"Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearLE
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Lemmy Support for Private Communities?
  • mreeder mreeder 1y ago 100%

    Geronimo writes -- "I’ll see if there’s any existing discussions about private communities while I’m at it though, it might be something the main devs have an opinion on or plan for."

    Brilliant -- thank you for checking.

    There are all kinds of situations in which a (usually small) group of people might need some privacy. An oppressed minority at a college in the southern United States, a group of employees trying to unionize, etc. Doctors discussing procedures and needing both vetted credentials to comment intelligently/safely and the general public to not see they are disagreeing with each other...

    At the same time, it would be great to have FEWER login credentials -- so members of these private communities could also partake in all the advantages of the Federated communities on their same Lemmy instance.

    -- Michael

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearLE
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    Lemmy Support for Private Communities?
  • mreeder mreeder 1y ago 100%

    Shadow -- The point is to have the best of both worlds. So a person could join the Lemmy instance and participate in all the Federated communities. Then, they could be vetted for the private community (which is not Federated -- only on that instance), in order to discuss more private matters.

    Not extremely secret stuff, more along the lines of "I'm a psychotherapist and I'm having depression issues myself" or "I have a depressed 23-year-old female client with symptoms of ..... Do you all have some treatment recommendations". Stuff that is back-channel and maybe the whole world should not read.

    Despite their various evils -- Facebook, Tumblr, and Reddit all have both open and closed communities. Of course these platforms are no doubt reading the "private" communities and monitizing it quietly in some way. Maybe even selling the data out the back door...

    Anytime people need a bit of trust and privacy at a distance this becomes a good idea. A young mother's group wanting to exchange advice and support on breastfeeding, an LGBTQ group at a particular somewhat hostile college in Texas, etc.

    Yes, old-fashioned BBS systems (remember FidoNet?) do this -- but then non-technical people have to learn a new BBS login every blessed time they want to access one of their particular closed groups. So you do it all through Lemmy for some convenience.

    -- Michael

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearLE
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    Lemmy Support for Private Communities?
  • mreeder mreeder 1y ago 100%

    Geronimo -- This would be lovely! Bonus points if its not just hidden, but can't be accessed by non-subscribers to that particular community. But... I'll take what I can!

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearLE
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    Lemmy Support for Private Communities?
  • mreeder mreeder 1y ago 100%

    Shadow -- I suppose that means private communities won't be possible.

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  • "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearLE
    Lemmy Support mreeder 1y ago 100%
    Lemmy Support for Private Communities?

    HI -- I'm wondering: 1) If support for private communities with a restricted member list within a Lemmy instance that is otherwise public is on the drawing boards for future implementation? Timeframe? Or just a someday since we are mostly volunteers? 2) If not, where would be the best place for me to submit this feature request? Trying to weigh several factors as to whether or not to keep my Lemmy instance operational. My use case is I'm trying to attract an audience of users (mental health professionals) who seem to be just not interested in discussions on Lemmy if they are open to the public. If they want an anonymous account to discuss other topics (I allow these too), they can just open one anywhere. (Yes, I've done more marketing than most, but that's another topic.) Thanks, Michael

