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General Purpose on Clinicians-Exchange

  • Kay Redfield Jamison: Healing in Mind (*Lancet*) [Book -- Fires in the Dark: Healing the Unquiet Mind. ]

    Thank you Dr. Pope for the summary.

    -------- Forwarded Message --------

    The new issue of The Lancet includes an article: “Kay Redfield Jamison: healing in mind” by Niall Boyce.

    Here are some excerpts:

    Figure thumbnail fx1

    I am talking on Zoom with Kay Redfield Jamison, Co-Director of the Mood Disorders Center and Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA, about her new book Fires in the Dark: Healing the Unquiet Mind. Its optimistic title is belied by the dustjacket photograph depicting flames rising from Notre Dame cathedral during the 2019 fire. While pointing out that she does not choose her cover art, Jamison nevertheless thinks it is an appropriate image:

    “Since I wrote about Notre Dame, and what it is that you can bring from ruin and destruction, it has some meaning there.” The book's title, meanwhile, is taken from English writer Siegfried Sassoon's poem To a Very Wise Man, a tribute to W H R Rivers, the psychiatrist who helped him cope with trauma sustained in World War 1.

    Fires in the Dark is the latest in a series of highly regarded publications by Jamison; previous topics include creativity and mental illness, suicide, bereavement, and exuberance.

    The book is concerned with healing, and Jamison has in her life been both the healer and the healed; her experience of bipolar disorder was the subject of her 1995 memoir An Unquiet Mind.

    Fires in the Dark is a book about finding a way forward, but it is also a revisitation of Jamison's past, as its subtitle suggests. Jamison recalls an episode of depression that she had as a 17-year-old in California during the 1960s, when help came not from a psychiatrist, but from an English teacher: “Nobody talked about depression. I mean, it just wasn’t done…But he came to me with a couple of volumes by Robert Lowell, and Sherston's Progress by Sassoon, and The Once and Future King by T H White.” Jamison tells me that these books—poetry, fictionalised war memoir, and Arthurian legend—“have just stayed in my life since”.

    There is an epic quality to Jamison's own life; her early years were spent moving “from Florida to California to Puerto Rico, Japan, Washington” with her family—her father was a scientist and pilot with the US Air Force. “I actually loved it, and enjoyed meeting new people”, she says. Settling in Pacific Palisades, CA, USA, when her father took a job with the RAND Corporation, Jamison's thoughts turned to the medical world; psychology, she explains, came later.

    At one point, she was set to become a veterinarian; and yet, discussing this stage in her life, I detect a hint of where her talents would eventually lead her. Animals, Jamison says, are “different, they go through the same world [as humans] and they sense that differently”. Perhaps this interest in communication across seemingly insuperable barriers meant that her eventual qualification in clinical psychology was on the cards from the start? One of the most frustrating things about mental illness, Jamison tells me, “is that you can’t communicate in your normal way. So it's up to the therapist…How do you find out what someone is feeling and thinking when they’re so ill, and so embarrassed about being ill?”

    Jamison has tackled that stigma in her own life, making public her experience of bipolar disorder in An Unquiet Mind. While family and colleagues were largely supportive, she experienced a ferocious backlash from some quarters. “I got a lot of hate mail”, Jamison recalls. “A lot of people saying it's a good thing you didn’t have children [and] pass these genes on.” But it was vital to Jamison to tell her story, other people's accounts of their illness having proved invaluable to her: “When I got manic the first time, I was so terrified…everything was just bleak, bleak. The fact that people had gotten through it was very meaningful, very important.” In a field that is often marked by professional polarisation, Jamison takes a holistic attitude towards healing: “I think psychotherapy is so undervalued. And I think there's no question in my own mind that for myself, psychotherapy kept me as alive as lithium did.”

    <snip>

    We return to the subject of Rivers, one of the key psychological and societal healers featured in Fires in the Dark. Jamison tells me that it was said “that he came by understanding human nature probably through more different paths than anyone else. Through experimental psychology, anthropology, neurology, psychiatry, medical psychology…there's profundity there of wisdom; of human wisdom, and an openness to experience, and a compassion toward suffering.”

