Remove 2002 Remove Aging and mental health Remove Healthcare
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Theodoric of Arizona: State-Sanctioned Pharma-Based Pseudo-Doctor

Mad in America

The opening roll of this classic skit: In the Middle Ages, medicine was still in its infancy. The skit conveys some examples of state-of-the-art healthcare in England, circa 1303 A.D.: This also applies to what is now called “mental illness.” Theodoric commented on all the progress Medicine had made by 1303 A.D.,

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Enlarging the Treatment Lens for Postpartum Depression

Mad in America

Mom continued to struggle to overcome depression until her death in 2002. The Office on Women’s Health emphasizes psychosocial causes as being significant in PPD. Kelly Brogan , a holistic women’s health psychiatrist, reports significant concerns about brexanolone. We need pills, but we need much more.”

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Understanding Overdose Risks and Choosing the Right Addiction Therapy for Substance Abuse

Clear Behavioral Health

Substance abuse is one of the most critical public health crises in the United States, affecting millions of individuals, families, and communities. The impact of addiction goes beyond the individual – families, workplaces, healthcare systems, and society suffers.

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Trust Among Those People in Prison, Rising From the Borderlands

Mad in America

Fear of other men runs deep here in our circle, here in the mad age of othering, here in a windowless building that looks like, from a distance, nothing more than a warehouse for storing things that no one else wants to deal with. New Mexico acupuncture law opened right after in 2002. Their non-cooperation paid the pins forward.