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    A therapist on another list asked if anyone had experience with hipaalink.net televideo service. This looks like a promising small company with some neat features at only $9.95 per month. See below first however. I really don't like that Facebook Connect is being contacted from the client's browser when they login! I spent a lot of time fighting to sign-up (had to change my settings to see their Captcha challenges). More of a problem -- there was a very basic malfunction in the password selection process. Some "special characters" (you have to have one in the password) would not work (+ and #). I eventually got "-" to work. I got an almost immediate call-back when I sent a message about trouble picking a password (bug in our system, thank you for finding it, our programmers are fixing "special characters" this evening). Did eventually set-up a 30-day free trial. So I can further tests later if I want to. I noticed that https://hipaalink.net/<mysite> works, but https://www.hipaalink.net/<mysite> does not -- another simple thing for their programming team to fix. (Older people are very used to "www" in front of everything, so this redirect should function.) I kinda feel like I ought to be charging for debugging services. I have not actually tried out video sessions yet. I've just run Privacy Badger and Ghostery browser plug-ins in both Opera and Firefox. Results: CLIENT LOGIN PAGE: Privacy Badger: www.googletagmanager.com -- cookies blocked fonts.gstatic.com -- cookies blocked Ghostery: Facebook Connect -- BLOCKED! Google Tag Manager -- allowed CLIENT IN-SESSION: Privacy Badger: www.googletagmanager.com -- cookies blocked fonts.gstatic.com -- cookies blocked Ghostery: Facebook Connect -- BLOCKED! Google Tag Manager -- allowed ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ THERAPIST LOGIN PAGE: Privacy Badger: www.googletagmanager.com -- cookies blocked fonts.gstatic.co -- cookies blocked Ghostery: Google Analytics -- "tracking not detected" it says Google Tag Manager -- allowed Google APIs -- allowed Google Static -- allowed THERAPIST IN-SESSION: (The same) Privacy Badger: www.googletagmanager.com -- cookies blocked fonts.gstatic.co -- cookies blocked Ghostery: Google Analytics -- "tracking not detected" it says Google Tag Manager -- allowed Google APIs -- allowed Google Static -- allowed ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ It's necessary for some cookies and tracking to the functioning of a website. Privacy Badger and Ghostery are both detecting some of this from Google libraries which they choose to allow. I don't have enough security engineering knowledge to know if these are harmless or not. I do know they are very common on most websites. Yet -- Privacy Badger says they are blocking some cookies... Facebook should not be contacted on the client side! I don't know what Ghostery is blocking from being sent to Facebook, but this should not be on a HIPAA site. The connection between therapist and client seemed at first glance to work fine with Facebook blocked. I will discuss this with Hipaalink.net before I test it with actual clients. For now I give them the benefit of the doubt. I am told by a computer engineer that Facebook supplies some code libraries (like Google) which websites can use -- maybe this is not intentional tracking, just their developers needing to fix this? There is more tracking taking place on the home page and more public sections of the website than inside the login and televideo areas. So some effort to decrease tracking has been made. I see different trackers on the public areas of the website today than I did when I first checked on 7/24/23. It's a maybe... But at $9.95 per month hipaalink.net could be a nice option if they clean up minor tracking concerns. Again, I have not tested the video yet. #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #telehealth #video #doxy #healthcare #dataprotection #hipaalink #hipaalinknet

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    if you tweet on Twitter, what do you do on X ?
  • mreeder mreeder 1y ago 100%

    Oh Gods -- on a lark I just typed "x.com" into my browser. One guess what website I ended up on? I'm imaging it now -- someone bought "x.com" 15 years ago and cursed the day they ever wasted money on it, yet hung onto it... Now they are on vacation in the tropics.

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  • The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) sent a joint letter to about 130 hospital systems and telehealth providers Thursday, warning of security risks posed by tracking technologies such as the Meta/Facebook Pixel and Google Analytics... https://therecord.media/apps-website-tracking-healthcare-ftc-hhs-warning

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    (Very slightly sensitive content below mentioned by name but not described in any detail.) As some may be aware, I’ve been playing with AI lately to see if there is a useful and ethical way to use it in the creation of psychotherapy progress notes. (See series of toots at https://mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org/@admin/110171203899758952 ) I have once again been caught in an insidious YouTube algorithm. The kind where a YouTube channel has one or two videos that you want to see, then a bunch of videos you have NO interest in seeing. This gets especially fun when you share your wife’s YouTube Premium account, and so she gets to see your suggested playlist. [ Previous Example: "YouTube Pseudo-Psychology, Algorithm Traps, and How I Got Set-Up to Look Like I Cheat" -- https://mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org/@admin/109705551829241507 ] Here’s how it goes this time: STEP #1: Watch a video on how to download the #Vicuna AI to your desktop instead of running it in the cloud. (Why? Privacy of medical data if I choose to ever use this for real. ) STEP #2: Watch a video from the same channel on how to download an AI with all guards and filters unlocked. (Why? Because psychotherapy notes occasionally deal in tough topics like suicide and cutting/self-mutilation behaviors that might be deemed too sensitive in censored AI versions. Maybe. Have not tried it yet.) STEP #3: Have the bad luck to have stumbled upon a channel where the video creator has an obsession with dirty sexy text chat with AI personas. Video after video on how to create sexy AI personas who will fulfill your wildest keyboard-typed fantasies. I don’t think I’m oversharing when I state that any fetishes or fantasies I might have do not include this. To each his own and its all cool – but now I have explaining to do… STEP #4: Explain all the above to my (happily amused) wife as she sees the fetish AI suggestion videos appearing in our YouTube feed for days.#