    I’m struck that Jamison takes a similarly expansive approach: she is focused not only on the acute stages of mental health problems, but also on what comes afterwards: “if you’ve got to spend the rest of your life knowing that you’ve got a recurrent illness—that you may get sick at any time, under the best of circumstances—you’ve got to figure out what you’re going to do with that. And to me…healing is a lot of getting well enough and insightful enough to say: How do I take on the world? How do I take some purpose from this?”

    Although the US health-care system—which Jamison describes as “utterly completely broken”—does not make it easy for clinicians to work as healers, she remains optimistic. Towards the end of our conversation, I ask her about her statement in An Unquiet Mind that she “long ago abandoned the notion of a life without storms”. Is this still the case?

    “I’ve been very lucky”, she replies. “By medical standards, I have a bad version of bipolar illness, but by treatment standards, I have a very good response.” She looks thoughtful. “The idea that there are storms out there doesn’t bother me.”

    Ken Pope

    Ken Pope, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Y. Adames, Janet L. Sonne, and Beverly A. Greene Speaking the Unspoken: Breaking the Silence, Myths, and Taboos That Hurt Therapists and Patients (APA, 2023) “I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my ship.” —Jo March in Louisa May Alcott’s Little Women (1868)

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  • The Thing My Therapist Said That Changed My Life—Fifteen Examples

    Thank you Dr. Pope as always for your summaries.

    ............... Apple News includes an article: “The Thing My Therapist Said That Changed My Life—Fifteen Examples” by Amanda Robb.

    Here are some excerpts:

    We’re all for doing the work, showing up and sitting in that chair (or lying on that well-worn Mies van der Rohe couch) and digging into our psyches to unearth our emotionally healthiest selves.

    But sometimes a single statement or question pierces right through your onion layers and serves as a touchstone for the rest of your life.

    <snip>

    1. When you don’t know what to do, do nothing

    “This has helped me from saying or doing the wrong thing in difficult or emergency circumstances. Simply waiting a beat until I’ve had enough time to think and process a situation allows me to make better choices.” —Tiffany M, 48, New Rochelle, New York

    1. You get to choose the type of relationship you have with ____ (fill in the blank)

    “My parents divorced when I was about 18. When I was in my early 20s, I found out why. My father is gay. This was nearly 40 years ago, and I didn’t know how to react to my dad and his new partner. I knew I wasn’t comfortable with my siblings’ reactions, but I [still] loved them. And I realized that I loved my dad and I was happy for him. We’re close to this day. It seems like simple advice, but it was a powerful realization for me at the time.” —Kathryn R., 59, Burlingame, California

    1. Get outside and walk

    “I was a depressed teen, and my therapist told me I had to walk to and from her office from my house, which was 15 to 20 minutes away on foot. On the way there, it allowed me to focus on what I wanted to talk about in the session. On the way back, it helped me process and release what had happened in the session. It was just good for my overall mental health, and I am still exercising for my mental health.” —Victoria V., 53, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania

    1. And what was the crime?

    “I do a fair amount of Monday-morning quarterbacking, telling myself, I should’ve done this, not that, and then beating myself up. And my therapist would say this in her lovely English accent, and I’d realize there really was no catastrophe.” —Pilar G., 53

    1. Just do it tired

    “I was in group therapy, and the therapist gave someone else this advice. But it resonated with me because you can come up with a million excuses for not investing in yourself because of where you are. ‘I’m too tired’ is a common one, an easy one. And sometimes you really are exhausted and need to rest. But most of the time, you’re not that wiped out. So just go do whatever it is. Be out there. Be a part of things and see what that brings.” —Sue K., 61, New York City

    1. Don’t get on the roller coaster, but always be waiting for them on the platform

    “Advice for raising four daughters, including a set of twins. Of course, I did get caught up in their drama sometimes, but remembering this often helped me take a step back from it.” —Kathy I., 60, Charlotte, North Carolina

    1. Okay, but at what cost to you?

    “This is what my longtime therapist, Ruth, asks when I tell her I’ve taken on too much or I’m tolerating something difficult because it’s easier than confronting someone or admitting that I’m diminishing myself. It instantly re-centers me (I picture myself as that dot in Google Maps) and reminds me that my emotions and energy are worth protecting.” —Jennie T., 52

