFunding for Mysteries of Mental Illness is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Johnson & Johnson, the American Psychiatric Association Foundation, and Draper, and through the support of PBS viewers.