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    (This was written in early May 2023 – may have improved since then?) This is for a new product called AutoNotes.ai that will create progress notes for you for about $14+ per month. I am tentatively interested in this and signed up for a free trial. I have concerns (below) but am hopeful this continues to improve. ~~~ The system has no BAA agreement for HIPAA because they claim not to collect any PHI. This may be true. Their terms of service and privacy policy may be amended at any time and the only notification provided will be on their website. I am wary of this now that I have been burned by such stealth changes by one of my own BAA subcontractors. Information for each client will have to be entered from scratch each time as they do not store data about clients. For the free demo, it takes about 60 seconds to generate each note. You then cut and paste it into your EHR. While they claim to collect no PHI, they do send SOME data of SOME sort to several tracking systems and data aggregators. At best, they are tracking YOU -- the clinician. At worst -- they may be sending some of the data you enter to data aggregators which -- hopefully -- do not have data from other sources to be able to pin down the individual clients you are describing. DATA IS SEND TO THE FOLLOWING OUTSIDE TRACKING COMPANIES ON BOTH THEIR DATA INPUT PAGE & THE GENERATED NOTE PAGE: **PRIVACY BADGER BLOCKED:** connect.facebook.net www.googletagmanager.com s.gravatar.com snap.licdn.com i0.wp.com **GHOSTERY BLOCKED:** Google Tag Manager LinkedIn Analytics Facebook Connect Gravatar The following is an example of the note generated for a fake client with Acute Stress Disorder: %GREEN = IN WHAT I REPORTED% &RED = INVENTED BY AI, NOT REPORTED BY CLINICIAN& BLACK = I HAVE NO STRONG OPINION Subjective: Client &reported increased levels of stress, particularly in the& %workplace. Described experiencing anxious mood and labile mood, but was able to demonstrate appropriate behavior and normal speech throughout the session. Client was self-reflective% and &engaged& %during the 45-minute video session%, %which allowed for a comprehensive exploration of the current challenges they face&. The client recognized the need to address these issues in order to improve their overall well-being. Objective: During the session, several areas were discussed. &Client was open and honest& about %feeling overwhelmed and stressed at work, further precipitating their anxiety. They were able to identify specific work situations that were particularly difficult for them to navigate. It was noted that the client was able to maintain self-reflective behavior during discussions,% which will be beneficial for making progress in therapy. Assessment: %The client is showing signs of progress in therapy, taking active steps to address and work through their challenges with stress and anxiety.% Their willingness to participate and self-reflect in session indicates a strong commitment to achieving their therapeutic goals. %Current therapeutic interventions, which are directed at helping the client build skills and coping strategies, are having a positive impact on the client's progress.% Plan: %In order to lower workplace stress and continue advancing in therapy, the client agreed to set specific objectives for themselves. They plan on talking to their manager about ways to manage their workload or address any outstanding concerns. Additionally, they will begin practicing meditation four times a week during their lunch breaks, as a means of managing stress and promoting relaxation.% &Continued exploration of these& and other stress reduction &strategies will be a focus in future sessions.& Hmmm... My take-away is that this needs more work (that's fine); I want to know why they have to report to LinkedIn, Facebook, Gravatar, and Word Press while I'm logged in and what they report; and the system IS inventing minor elements that I did not tell it to add. For example, while I reported the client was overwhelmed and stressed, I did not say the client was open and honest about it. I told the system the client was "progressing", but never said that increased levels of stress were reported in this session. It occurred to me this morning that by the time I fill out the form and write two or three sentences, I've already done all the work that is needed for an official note (after adding start and end times, diagnosis, name, client age, and a few other elements to the form). There is no need to convert it all to narrative -- it can stay in form factor mostly. So -- while I want an AI I can trust to help with notes (and this one may grow into such) -- right now the effort of getting it to create a note is about exactly equal to the effort of just writing it myself anyway. -- Michael