    1. Not my circus, not my monkeys

    “My life coach gave me this advice. I was learning to say no to people, but some didn’t accept it! They would give me a whole backstory and reasons I should change my answer to yes. This quote reminds me that I can’t change anyone’s reaction to my responses to things, but I can stick to my responses.” —Karon G., 47, Bayonne, New Jersey

    1. With a good book, you’ll never be lonely

    “This advice from my therapist after I got divorced resulted in my starting a book-related media company.” —Zibby O., 46, New York City

    1. Aren’t you curious about what is around the corner for you?

    “I had just experienced a serious traumatic event and was contemplating suicide. I still turn to this thought in dark times.” —Katherine K., 57, Las Vegas

    1. You can hold two things at once

    “I tend to think about things in categoricals—a career hazard, if you will. We are on time, or we’re late. We are on budget, or we’re not. It’s great for deadlines but bad for feelings. Over the past few years, I’ve had to figure out how to live alongside immense grief, and I remember telling my therapist how guilty I felt about being excited for an upcoming event. ‘You can hold two things at once,’ she said, and it sounds so simple, but it gave me a way to wrap my brain around feeling two diametrically opposed emotions. I can be sad about what isn’t while being excited for what is. It’s useful all the time. Two things can be true, and we can acknowledge both of them.” —Paulie D., 36,

    1. Don’t compare your insides to other people’s outsides

    “I use this constantly and repeat it to my children. It’s especially useful when I’m with someone who is incredibly intimidating and I’m feeling like a complete loser.” —Lisa C., 64, New York City

    1. No one else is going to fight your fight

    “My husband had left me. Immediately, I started seeing myself only as a victim. All I felt was self-pity about how badly I’d been betrayed; all I did in therapy was whine and complain. After about six months, my therapist said this to me, and a light bulb went off in my head. If I didn’t stand up for myself, I would be immobilized forever. I would be stuck not being able to trust anyone. Most importantly, I wouldn’t be able to make a new life for myself.” —Mary S., 63, Bozeman, Montana

    1. Always follow the advice flight attendants give: Put on your own oxygen mask first, then help others around you

    “My brother-in-law is a therapist, and he says this is among the most common advice he gives. I can overextend myself trying to help other people and wind up neglecting to take care of myself and my stuff, which can make me useless all the way around. This helps me keep first things first.” —Jonna A., 52, Reno, Nevada

    1. We all have something from our childhood that we had zero control over

    “You couldn’t control anyone’s behavior—what they said or how they acted. What you do have control over as an adult is how you allow it to affect the rest of your life, how you act and react to things. This changed my whole way of thinking and allowed me to be in control of my life!” —Brenda S., 59, Nassau, The Bahamas

    Ken Pope

    Ken Pope, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Y. Adames, Janet L. Sonne, and Beverly A. Greene Speaking the Unspoken: Breaking the Silence, Myths, and Taboos That Hurt Therapists and Patients (APA, 2023)

    .................. Merely reposted by: Michael Reeder LCPC Baltimore, MD

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist@a.gup.pe @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialpsych@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #psychiatry @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #graduatestudents #PsyNP #doctors #nursepractitioners #OMHC

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  • Imposter Syndrome

    Email2Lemmy ROBOT -- CHECK ACTUAL AUTHOR BELOW: EMAIL LIST: https://www.clinicians-exchange.org & MASTODON: https://mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org

    TITLE: Imposter Syndrome

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A few months ago someone posted an inquiry about imposter syndrome.

    This article posted today:

    https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/994344?ecd=wnl_dne6_230714_MSCPEDIT_etid5638673&uac=397605ET&impID=5638673

    ~~~~

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist @psychotherapists @psychology @socialpsych @socialwork @psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychiatry #healthcare #imposter #impostersyndrome #doctor #doctors

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  • Actually Getting Psychiatric Help for Yourself or a Loved One

    Hello All,

    I realize this instance is not the place for anyone to be asking for direct counseling or psychiatric help.

    I do want to post a few USA resources for anyone looking for help. I hope that others might post resources as well - particularly from other areas of the world.

