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occasion professor, you and cameron was a very famous psychiatrist, he was head of the american psychiatric association and the world psychiatric association. he was the top of the field at the same time, he seemed pretty much willing to do anything. and the for the cia to find a doctor who didn't have limits in a nearby cap, but oh, with lots of patients to work with last is subs that subjects with somebody they were interested in supporting patients would come in with ordinary psychological emotional problems. they sign their waivers and they would be subjected to this czar written of xtreme sensory deprivation, isolation for, for up to a month. one of his favorite things was he had a sort of a football helmet with a tape recorder in that would play a tape. and look up to 500000 times, say things like, my mother hates me and he would blit the brim with globe's answered approbation. and kind of psychological emotional assault. well, what's working? i mean it's garbage move. ah, what he did was he would put people under massive electro shock and he would give it to the banner prolong basis along with w
occasion professor, you and cameron was a very famous psychiatrist, he was head of the american psychiatric association and the world psychiatric association. he was the top of the field at the same time, he seemed pretty much willing to do anything. and the for the cia to find a doctor who didn't have limits in a nearby cap, but oh, with lots of patients to work with last is subs that subjects with somebody they were interested in supporting patients would come in with ordinary psychological...
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he was head of the american psychiatric association and the world psychiatric association. he was the top of the field, he pretty much willing to do anything. and the for the cia to find a doctor who didn't have limits in a nearby cap. but oh, with lots of patients to work with somebody they were interested in supporting patients would come up with ordinary cycle and then they would be subjected to this bizarre written sensory deprivation, isolation for his favorite things was he had a sort of a football helmet with a play a tape and look up to 500000 times, say things like my mother, it's me. and he would blit and of psychological emotional assault. well, what's working? i mean it's garbage. know what it was. he would put people under mass, civil to the banner prolong basis along with what he called sleep was. once you wipe the brain clean, you could wipe bad the city as the ideas they were messing up people's minds. and you could program in other ideas electric convulsive therapy picked up and was widely used in germany before it went anywhere else. soldiers to war. the g
he was head of the american psychiatric association and the world psychiatric association. he was the top of the field, he pretty much willing to do anything. and the for the cia to find a doctor who didn't have limits in a nearby cap. but oh, with lots of patients to work with somebody they were interested in supporting patients would come up with ordinary cycle and then they would be subjected to this bizarre written sensory deprivation, isolation for his favorite things was he had a sort of...
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he was head of the american psychiatric association and the world psychiatric association. he was the top of the field at the same time, he seemed pretty much willing to do anything. and the for the cia to find a doctor who didn't have limits in a nearby cap. but oh, with lots of patients to work with last is subs that subjects with somebody they were interested in supporting. patients would come in with ordinary psychological emotional problems. they sign their waivers and they would be subjected to this czar urging of extreme sensory deprivation isolation for, for up to a month. one of his favorite things was he had a sort of a football helmet with a tape recorder in it would play a tape and look up to 500000 times, say things like my mother hates me. and he would blit the brim where float center deprivation and kind of psychological emotional assault. well, what's working? i mean it's garbage move. ah, what he did was he would put people under massive electro shock and he would give it to the man a prolong basis along with what he could sleep therapy. his idea was, once
he was head of the american psychiatric association and the world psychiatric association. he was the top of the field at the same time, he seemed pretty much willing to do anything. and the for the cia to find a doctor who didn't have limits in a nearby cap. but oh, with lots of patients to work with last is subs that subjects with somebody they were interested in supporting. patients would come in with ordinary psychological emotional problems. they sign their waivers and they would be...
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May 26, 2022
05/22
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sue, a board certified psychiatrist and a distinguished fellow of the american psychiatric associationhere today, after mass a-mass shooting, there always seems to be a renewed debate over the root causes of the shooting. access to guns. and mental health. you said, you're concerned about jumping to mental illness as the cause. tell us more why you think that. >> yes, you know, folks living with mental illness are actually 11 times more likely to be victims of violent crimes than perpetrators. we know that folks living with mental illness only 3 to 5% of the population contribute to violence. that means 93 to 95% are not. more than 95%. and i think it is really important that we need to make this clear, so there isn't discrimination, and look, the number one cause of death in children ages one to 19 is guns. and that has replaced car accidents. so we need to be clear about what the causes are here and not unfairly point fingers. >> it does seem as if it is a sort of crutch, an effort to deflect, for those who don't want to have a conversation about gun control, for those who don't want
sue, a board certified psychiatrist and a distinguished fellow of the american psychiatric associationhere today, after mass a-mass shooting, there always seems to be a renewed debate over the root causes of the shooting. access to guns. and mental health. you said, you're concerned about jumping to mental illness as the cause. tell us more why you think that. >> yes, you know, folks living with mental illness are actually 11 times more likely to be victims of violent crimes than...
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May 21, 2022
05/22
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welcome back to "gma" and may is mental health awareness month, and according to the american psychiatric associationtually get the care that they need. >> and janai is breaking down the stigma in a very powerful roundtable conversation on mental health care for black women. janai, you basically lay it all out there in this conversation. >> yeah, it was a really intimate and vulnerable conversation. it was an honor to get to do it and talk to those women about issues that impact millions of americans so i think that so many people can benefit, have benefited as they've told me from watching it. you can catch the entire conversation, "breaking the mental health stigma for black women," it's on hulu now. >> well done. >> thank you. >>> now to our "gma" cover story. dove cameron opening up about her mental health journey, sharing an emotional post and getting candid about her struggles with identity, beauty and gender norms. zohreen shah has the details. good morning to you, zohreen. >> reporter: good morning, eva. the 26-year-old actress has a massive voice, 40 million instagram followers. she also has
welcome back to "gma" and may is mental health awareness month, and according to the american psychiatric associationtually get the care that they need. >> and janai is breaking down the stigma in a very powerful roundtable conversation on mental health care for black women. janai, you basically lay it all out there in this conversation. >> yeah, it was a really intimate and vulnerable conversation. it was an honor to get to do it and talk to those women about issues that...