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    A few days ago I sent out an email on possible criteria for using AI to help write progress notes. To my way of thinking it boils down to three criteria: 1. **Security:** Sending client data to an AI in the cloud is obviously not okay. Questionable even with a BAA agreement (or too expensive like Mentalyc – the first service I have seen for this purpose). It could work if the AI is downloaded to your computer and does not communicate with the Internet on its own. 2. **Creativity:** AIs tend to add their own information beyond what you specify to whatever they write. This does not work in a progress note. 3. **Worth It:** The effort of providing the AI with the information to write a progress note needs to be less than the effort of just writing it yourself. So… I’ve been experimenting… Obviously – I’m using fake client data. Vacuna is an AI that can be downloaded to your own laptop to run. I’m testing it online to see if that is worth doing. Also – I’m not trying to write great progress notes right now – I’m just testing to see if a) the AI (Vacuna) is capable of not adding creative elements to what I want it to write, and b) can write a note without me spending more effort on it than just writing it myself. **ROUND #1:** Trying to get Vacuna to understand not to create fake items in the progress note.** **PROMPT 1:** Please write a paragraph with the following facts. Do not add additional facts or get creative. Marie is 32 years old. Has depression. Has anxiety. We practiced breathing exercises, CBT, and guided visualization. **VICUNA 1:** *Marie is a 32-year-old woman who has been struggling with depression and anxiety. As part of her treatment, we have been practicing various techniques, including breathing exercises, cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), and guided visualization. These techniques have helped Marie to better manage her symptoms and improve her overall well-being. By learning how to breathe more effectively and calm herself down when she feels anxious, Marie has been able to reduce her reliance on medication and feel more in control of her emotions. Through CBT, Marie has been able to identify negative thought patterns and challenge them, leading to a more balanced outlook on life. And through guided visualization, Marie has been able to visualize positive outcomes and increase her motivation and hope for the future. These techniques have played an important role in Marie's recovery and will continue to be useful tools for her as she continues her journey towards wellness.* **PROMPT 2:** Stick to only information provided in the prompt and try again please. **VICUNA 2:** *Marie is a 32-year-old woman who has depression and anxiety. We have been practicing breathing exercises, CBT, and guided visualization with her. These techniques have helped her manage her symptoms and improve her well-being. By practicing breathing exercises, Marie has been able to reduce her reliance on medication and feel more in control of her emotions. Through CBT, Marie has been able to identify negative thought patterns and challenge them, leading to a more balanced outlook on life. And through guided visualization, Marie has been able to visualize positive outcomes and increase her motivation and hope for the future. These techniques have played an important role in Marie's recovery.* **PROMPT 3:** Marie is not on medication and her symptoms remain stable. Please try again thanks. **VICUNA 3:** *Marie is a 32-year-old woman who has depression and anxiety. We have been practicing breathing exercises, CBT, and guided visualization with her to help manage her symptoms and improve her well-being. These techniques have helped Marie to better control her anxiety and depression symptoms without the need for medication. By practicing breathing exercises, Marie has been able to calm herself down when she feels anxious and reduce her stress levels. Through CBT, Marie has been able to identify negative thought patterns and challenge them, leading to a more balanced outlook on life. And through guided visualization, Marie has been able to visualize positive outcomes and increase her motivation and hope for the future. These techniques have played a significant role in Marie's recovery and will continue to be useful tools for her as she maintains her well-being.