    1. Directories such as:

    **Psychology Today: ** https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/therapists

    1. Insurance company provider directories. These directories are usually online. You can also ask your insurance company if they have a service for helping you find a provider - like a nurse consultant.

    2. EAP - Employer Assistance Programs. Ask your HR department who your company EAP plan is with. EAPs such as ComPsych frequently will help you find local providers.

    3. In an emergency - See if your locality has "crisis response" teams. These usually consist of a police officer and a social worker. The point is that this team will be better prepared for psychiatric emergencies than the average police officer responding to a 911 call. Google this ahead of time.

    4. Crisis hotlines - In the United States there is the "Suicide & Crisis Lifeline" which can be reached nationwide by calling or even texting 988.

    Thanks, Dan

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  • New PT Piece - The Mystery of Narcissism :)

    Another Psychology Today article from one of our email listserv members!

    TITLE: New PT Piece - The Mystery of Narcissism :) https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-intelligent-divorce/202301/the-mystery-of-narcissism

    Hi all, This is a new PT piece that may help a client or two. It is part of a series that I've been thinking about. Mark Banschick, MD – Stamford, CT

    The Mystery of Narcissism https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-intelligent-divorce/202301/the-mystery-of-narcissism

    Mark Banschick M.D. on January 23, 2023 The origin of narcissistic personality disorder (or associated traits) is a great mystery to solve.

    #psychology #psychotherapy #psychiatry #personalitydisorders #socialwork #psychologytoday #narcissist #narcissism @psychology@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth @psychiatry@a.gup.pe

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  • SPEAKING THE UNSPOKEN by Ken Pope, Nayeli Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Adames, Janet Sonne, &amp; Beverly Greene

    TITLE: SPEAKING THE UNSPOKEN by Ken Pope, Nayeli Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Adames, Janet Sonne, & Beverly Greene

    From Ken Pope:

    I am (extremely, exceptionally, over-the-top) happy to announce that APA will publish a special book later this year: Speaking the Unspoken: Breaking the Silence, Myths, and Taboos That Hurt Therapists and Patients.

    The book was a creative collaboration of 5 co-authors: Kenneth S. Pope, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Y. Adames, Janet L. Sonne, and Beverly Greene.

    Speaking the Unspoken The Kindle and paperback versions can now be pre-ordered from APA, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Bookshop.org, eCAMPUS.com, and the other usual suspects.

    Below are reviews, followed by the Table of Contents.

    “Here, at last, is the book we never really knew we needed, but needed so desperately. ‘Silence and silencing have shaped the psychotherapy profession.’ Truer words were never (un)spoken.”

    —Eric Y. Drogin, JD, PhD, ABPP Harvard Medical School Former Chair, APA Committee on Professional Practice and Standards

    “This book is essential reading for anyone who practices, teaches, supervises, and studies psychotherapy. It will help you to recognize and overcome barriers to thinking clearly, speaking openly, and listening respectfully about unspoken topics in our profession. The engaging vignettes, thought-provoking exercises, suggested strategies, and informational pearls of wisdom will strengthen your courage, humility, readiness, and skills to engage in authentic discussions.”

    —Joan Cook, PhD Professor of Psychology Yale University

    “Kenneth S. Pope, the foremost psychological ethicist of our time (someone who walks the talk), and a diverse and distinguished cadre of co-authors provide a necessary exploration of censored and challenging topics in psychotherapy. They show how correct Sigmund Freud was in positing that suppressed material will ‘come forth later in uglier ways’.”

    —Etzel Cardeña, PhD Thorsen Professor in Psychology Lund University, Sweden Co-editor of Varieties of Anomalous Experience and founding editor of the Journal of Anomalous Experience and Cognition

    “What a treasure of a book! The teaching, practice, and profession of psychotherapy are enhanced when we openly and directly address, understand, and continuously process ‘taboo’ topics that are challenging. The amazing authors provide history and sources of resistance to topics such as group identity, anger, oppression, and sexual feelings regarding clients. Most importantly, and of significant value, the book provides strategies that inspire us to have the courage, confidence, and determination to address the relevant issues in the various contexts in which we work. After reading this outstanding, compelling, must-read contribution, you will agree that creating a culture of speaking up benefits us all!”

