One of the hardest things to do as a psychiatrist is to get patients to tell the truth. The absolute hardest thing to do is to get patients to ask the questions that they really find on their mind but are scared of asking.
Me, I do everything I can to break down the communication barriers that exist between me and my patients.
For one thing, I do not even own a doctor’s white coat. Read more on FAQ: Antidepressants…
Filed under medicine, News, prescription drugs by on Jan 22nd, 2018. Comment.
Excuse me while I curse — “Oy vays mir!”
That is a pretty mild ethnic expletive in Jewish language as cursing goes and the translation is something like “oh, woe is me.”
I’m sure you’ve heard worse elsewhere. However, this is engrained deeply in the limbic — deep, reflexive — areas of my brain, I suppose, since sometimes I forget that there is nobody around me who could possibly understand it. It does not call upon any real or imagined universal powers. Yet my grandmother of blessed memory spoke it often, when she thought someone around her was being really stupid, and could potentially be harmful — like a butcher who had slaughtered her chicken incorrectly and we maybe could end up with some bile in the preparation. So by hearing this, you can be assured that I have surely been secreting bile. Read more on Brain Cancer and Cell Phones (Or Not?)…
Filed under Brain, Research by on Nov 30th, 2010. Comment.