Word: mentalism
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Over the past three years, I interviewed 700 families across the U.S., asking them what they'd had to deal with. Extremely few mentioned the kinds of problems diagnosed by supermom lit. Rather, they had old-fashioned problems like infidelity, mental illness, teen drug use, poverty, racial prejudice, custody battles, emotional frigidity and marital boredom. The kinds of problems people actually deal with are not covered by anyone but Oprah and Dr. Phil, which certainly explains why they're the cultural phenomena they are. Most families in the U.S. aren't doing too much for their children. They're doing...
...appointments were cancelled fewer than 24 hours ahead of time or missed altogether. These “dinkas” (short for “did not keep appointment”) swamped—or, rather, didn’t swamp—the busy dermatology and mental health services, representing about 15 percent of all appointments in those departments. As a result, many students who need to use these services often have to wait longer to find an appointment. Fortunately, UHS officials have come up with a smart idea to the combat the problem: charge the AWOL students. According...
...this study is the first to investigate the long-term effect of negative emotions on the lungs. Lead researcher Laura D. Kubzansky, an assistant professor of society, human development, and health at HSPH, said in a phone interview, “while we suspected that the toxic effect of mental stress was not limited to the cardiovascular system, we were surprised by how robust and definitive the data was.” According to Kubzansky, decline in lung function is an early marker for many other prognoses, such as heart disease and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder. Harvard Professor of Medicine...
...bottle of pain pills, passed out and had his stomach pumped. At a press conference Wednesday at the team's Valley Ranch training camp, Owens admitted he was a bit vague about details of what happened Tuesday night at his downtown Dallas loft, but cut off talk about his mental state. "There was no suicide attempt," he said, a thin smile showing. "The rumor of me taking 35 pills is absurd...
Students who miss appointments at University Health Services will find themselves out of pocket starting Oct. 16, when the University begins charging $10 for each absence. The move is an effort to shorten waiting lists at the University’s medical and mental health services. According to the director of University Health Services (UHS), David S. Rosenthal ’59, the fine was recommended by the Student Health Planning Center, a group of administrators and students that expressed concern about the cost of “dinkas”—patients whose records are marked with...