    —Melba J. T. Vasquez, PhD, ABPP Independent Practice Former President, American Psychological Association

    “Speaking the Unspoken: Breaking the Silence, Myths and Taboos that Hurt Therapists and Patients is a must-read for EVERY therapist. The authors raise awareness and brilliantly illustrate how to address critical, contemporary, and challenging issues in therapy and supervision, including oppression and racism. I highly recommend this book!”

    —Lillian Comas-Díaz, PhD Recipient of the American Psychological Association Gold Medal Award for Life Achievement in the Practice of Psychology Past President, Psychologists in Independent Practice, APA Division 42 Author: Multicultural Care: A Clinician’s Guide to Cultural Competence

    “Have you ever avoided talking about something important? Have you ever wished for the courage to speak up? In clear and accessible prose, Speaking the Unspoken explains what underlies the fear and the other obstacles that keep us silent. With remarkable clarity, the book models the courage to discuss complex topics and provides practical advice for how and when to discuss previously unspoken matters. Every psychotherapist should read this intelligent and transformative book.”

    —Jennifer Joy Freyd, PhD Founder and President, Center for Institutional Courage Professor Emerit, Psychology, University of Oregon Adjunct Professor, Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University Editor, Journal of Trauma & Dissociation

    “Brave and compelling, Pope and colleagues’ volume paves the way to change and enlightenment of mindsets in clinical training, supervision, and practice. This courageous book outlines what is NOT DISCUSSED in clinical practice, supervision, and consultation, the impacts of these, and guideposts to identify, reflect, and address them. The authors address emotionally, politically, and personally charged topics that are avoided. It is a “must-read” for educators, supervisors, and clinicians-in-training.”

    —Carol Falender, PhD Adjunct Professor, Graduate School of Education and Psychology, Pepperdine University Clinical Professor, University of California, Los Angeles, Psychology Department Co-author, co-editor of six books on Competency-based Clinical Supervision, one on Competency-based Consultation

    “‘Several topics have been historically avoided in psychotherapy.’ The opening line in this book sheds light on a central truth – we tend to avoid certain topics because we have been told it is ‘uncultured’ to address them in ‘polite society.’ Although we may wish it to be so, averting our gaze does not remove these issues and problems from reality—not in society and not in our practices. The authors, experts in ethics, multiculturalism, practice, and training, excellently guide us through our own necessary edification. They invite us not to collude with the silence and the avoidance created when we hide behind the veil of ‘politeness’ and the guise of clinical neutrality. The book aims to enhance our skills and tolerance to feeling distressed and uncomfortable when we do “Break the Silence.” In learning how to do the necessary yet uncomfortable, we benefit our profession and the people we serve.

    —Cynthia de las Fuentes, PhD Independent Practice

    Here’s the Table of Contents:

    Dedication Acknowledgments

    Introduction: Unspoken Topics in Psychotherapy and How This Book Can Help Break the Silence

    Part I: The Problem of the Unspoken

    A Chilling Context for Psychotherapy: Cancel Culture, Hyperpolarization, Books and Topics Banned by the State, Frightened Academics, and Self-Censorship A Silenced Profession: The Toxic Effects of Taboo Topics Systems of Silencing and Cognitive Cues for Keeping Quiet An Example of the Problem: Therapists' Sexual Attractions, Arousals, and Fantasies

    Part II: Preparing to Break the Silence

    Looking Inward: A Self-Assessment of How We Respond to Challenging Topics Strengthening the Courage to Speak Up: Creating a Supportive Context

    Part III: Speaking the Unspoken—Exercises for Explorating and Learning

    Talking About Physical Difference and Disability Talking About Sexual and Affectional Orientation Talking About Sexual Reactions to Clients Talking About Anger Talking About Oppression Speaking Up About White Supremacy Culture Talking About Religion Talking About Money and Fees Talking About Death and Dying

    Part IV: Speaking the Unspoken Beyond Psychotherapy

    Speaking Up in Supervision and Consultation Speaking Up in the Profession and the Community

    Part V: But What If...