* **PROMPT 4:** Marie has not yet experienced improvement. Please try again thanks. **VICUNA 4:** *Marie is a 32-year-old woman who has been struggling with depression and anxiety. We have been practicing breathing exercises, CBT, and guided visualization with her in an effort to help manage her symptoms and improve her well-being. While these techniques have potential benefits for many people, unfortunately, Marie has not yet experienced any improvement. Despite our best efforts, we have not been able to help her reduce her symptoms or improve her overall well-being. We will continue to work with Marie and explore other treatment options to help her manage her symptoms and move towards recovery.* So, yeah, not working so far at all... [I do get it to work further down in the note.] **ROUND 2:** Getting Vacuna to just rearrange what I write.** While the main point of psychotherapy is for the client to get BETTER, sometimes they don't for awhile. Some clients with severe conditions need ongoing supportive therapy to simply maintain their highest level of functioning without backsliding. When this happens, the clinician has to find new ways to write the same thing again, and again, and again... Why? Because insurance auditors frown on cutting and pasting the same exact old text into multiple notes. In this unfortunate situation, Vicuna actually does fairly well in this sample: **PROMPT:** Please reword the following paragraph changing some words and sentence order, but using the exact same information facts and adding nothing: Pete is a 45 year old electrician reporting continuing depression. Symptoms remain unchanged from last session. Today we discussed his workplace frustrations at length. He continues to blame workplace stressors for his mood and problems with his family. **VICUNA:** *Pete, who is 45 years old and a electrician, reported continued symptoms of depression during his previous session. The symptoms have remained unchanged since the last time he visited. During this session, Pete and his therapist discussed in detail his workplace frustrations. Despite this, Pete continues to attribute his mood and problems with his family to workplace stressors.* **Success!** **ROUND #3: Retrying Round #1 (Trying to get Vacuna to understand not to create fake items in the progress note.)** Okay -- so now I may have the right wording to keep Vicuna from adding elements to the note! To make this worth it, I would need to be able to shorten/bullet-point my prompt. Maybe have the AI take data from a point and click tablet form I fill out. Why not just use the point and click form? Some auditors require written text -- not just checkbox forms. Also -- this may just be best practice for notes to capture more of value. Note how random the right "magic formula" is for getting an AI to understand. In Round #1 I clearly told Vicuna not to invent information not given to it (no luck). Below, I have stumbled upon the right word combination: **PROMPT 1:** Please reword the following changing some words and order, but using the exact same information facts and adding nothing: Tom is 34 years old, a plumber, reports continuing depression, symptoms remain unchanged, we discussed his workplace frustrations, he blames workplace stressors for his mood and problems with his family. **VICUNA 1:** *Tom, a 34-year-old plumber, reported ongoing symptoms of depression during his latest session. The symptoms have remained unchanged since his last session. During the session, Tom and his therapist discussed his workplace frustrations in detail. Tom continues to attribute his mood and family problems to workplace stressors.* STARTING OVER TO SEE IF I CAN JUST LIST ELEMENTS WITHOUT WRITING MUCH: **PROMPT 2:** Please reword the following changing some words and order, but using the exact same information facts and adding nothing: Tom, 34 years old, plumber, continuing depression, symptoms unchanged, discussed his workplace frustrations, he blames workplace stressors for mood and family problems. [Note how I just listed data with commas between after the initial sentence.] **VICUNA 2:** *Tom, who is 34 years old and works as a plumber, has been experiencing ongoing depression with unchanged symptoms. He discussed his workplace frustrations, citing workplace stressors as the cause of his mood and family problems.* MOSTLY SUCCESSFUL!! So now I have the AI not inventing garbage to add to the progress note. Would need to run this AI from a laptop computer making sure it sends nothing back out to Internet for medical data security HIPAA reasons. This might be useful for notes that are 100% written, and for point and click forms with a bit of text added. It would be better if the AI could take information from a point and click form. It does seem to take 90% of the effort of just writing the note myself! This was a quick demo, so I was not trying to write a beautiful note -- just test if the darn thing could write sentences from lists and NOT invent information not provided.

