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Doctors Are Not Trained to Think Critically

Mad in America

I was given psychotherapy all through this time, but the therapists were not impressed by my accounts of childhood trauma. Medical research is largely funded by the pharmaceutical industry, papers ghostwritten by the pharmaceutical industry and influencers paid by the pharmaceutical industry.

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The Trauma Craze: How the Expansion of Trauma Diagnoses Fueled Victimhood Culture

Mad in America

While expanding trauma criteria is often justified as necessary for inclusivity and compassion, critics contend that these expansions may be driven, by some, out of self-interest. It increased demand for therapy and medication, amplified the importance and influence of experts within the field and justified allocating more resources to it.

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One Person’s Journey from Celebrity Medical Model Advocate to Skeptic: An Interview with Rose Cartwright

Mad in America

She talks about understanding the place of her own childhood trauma and also the limitations of simplistic trauma narratives. You write that you worry about how psychedelics are getting co-opted by pharmaceutical industries. You want to be reborn in each moment. That’s the whole Buddhist philosophy. Tell us more.

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How Mad Studies and the Psychological Humanities are Changing Mental Health: An Interview with Narrative Psychiatrist Bradley Lewis

Mad in America

Terms like “broken brain,” “childhood trauma,” “unresolved grief,” and “family dysfunction” come to mind. Key among these tools are metaphor, plot, character, and point of view. Metaphors, in particular, are intriguing.