    Hitting a Wall, or The Wall Hitting Us: What to Do When Confused, Scared, Disheartened, or Stuck

    References About the Authors Index

    I would greatly appreciate your passing the word to any lists or individuals who might be interested in this book.

    Ken Pope

    #psychology #psychiatry #socialwork #mentalhealth @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #supervision #taboos #psychotherapy

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  • BOOK: JUDY HERMAN: TRUTH &amp; REPAIR

    TITLE: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED: JUDY HERMAN: TRUTH & REPAIR

    I’m writing to recommend a remarkable new book, Truth and Repair: How Trauma Survivors Envision Justice (Basic Books—Hardcover, Kindle, eBook, Audio CD, Audible.com Audiobook), by a giant in our field, Dr. Judith Herman.

    Here’s a brief bio:

    Judith L. Herman M.D. is a Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, and co-founder of the Victims of Violence Program at The Cambridge Hospital, MA. She is the author of two award-winning books: Father-Daughter Incest (Harvard University Press, 1981) and Trauma and Recovery (Basic Books, 1992) which have been translated into numerous languages and reprinted editions. Considered one of the world's leading experts in the field of psychological trauma, Herman has lectured widely on the subject of sexual and domestic violence. She has received numerous awards including: a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1984, the 1996 Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, and the 2000 Woman in Science Award from the American Medical Women's Association. In 2007 she was named a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association.

    The reviews have been stunning. Here’s a small sampling:

    “Herman has written some of the most seminal, life-changing books on violence against women. Here in her new book, Truth and Repair, she does something even more radical. She listens to the survivors themselves and skillfully shapes their voices and wisdom into a practical and truly enlightened road map for our future. Every word rang true and essential.” ―V (formerly Eve Ensler), playwright of The Vagina Monologues

    “For thirty years, every single book written about the impact of trauma has stood on the shoulders of Herman’s groundbreaking book Trauma and Recovery. Now, thirty years later, we receive a bookend to that masterpiece, examining how survivors of gender-based violence seek justice and healing. Truth and Repair is a deeply researched and thought-provoking book offering hope and healing for victims of violence, many of whom have felt betrayed, ignored, or retraumatized by existing larger societal institutions.” ―Michelle Bowdler, author of Is Rape a Crime?

    “Herman’s earlier studies of abuse of women and children recast our understanding of trauma. Now, in Truth and Repair, she comes full circle in describing how initially powerless victims can, through innovative social arrangements, achieve hard-won survivor justice. In the process, we learn much about what justice really means for traumatized people. Herman’s perspective is deeply humane and grounded in historical and political reality. Her work stands alone in its arc and originality.” ―Robert Jay Lifton, MD, Columbia University

    “Three decades after the publication of her foundational Trauma and Recovery, Herman brilliantly confronts us with another vital, but much ignored, aspect of recovery: social justice. Justice is an essential component for healing the godforsaken sense of humiliation and abandonment so central in traumatizing experiences. When justice is denied, trauma’s imprint is likely to fester in the form of helpless rage. A magnificent and inspiring contribution with profound implications for the healing professions and for society at large.” ―Bessel van der Kolk, MD, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller The Body Keeps the Score

    “This book is a revelation. With careful precision and dogged research, Judith Herman offers us not only a diagnosis of our most pressing social ailments, but a prescription for healing. Rarely does a book offer this level of insight, hope and remedy.” ―Rachel Louise Snyder, author of No Visible Bruises

    “Through masterful storytelling, Judith Herman charts the course from trauma to justice and compels us to follow it. An inspiring and practical call to action, Truth and Repair celebrates survivors’ wisdom and their power to heal themselves and the world we live in.” ―Anita Hill

    The book can be pre-ordered (it’ll be out March 14) from Basic Books, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Google Play, etc.

    PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU ORDER TODAY THROUGH JANUARY 27 AT BN.COM, YOU CAN GET 25% OFF WITH CODE PREORDER25!

    It would be great if everyone would pass the word about this new contribution to any lists or individuals who might be interested. Thanks!

