Reviews “Although they were experiencing some administration changes during my treatment, they were always attentive to my program and helped me find solutions with a smile. The lectures and groups were great. I’ve learned so much about addiction and myself. I hope to put that knowledge into...
We provide premiere medical treatments for integrative psychiatry, behavioral health, addiction, and more. Request an appointment now!
The message from these reviews is that for many conditionsCBT is as effective or more effective than other genuine forms of therapy and is typically better than ‘treatment as usual’(which often includes medication or check-ups with doctors) or doing nothing. In recognition of its effectiveness...
current gaps in the literature by: (1) identifying the most downloaded and installed apps for mental and behavioral health disorders and (2) comparing the ratings of the most downloaded and installed apps from three consumer-facing, publicly available, online rating frameworks with expert reviews. ...
AI tools intend to transform mental healthcare by providing remote estimates of depression risk using behavioral data collected by sensors embedded in smartphones. While these tools accurately predict elevated depression symptoms in small, homogenous pop
Bottom line: instead of fitting people into treatments, mental health care should be to made to fit the person. Doing so is referred to, in the psychotherapy outcome literature, asresponsiveness— that is, “doing the right thing at the right time with the right person.” And while the sub...
The most prominent concept championed by human resource professionals, point solution providers, and the mental health care industry is the construct of ho
Encouraging alternatives to the car such as walking, cycling or public transport is a key cross-sector policy priority to promote population and planetary health. Individual travel choices are shaped by individual and environmental contexts, and changes
Narrative reviews have long advocated for proactive anticipation of likely future care needs (Rogers et al., 2000) and for regular reassessment as needs change with decline (Sapolsky et al., 2011), but only two studies in the current review described a treatment approach that adapted with PPA ...
(e.g., “shell shock,”“psychoneuroses,”“PTSD”). In this generation, the focus is regularly on a handful of psychiatric diagnoses believed to reflect the “psychological costs of war.” Table2reviews government studies that portend to describe the scope of the wartime mental health ...