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    Thank you Dr. Pope as always for your summaries. ............... Apple News includes an article: “The Thing My Therapist Said That Changed My Life—Fifteen Examples” by Amanda Robb. Here are some excerpts: We’re all for doing the work, showing up and sitting in that chair (or lying on that well-worn Mies van der Rohe couch) and digging into our psyches to unearth our emotionally healthiest selves. But sometimes a single statement or question pierces right through your onion layers and serves as a touchstone for the rest of your life. <snip> 1. When you don’t know what to do, do nothing “This has helped me from saying or doing the wrong thing in difficult or emergency circumstances. Simply waiting a beat until I’ve had enough time to think and process a situation allows me to make better choices.” —Tiffany M, 48, New Rochelle, New York 2. You get to choose the type of relationship you have with ____ (fill in the blank) “My parents divorced when I was about 18. When I was in my early 20s, I found out why. My father is gay. This was nearly 40 years ago, and I didn’t know how to react to my dad and his new partner. I knew I wasn’t comfortable with my siblings’ reactions, but I [still] loved them. And I realized that I loved my dad and I was happy for him. We’re close to this day. It seems like simple advice, but it was a powerful realization for me at the time.” —Kathryn R., 59, Burlingame, California 3. Get outside and walk “I was a depressed teen, and my therapist told me I had to walk to and from her office from my house, which was 15 to 20 minutes away on foot. On the way there, it allowed me to focus on what I wanted to talk about in the session. On the way back, it helped me process and release what had happened in the session. It was just good for my overall mental health, and I am still exercising for my mental health.” —Victoria V., 53, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania 4. And what was the crime? “I do a fair amount of Monday-morning quarterbacking, telling myself, I should’ve done this, not that, and then beating myself up. And my therapist would say this in her lovely English accent, and I’d realize there really was no catastrophe.” —Pilar G., 53 5. Just do it tired “I was in group therapy, and the therapist gave someone else this advice. But it resonated with me because you can come up with a million excuses for not investing in yourself because of where you are. ‘I’m too tired’ is a common one, an easy one. And sometimes you really are exhausted and need to rest. But most of the time, you’re not that wiped out. So just go do whatever it is. Be out there. Be a part of things and see what that brings.” —Sue K., 61, New York City 6. Don’t get on the roller coaster, but always be waiting for them on the platform “Advice for raising four daughters, including a set of twins. Of course, I did get caught up in their drama sometimes, but remembering this often helped me take a step back from it.” —Kathy I., 60, Charlotte, North Carolina 7. Okay, but at what cost to you? “This is what my longtime therapist, Ruth, asks when I tell her I’ve taken on too much or I’m tolerating something difficult because it’s easier than confronting someone or admitting that I’m diminishing myself. It instantly re-centers me (I picture myself as that dot in Google Maps) and reminds me that my emotions and energy are worth protecting.” —Jennie T., 52 8. Not my circus, not my monkeys “My life coach gave me this advice. I was learning to say no to people, but some didn’t accept it! They would give me a whole backstory and reasons I should change my answer to yes. This quote reminds me that I can’t change anyone’s reaction to my responses to things, but I can stick to my responses.” —Karon G., 47, Bayonne, New Jersey 9. With a good book, you’ll never be lonely “This advice from my therapist after I got divorced resulted in my starting a book-related media company.” —Zibby O., 46, New York City 10. Aren’t you curious about what is around the corner for you? “I had just experienced a serious traumatic event and was contemplating suicide. I still turn to this thought in dark times.” —Katherine K., 57, Las Vegas 11. You can hold two things at once “I tend to think about things in categoricals—a career hazard, if you will. We are on time, or we’re late. We are on budget, or we’re not. It’s great for deadlines but bad for feelings. Over the past few years, I’ve had to figure out how to live alongside immense grief, and I remember telling my therapist how guilty I felt about being excited for an upcoming event. ‘You can hold two things at once,’ she said, and it sounds so simple, but it gave me a way to wrap my brain around feeling two diametrically opposed emotions. I can be sad about what isn’t while being excited for what is. It’s useful all the time. Two things can be true, and we can acknowledge both of them.” —Paulie D., 36, 12. Don’t compare your insides to other people’s outsides “I use this constantly and repeat it to my children. It’s especially useful when I’m with someone who is incredibly intimidating and I’m feeling like a complete loser.” —Lisa C., 64, New York City 13. No one else is going to fight your fight “My husband had left me. Immediately, I started seeing myself only as a victim. All I felt was self-pity about how badly I’d been betrayed; all I did in therapy was whine and complain. After about six months, my therapist said this to me, and a light bulb went off in my head. If I didn’t stand up for myself, I would be immobilized forever. I would be stuck not being able to trust anyone. Most importantly, I wouldn’t be able to make a new life for myself.” —Mary S., 63, Bozeman, Montana 14. Always follow the advice flight attendants give: Put on your own oxygen mask first, then help others around you “My brother-in-law is a therapist, and he says this is among the most common advice he gives. I can overextend myself trying to help other people and wind up neglecting to take care of myself and my stuff, which can make me useless all the way around. This helps me keep first things first.” —Jonna A., 52, Reno, Nevada 15. We all have something from our childhood that we had zero control over “You couldn’t control anyone’s behavior—what they said or how they acted. What you do have control over as an adult is how you allow it to affect the rest of your life, how you act and react to things. This changed my whole way of thinking and allowed me to be in control of my life!” —Brenda S., 59, Nassau, The Bahamas Ken Pope Ken Pope, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Y. Adames, Janet L. Sonne, and Beverly A. Greene Speaking the Unspoken: Breaking the Silence, Myths, and Taboos That Hurt Therapists and Patients (APA, 2023) .................. Merely reposted by: Michael Reeder LCPC Baltimore, MD #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy @psychotherapist@a.gup.pe @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialpsych@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #psychiatry @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #graduatestudents #PsyNP #doctors #nursepractitioners #OMHC