    Ken Pope

    #psychology #socialwork #psychotherapy #psychiatry #trauma @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #bookreviews

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  • Video on Autism and Women

    TITLE: Video on Autism and Women

    Absolutely brilliant video on female pattern Autism. Any individual can have aspects of either the stereotyped "male" pattern, "female" pattern, or both:

    https://vimeo.com/122940958

    Book: Aspergirls https://smile.amazon.com/Aspergirls-Empowering-Females-Asperger-Syndrome/dp/1849058261/

    -- Michael

    #autism #femaleautism #aspergirls #psychology #socialwork #psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychotherapy @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe @psychology@a.gup.pe #aspergers

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  • What Therapists are Called

    I've heard counselor, psychotherapist, mental health professional, and of course the infamous "provider" (thank you insurance companies).

    Now I am a "supplier" -- thank you to another insurance company for feeding my ego today. Not.

    As another therapist said on a related conversation -- the less prestigious and individual we sound, the more replaceable we are, the less we can be paid. They went on to speculate that soon we will be called titles that imply we are a financial burden by existing.

    Michael Reeder LCPC Baltimore, MD

    #psychology #psychiatry #mentalhealth #socialwork #healthpay @psychology@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #psychotherapy

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  • The Frightening Truth About Youth Suicidality and Fentanyl: Our Kids are Not Ok - My New Psychology Today Article

    TITLE: The Frightening Truth About Youth Suicidality and Fentanyl: Our Kids are Not Ok - My New Psychology Today Article

    Our kids are not even close to being OK. I’m astonished at how many patients I’m currently treating that have been directly or indirectly impacted by suicide or fentanyl poisoning... There’s a new crop of youth who are suffering with anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) because of the residual effects of these tragedies. To read more:

    https://www.psychologytoday.com/intl/blog/being-your-best-self/202303/the-frightening-truth-about-youth-suicidality-and-fentanyl

    Please share with others who may be interested or who may benefit.

    Warmly,

    Michelle Michelle Maidenberg, Ph.D., MPH, LCSW-R, CGP ////

    W E B / I N S T A G R A M / F A C E B O O K / T W I T T E R / L I N K E D I N

    TED TALK: Circumventing Emotional Avoidance

    My new book Ace Your Life: Unleash Your Best Self and Live the Life You Want is available to order at: Thriftbooks, Barnes and Noble, Walmart, Target and Amazon. Note that all paperbacks come with a free ebook.

    #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #research @psychotherapist@a.gup.pe @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialpsych@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe #suicide #mentalhealth #Fentanyl #kids #teens

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  • Online Pill Identifier: Search by Imprint, Shape, or Color (With Plenty of Data Tracking)

    TITLE: Online Pill Identifier: Search by Imprint, Shape, or Color (With Plenty of Data Tracking)

    Thank you Dr. Pope for initial message below.

    This is really cool.

    It should also be noted that when you use it, the drugs.com server communicates with -- and sends something about you -- to:

    securepubads.g.doubleclick.net stats.g.doubleclick.net www.google-analytics.com analytics.google.com fundingchoicesmessages.google.com www.googletagmanager.com fonts.gstatic.com www.gstatic.com ads.rubiconproject.com sb.scorecardresearch.com

    Don't pretend for a moment that what medications you are taking are likely to remain private.

    So load-up Ghostery and Privacy Badger into your web browser and hope for the best.

    -------- Forwarded Message --------

    Drugs.com provides an online pill identifier service.

    Here’s the announcement: Pill Identifier Search by imprint, shape or color Use the pill finder to identify medications by visual appearance or medicine name. All fields are optional.

    Tip: Search for the imprint first, then refine by color and/or shape if you have too many results.

    Here’s the link: https://www.drugs.com/imprints.php

    PLEASE NOTE: The Drugs.com site also provides an interactions checker and other services.

