tv [untitled] April 4, 2013 4:30am-5:00am EDT
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to detox. and then they started me on a whole different part of the tropics i was watching it happen and sang to myself this doesn't seem right. especially when one of her doctors refused to see her and yet he was still giving her psychotropic drugs but not monitoring arm with look who which i was in the person that was that was wrong. that's polypharmacy in that she. couldn't tolerate really not being arrested in the way what do you think about. what i did and i actually was not what i imagined i would be doing when i was in the army. my first impression about prison was this looks like a concentration camp i don't know who i should be watching when i should be doing i
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should be conducting myself i don't know how i made it there very overwhelming for a nineteen and going year old kid here. to be. in charge of weather summary of what's that and so. i would never. acts like i did i would read prison and normal life never ever in the way were using medicine there was to get at the prisoners and rake them down the side of treating people it was almost like we're punishing them for seeking treatment from us i mean when i'm ordered to give some a fourteen gauge needle. especially if they're not in a mass of trauma i know that that's not needed and i know that that's purely to inflict pain and that was explicitly explained to me by the officer in charge as
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give these guys fourteen gauge needle so they won't want to have these anymore because they're so huge and they're so painful. years of the prisoners are crying and wailing and screaming that you know in the us . there's nothing to feel good about stick in fourteen years have been somebody for no good reason. take the one that's those people who are i'm sure there was other people who also felt the same way as i did but. a prisoner was not a place you spoke out against. i guess inside the practices there was or. when dan dad he didn't leave much of
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a suicide note he simply wrote i leave his experience smiling that's all he wrote. you know doing it all over again i you know i don't know what i could've done differently i mean for heaven's sakes i didn't want him in the study it was not important at all how dan was chilling if it were important how he was doing that would have contacted me after we contacted them on good friday and said do we have to wait for him to kill himself and we did we had to wait for that i call the corner the monday after he died i said i wanted to see him and i remember her kind of yelling at me and saying. don't you know how he died. and i his head well evidently i had to hope. and i didn't you know. when you find out your son kills himself you don't say what do i
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know i didn't know. but it wasn't a normal suicide. he slit his throat so badly that the car nurse office said young mr capitated himself. and then she said probably because he wasn't dying fast enough that he. let his abdomen open and. reach his hand inside and she said when they found him his one hand had the box cutter frozen and that and the other hand was inside his abdomen up to his wrists. and. you know i want people
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so. what i do is a historian is looking to the way the poor people have been exploited and brutalized and abused by. the people in power. and the people with money. this includes these people who are on the margins including. human guinea pigs. this is a history of that hasn't been told far away. and there are a lot of stories that are important that haven't been brought to light and that haven't been explored.
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i think. i. mean the people that are in psychiatric distress can especially benefit from the acute use of psychiatric medications i don't think we need to question them but you also have this whole other part of society that is using slash abusing psychiatric medication and you can put the medical field in there too because they're the enablers in the ninety's if you told a family practice doctor in ten years you will write
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a ton of prescriptions every month for atypical antipsychotics he might laugh at you now primary care writing a typical for and on therapy for depression anger management all d.d. and. i.v. disorders they're just being used for everything the market is being saturated with them but most important by primary care that. i think that's the most important thing that pharma has figured out. i'm tracking case about a psychiatrist who claims that a major part of her job now is detox she has patients who come in a cocktail of medications from one primary care doctor who thinks he's an expert on bipolar disorder she gets the patients she says they're on all the wrong medications they're not bipolar they're depressed and then her job is to titrate the patient off these medications and get him on perhaps one medication for depression this is a future of psychiatry you could think about which is psychiatry is detox
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psychiatry more and more they're dealing with the poly pharmacy generated by primary care and in this case they asked the question their primary care doctor is writing all these atypical and i say comics we have millions of people that are being prescribed psychiatric medications sometimes appropriate use but a large part of that population is being prescribed psychiatric medication where it may not be warranted or indicated. but it's in to be. wealthy british style. such. hot. markets why not. come to find out what's really happening to the global economy
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session which is extremely uncomfortable. and they have a set program for p.t.s.d. that just simply doesn't work there's really no continuity to your care because a lot of these guys are residents and you might see him once or twice and so they don't know what you've even been on half the time so they try to give you the same drugs that have already failed for you p.t.s.d. is not a new thing it's been around forever and i think they should be a little slower to just hear drugs say i hope these work for you send you out the door and pursue even like alternate thirty treatments that could work for people. her car. lot of people who do start is simply right again. i mean i'm playing for that one
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chance that i might hit it big. just a money issue or i don't have the money or i. don't have enough. i . could have passed that had a lot more issues gambling or would not pay my bills that i should. but i didn't have any support from my parents and i wouldn't have any support from anywhere else basically dropped out there and to a world that. made a lot of mistakes tell us the really good job was a bus driver for
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a while. had a snowball to not. not make car payments. so eventually i ended up this new not a good time with my life. it's like one of those thirty days when say. once you've experienced homelessness you just never really get over it. that has been an issue you know us had rather go to vegas this way somebody just knowing that i can survive to the next that mystery. never ever dissipate not really sure where i.
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when he said he. i mean the. world. owes where was the. name experience you know i was lost and that's when i first found this and. it saved my life. that because just recently passed away i got arrested oh if you can't because all the corrupt things he sends his own help if he has been given is coming to me he's going to get it you know guess is that's it best with forgiveness a law is when you've got to get you know. i mean i feel her that he called her us to believe that those tests as was safe you see through her that he did it for the sake of money. alone hills rooms.
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