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    Here is a posting or two from April 2022 when I took a look at Doxy.me privacy policies in force at that time. I am of course not a lawyer and could misunderstand something. Maybe. As you read this, please keep in mind: **Use of Online Tracking Technologies by HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates** https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/hipaa-online-tracking/index.html This HHS and OCR guidance includes several sorts of 3rd party tracking technologies possibly in use by Doxy. ........................ To be crystal clear -- I am NOT accusing Doxy of breaking HIPAA or other laws, sharing PHI, or sharing video content. I am "accusing" them of doing exactly what they allow themselves to do in their "privacy" policy -- communicate "de-identified and anonymized" data to 3rd parties having little to nothing to do with the operation of the service. The huge problem is that "de-identified and anonymized" data can be easily reattached to client names by any data broker worth their salt with a big enough database. -- Michael On Thu, Apr 14, 2022 at 12:54 AM Michael wrote: https://doxy.me/en/privacy-policy/ Picture me having an angry laugh (at Doxy, not you) as I read this "privacy"policy. It's ridiculous. In summary: They give themselves permission to do quite a lot, and by using their product, you are consenting to it. They say they are "anonymizing" everything -- but what good is that if the data can be used to easily reconstruct client identity? They don't say they are sending along tracking cookie data to 3rd parties, but they give themselves permission to do it. A few choice pointers: "This Privacy Policy describes Our policies and procedures on the collection, use and disclosure of Your information—when You use the Doxy.me Service or visit this web site" Your permission is granted... ............................ "Usage Data is collected automatically... Usage Data may include information such as Your Device’s Internet Protocol address, browser type, browser version, the pages of our Service that You visit, the time and date of Your visit, the time spent on those pages, unique device identifiers, and other diagnostic data. However, this Usage Data is de-identified and anonymized and not linked to a particular data. As such, it is not considered personal information; it is incidental to providing the Service." Several Internet security sources point out (sorry -- I don't have a reference immediately available) that when data brokers accumulate several data points on you (such as browser type, IP address, "other diagnostic data") that it can act as a unique fingerprint to figure out who you are. Keep in mind that data brokers track across several websites across time. This is exactly the sort of information that cookies are commonly used for to store and pass along. Internet Protocol address -- If a user happens to have a static IP address, this is a unique identifier of the user. If its not static, it still serves to pinpoint the general geographic area the person is in (unless a VPN is used) and can be combined with other data to identify the person. Unique device identifiers -- