Healthcare > Mental Health Press Releaseshttp://www.sbwire.com/news/industry/269enToday in OT Announces New Blog for Occupational Therapy Practitionershttp://www.sbwire.com/news/view/23730Today in OT’s Occupational Therapy Editor, Marianne Outzen, MS, OTR/L, CHT, will lead a Web log for occupational therapy practitioners to connect and share ideas. Quantum Units Continuing Education Adds New CEU Courseshttp://www.sbwire.com/news/view/23351Several new CEU Courses have been added to the website of Quantum Units Continuing Education for the month of November.Care-giving, Faith and Support Groups Seminars Offered During Invisible Illness Weekhttp://www.sbwire.com/news/view/21331Nearly 1 in 2 people in the USA have a chronic illness and about 96% of it is invisible.* With the knowledge that this number is continuing to grow as our population ages, National Invisible Chronic Illness Awareness Week offers three workshops that focus on coping mechanisms and emotional support.Join Hundreds of Others in Blogging About Invisible Illness Sept 8-12http://www.sbwire.com/news/view/21253Some would argue having an illness that is invisible is a good thing. And at times it can be because one gets to choose who to share what information with. But it's also difficult because no one ever believes the seriousness of one's illness or pain level.Quantum Units Continuing Education Re-Casts CEU Websitehttp://www.sbwire.com/news/view/21103Quantum Units Continuing Education is an online source for continuing education units (CEU’s) for Nurses, Therapists, Social Workers, Substance Abuse Counselors, Licensed Professional Counselors and other health professionals. Quantum Units has always emphasized affordability, convenience, free access to materials, environmental consciousness, impeccable service and hands-on customer support. But the bar has just been raised again – this time with a new state-of-the-art web site which offers expanded features that reinforce and elaborate upon all of the above themes.Invisible Illness Awareness Week Unites Thousands Who Get ithttp://www.sbwire.com/news/view/20924Living with an invisible illness can cause heartache and bitterness when one feels no one understands the significance of the illness. Invisible Illness Week provides that validation that people with invisible diseases often seek.Who Hates to Hear They Look Great? Over Half of the Chronically Illhttp://www.sbwire.com/news/view/13078In a recent survey of 611 chronically ill individuals, done by the National Invisible Chronic Illness Awareness Week committee, 53.27% of the respondents said that the most frustrating or annoying comment people make about their illness is “But you look so good!”