Some photos from Nepal.
Marian Mulligan in Nepal
Marian Mulligan in Nepal
Marian Mulligan in Nepal
A volunteer humanitarian organization. Not for profit.
Some photos from Nepal.
Marian Mulligan in Nepal
Marian Mulligan in Nepal
Marian Mulligan in Nepal
Some photos from the Mondello event.
Winner of the Best Wheels at Sphenoid Ireland’s Suicide Prevention Drift Day
Winner of the Best Engine at Sphenoid Ireland’s Suicide Prevention Drift Day.
with Drift Queen of Europe, Danielle Murphy
Winner of the King of the Cones at Sphenoid Ireland’s Suicide Prevention Drift Day
European Drift Queen, Danielle Murphy
European Drift Queen, Danielle Murphy
Supporting Drift & Track Day
Marian Mulligan with Danielle Murphy
Danielle Murphy & Marian Mulligan with Kildare Red Cross.
Winner of the Best European Car at Sphenoid Ireland’s Suicide Prevention Drift Day
Nick Costigan won the Best Showman Award with his Nissan 180SX at the Sphenoid Ireland’s Suicide Prevention Charity Drift Day
Drift Queen of Europe, Danielle Murphy
Drift Queen of Europe, Danielle Murphy with some of the Drifters who participated at the Drift Day
Marian Mulligan, Director of Sphenoid Ireland
Supporting Drift & Track Day
Some photos from the seminar.
Mary Allison Sphenoid Ireland, Sean O' Sullivan Hope(D), Prof. Giovanni Maria Ruggiero, Marian Mulligan, Mingmar Sherpa, Kanchha Sherpa , Nepalese Youth Group
Mingmar Sherpa, Prof. Giovanni Maria Ruggiero, Marian Mulligan, Matt Carthy MEP
Front Row:-Garda Karol McSweeney, Ballymun District, Marian Mulligan CEO Sphenoid Ireland, Matt Carthy MEP, Prof. Giovanni Maria Ruggiero, Seamus Connolly President EFCAM, Patricia Bourke(Mental Health Ireland) Back Row:-Kanchha Sherpa(Nepalese Youth Group), Mingmar Sherpa, Tom Dalton Celtic Grace, Rep Hope(D), Governor Conal Healy Shelton Abbey, Vivienne O'Herlihy, Lusk Guild I.C.A, Sean O' Sullivan Hope(D) Kildare, Sinead Cassin Lusk Guild I.C.A., Teresa Allison Sphenoid Ireland, Mary Allison Sphenoid Ireland, Maria Finn Project Manager, Clondalkin Addiction Support Programme CASP, & Hillary.
Promoting Health and well-being in the young
Promoting Health and well-being in the young
Marian Mulligan CEO with Donal & Laura McCormack from Irish TV
Promoting Health and well-being in the young
Carol Nolan Offlay TD with Marian Mulligan CEO
The Irish Institute of Naturopathic Medicine is calling on the government to support its pilot programme to help reduce suicide in prisons.
THE GOVERNMENT HAS been asked to support the introduction of a suicide prevention programme in Irish prisons.
Yesterday, Maureen Mulligan, the Director of the Irish Institute of Naturopathic Medicine, discussed the issue with the Oireachtas justice committee.
Mulligan worked on a similar programme in UK prisons for 14 years with 200 voluntary practitioners.
Prisoners from all over Britain took part in the initiative. Mulligan said there was “a significant reduction of attempted suicide in individuals who have undertaken the programme”.
Participants were supported through counselling, natural medicine, anger management, and nutritional and fitness advice.
Mulligan told the committee of one instance where a prisoner with 150 previous charges was referred to the programme in 2006. His father had been murdered and he was dependent on drugs and alcohol.
“There was nothing for him, he was out of control,” she recalled.
Following three months of therapy in prison and continued engagement with the programme upon his release, he has not re-offended since.
Mulligan said that many of the prisoners she worked with “had given up the will to live”.
Some of those who completed the programme, which ran seven days a week, were released on parole and had their sentences shortened.
“One suicide within prison is too many and is everyone’s trauma,” Mulligan said.
She noted that a prisoner’s suicide affects their family “from generation to generation, forever feeding a need for failure and the cycle of wasteful tragedy”.
Mulligan said that many of the prisoners who sought help from the programme did so under false pretences, noting that some heroin addicts would pretend to have a bad back when they first engaged with doctors.
She said that it would “help their male egos” to not have to share their true problem initially.
“They come in for the wrong reason but stay for the right reason.”
The main aim for them was to get their families back … and be free of the need to use drugs.
“For some the first step of recovery is when they are incarcerated.”
Mulligan said that the issues of depression, self harm and suicide among prisoners need to be dealt with by society at large.
We need as a community to understand the pain held by the person who is lost to failure and doubt about their ability and purpose in living.
The pilot project was co-developed by a number of organisations and has the backing of doctors and academics in the UK, Germany and the US.
Mulligan wants Europe-wide training for doctors to be financed through the European Commission’s Horizon 2020 fund.
She said that the programme, if implemented, would be closely monitored and could be individually tailored to suit male and female prisoners and young offenders.
Committee chair David Stanton said that some of the issues raised by Mulligan were covered in the committee’s 2013 Report on Penal Reform.
He said that the group would “certainly have a discussion about this”.
Labour TD Anne Ferris said the programme was a “very, very good initiative”, adding: “We certainly as a committee should support it”.