    Ken Pope

    ~~~ Merely forwarded by: Michael Reeder LCPC Baltimore, MD

    #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #pharmacy #medicationchecker #drugs #druginteractions #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons

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  • Declining Psychotherapy Reimbursement in Inflation-Adjusted Dollars &amp; the Inability of Psychotherapists to Collectively Bargain or Really Have Any Power at All in Their Reimbursement

    TITLE: Declining Psychotherapy Reimbursement in Inflation-Adjusted Dollars & the Inability of Psychotherapists to Collectively Bargain or Really Have Any Power at All in Their Reimbursement

    (Posted for anonymous author by Michael Reeder LCPC -- I did not write it myself but wish I did :) )

    ~~~

    My Medicare reimbursement for 45 minutes of psychotherapy in 1990 was $86.82 (in my region -- I have billing records back to 1985, but Medicare did not contract with psychologists until 1990). Currently it is $91.38 (Santa Barbara County), but minus 2% sequestration, it is actually $89.55.

    You can find your region's version by searching 2023 Medicare Physician Fee Schedule (using the name of your state -- and also searching reimbursement rates by year).

    Using the US Bureau of Labor Statistic's inflation calculator

    https://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm

    which BTW is the most conservative with regard to inflation.

    $86.82 in 1990 had the same buying power as $204.05 today. $89.55 divided by $204.05 equals 44% -- i.e., a pay cut of 56%.

    In year 2000, in my region Medicare paid $95.89 for 45 minutes of psychotherapy (then coded 90806, now coded 90834).

    Using the CPI inflation calculator, $95.89 in year 2000 had the same buying power as $169.89 today. In my region, Medicare currently pays $105.02 for 90834 -- but reduced 2% for sequestration, actually pays $102.92. $102.92 divided by $169.89 = 61%, so only a 39% pay cut. That also tells us that reimbursement dropped 17% between 1990 and year 2000.

    The biggest impediment to negotiating with insurers is a legal precedent from the late 1970's that prohibits psychotherapists from engaging in collective bargaining. Theoretically under the Sherman Act of 1890, we might form 'trusts' to set fees and control the market.

    As absurd as this sounds, it has become even more absurd since the advent of managed health care in the 1980's and our ability to participate as Medicare providers in 1990.

    Insurers create contracts in which they unilaterally set reimbursement rates, documentation requirements and other working conditions. Although we are all given the same contract, and are thus treated as a class of workers, we are legally prohibited from negotiating contracts as a group of workers.

    Last week, I wrote (again) to APA's legal team, asking them to prioritize this issue. Historically, professional associations beg off, arguing that they lack the resources to take on trillion dollar a year private insurance corporations, much less the federal government.

    Please let your professional associations know that the right to collective bargaining is a crucial issue, and in the context of reimbursement that is less than half what it was in 1990, perhaps the criterion issue for the survival of our profession. #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist@a.gup.pe @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialpsych@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe #union #unionizing #pay #healthcare #reimbursement #ShermanAct #APA #ACA #NCSW #inflation #wages

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  • from NYT: A Wellness Chatbot Is Offline After Its ‘Harmful’ Focus on Weight Loss
    www.nytimes.com A Wellness Chatbot Is Offline After Its ‘Harmful’ Focus on Weight Loss

    The artificial intelligence tool, named Tessa, was presented by the National Eating Disorders Association as a way to discover coping skills. But activists say it instead veered into problematic weight-loss advice.

    A Wellness Chatbot Is Offline After Its ‘Harmful’ Focus on Weight Loss

    Anyone else have patients that are using or have used AI as an adjunct to therapy? Or were using it prior to coming to your office?

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  • New Communities?

    Please suggest ideas for additional communities here. It's also theoretically possible --as we grow -- for members to moderate their own communities of interest.

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  • Welcome!

    I'd like to welcome everyone who is trying out Lemmy with us. The Lemmy software is still in its early stages, so expect some hick-ups.

    This is an instance for licensed professional mental health workers (psychologists, licensed professional counselors, social workers, psychiatrists, psych nurse practitioners, etc.).

    It's intended as mainly a professional forum, but we do have a social support function also, as well as communities for water cooler banter and off-topic posts.

    Much of the Fediverse is anonymous. Accounts here are NOT anonymous -- but feel free to establish anonymous accounts elsewhere for topics that need to stay that way.

    Moderators will make our best efforts to check professional credentials -- it really helps to provide a URL link we can look at.

    We plan to Federate, so comments here will eventually be available to the wider world.

    Thanks, Michael

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