WhatsMyM3
Book Details
PublisherTakeControlPress
ISBN / ASINB007YWIHL6
ISBN-13978B007YWIHL5
Sales Rank571,120
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
WhatsMyM3 is a primer to help you take control of your mental health. M3 is a 27 question confidential screen that you can complete at WhatsMyM3.com. After you finish the questions you to receive an overview of your potential risk of anxiety, depression, bipolar disorder or PTSD based on research published in the Annals of Family Medicine.
“You know your other important health numbers - your cholesterol
levels, your heart rate and blood pressure. Now for the first time, we
finally have a number that gauges mental health. By knowing our M3
score and then getting the right treatment, we have more success
managing all our numbers, because mental health affects everything.”
Larry Culpepper, MD, MPH
Professor of Family Medicine
Boston University School of Medicine
The M3 Score, which represents the likelihood that the symptoms disclosed reflect a clinically significant disorder. A University of North Carolina published in the Annals of Family Medicine study of the M3 has shown that among people with no diagnosis, 83% receive an M3 Score below 33, whereas 81% of those with confirmed diagnoses fall above this threshold.
The higher the M3 Score the more likely the patient's responses are
clinically significant and the symptoms reported are having a real impact
on quality of life. Therefore, the M3 Score could be viewed as a general
mental wellness grade, with lower scores indicative of good mental
health. For those receiving treatment it provides a target for treatment
success.
“You know your other important health numbers - your cholesterol
levels, your heart rate and blood pressure. Now for the first time, we
finally have a number that gauges mental health. By knowing our M3
score and then getting the right treatment, we have more success
managing all our numbers, because mental health affects everything.”
Larry Culpepper, MD, MPH
Professor of Family Medicine
Boston University School of Medicine
The M3 Score, which represents the likelihood that the symptoms disclosed reflect a clinically significant disorder. A University of North Carolina published in the Annals of Family Medicine study of the M3 has shown that among people with no diagnosis, 83% receive an M3 Score below 33, whereas 81% of those with confirmed diagnoses fall above this threshold.
The higher the M3 Score the more likely the patient's responses are
clinically significant and the symptoms reported are having a real impact
on quality of life. Therefore, the M3 Score could be viewed as a general
mental wellness grade, with lower scores indicative of good mental
health. For those receiving treatment it provides a target for treatment
success.
