Check out this whole long Telegraph Twitter thread featured today, Orion, if not the article, starting with the Tweet I copied.. As faulty as all health care is, especially psychological, often in the UK because of the NHS, where profit motive is not the predominant motive in health care, you find a lot more interest in "what works for people who want help". It's not predicated on manipulating people to want treatments, and sell them, rather, it's focused on trying to best help those who want and need it:
Around 30% of people do not respond to existing treatments of antidepressant drugs, psychotherapy or electroconvulsive therapy.
Could the future of treating depression be ketamine infusions – or even a ‘pacemaker for the brain’?
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Check out this whole long Telegraph Twitter thread featured today, Orion, if not the article, starting with the Tweet I copied.. As faulty as all health care is, especially psychological, often in the UK because of the NHS, where profit motive is not the predominant motive in health care, you find a lot more interest in "what works for people who want help". It's not predicated on manipulating people to want treatments, and sell them, rather, it's focused on trying to best help those who want and need it:
by artappraiser on Tue, 10/19/2021 - 8:59pm