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Is Our Medical System Traumatizing Us?

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I’m healthy as a horse, but a body part was bugging me, so at my annual check up I asked to see a specialist.  I love my family doc, er I mean “primary care,” and I love this specialist.  They’re the best there is.  And they’re victims of the system as much as we.  I’m grateful they’re here just when I need them, with all their years of training and miraculous skills. I don’t want to cause them trouble, so let’s call it “body part X.”

 

It took months to get authorization for the specialist, thanks to insurance lunacy. Meanwhile X got worse, but still I expected just a routine new prescription.

 

The new doc walked in, took one look, and said, “You’ve got [deleted] here, and also there. You can go on like that for a while, and  I could just write you another prescription for Y [as it's been handled before].  But you’ll be back in a year because it will get worse.  It’s not for me to tell you what to do, but we can replace [body part X] with an implant…

 

“Outpatient surgery takes 20 minutes, insurance pays for it all because it’s legally classified as  ‘medically necessary’ since otherwise you’re going to lose your Z [essential function]. Then you can forget about the problem, you’ll be done.”  (And no, it wasn’t prostate cancer.)

 

“Outpatient surgery”?  So professional. 

 

Me?  I’ve just been told, “you’re getting a knife in a real scary place.” .... MORE...

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Oxytocin Blunts Social Vigilance in the Rhesus Macaque (But this is the end of the last Talk I listened to).

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Listening to Van Der Kolk, MD. My Hero tell us what he had to say about Stephen J. Suomi's talk:

 

"Thanks Steve, I am really delighted that these presentations are being video taped and the reason why I am delighted is because you should get them, and you should show them to your clinic directors and you should show them to your states politicians and the mayors of your town and the heads of the board of directors. These things have profound implications for the welfare of our children. We know that the single most effective mental health intervention is early mother child intervention that is what James Beckman, Heckman got his noble prize for anyway.  Bill De Blasio's, actually as some of you may have read has a very horrendous trauma history, very interesting trauma history. You might want to look up. It is also interesting he is the mayor who right now is advocating and has a huge amount of money into very early mother childhood intervention in New York City as the standard model. Somebody got to him. Did you talk to him? Somebody talked to him. You know when I go to Norway or Holland or places like that, I often times get calls from the local ministry of health. I bet you do a lot also and they ask me "What's the latest research on infant development?" Which I am not specialized in and the people in the ministries listen to the science. In Norway, there are 51/100.000 people in prison, in the US 951/100,000 that's because people listen to the science. People listen to THIS SCIENCE and so this stuff has profound implications for the budgets of our countries because if you don't pay attention to this, you waste your money on the incarcerating people and having a useless population. These things have huge little t implications and they have huge implications for the work that we do and the issue is about playing, being seen, being moved together, sitting on the ???? talking  how bad you felt as a kid ma not be the treatment of choice......

 

That is the implication of what we are talking about here, this is not like a cute stories about monkies. This is really important. Thank you!"

 

 

http://www.pnas.org/content/ea...013/06/21/1305230110

Now he is doing the still face experiment with a 3 day old rhesus and opening and closing his mouth. The Baby rhesus is mimicking the mouth movement and is doing what the human is doing.  It is shocking......You need to watch this... I am gonna cry. 

Hi Kathy, 

I wish you could listen to what I am now!!!! 

 

I think my way of proceeding will be to contact JRI to see if we can get this on ACEs (the entire conference by BVD) for all ACEs members to view -- those conferences are so AWESOME!!!! But if I cannot --- I think I will contact Dr. Suomi directly... To see if he will be interviewed for ACEs.  What do you think???

Genetic and Environmental Determinants of Biobehavioral Health

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I just got my CD of the 25th annual Boston Trauma Conference (BVK).  I am listening to differential gene expression in peer reared versus mother reared rhesus monkey studies.  I don't know if we can get a group ACEs subscription to this work... I may check it out for ACEs subscribers.... But I am shocked. As shocked as I was when I first learned of Harlow's Monkey experiments in 2001.   Work by: 

  • Stephen J. Suomi, PhD, Head, Comparative Behavior Genetics Section (this researchers work needs more research by ACErs)..in my opinion!!!

 

 

Genes that are thought to promote certain negative behaviors such as drinking too much as an adolescent ---- are protective if the monkey is mother reared versus peer reared. In fact 25 percent (1/4) of the entire genome of the rhesus monkey is differentially methylated (i.e. expressed) vs not expressed at age 8 in these monkeys depending on whether they are peer vs mother reared. Environment matters!!! This is astounding.  So what we think may genetically be the problem gene (or many researchers in big academic centers)--- is protective in the right environment. If anyone has the most recent published data to this work... I would like to see it.... 

 

Thanks

 

http://cmbconference2012.org/b...riences-in-primates/

http://www.thefpr.org/private/pdf/BROWNC~1.pdf

http://annualreport.nichd.nih.gov/suomi.html

Dear Tina

Thank for your comment below; it's so true!  And I saw from your comments on my website AttachmentDisorderHealing.com, that you've found my "article" on how bad psychiatry causes
re-traumatization. The article is my book, "Don't Try This at Home."  I had so many re-traumatizing experiences by bad psychiatry, that I quit seeking help and "did it myself" at home. Which was an even worse disaster, 'cos that's biologically impossible.  The relevant book chapter, which all were posted on ACEsConnection last year, are at http://attachmentdisorderhealing.com/book/   Especially starting at Chapter 11 http://attachmentdisorderheali...ughtta-have-my-head/  which says, "Out of the dating shark pool I stumbled, into the therapy jungle. That’s right, I took the plunge, despite the massive social condemnation, the incredible expense, and the huge time commitment.  I threw myself into treatment heart and soul for seven months, out of genuine alarm at my own mental state..."

Thanks again,

Kathy

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Comment By Tina Marie Hahn, MD: Is Our Medical System Traumatizing Us?
Date: Saturday, August 23, 2014, 6:01 AM
Kathy,  could you do a story about how uninformed psychiatry causes
severe traumatic re-victimization? I can give you ideas....lots of them.... Thank
you for your blog.

Tina

Last edited by Kathy Brous
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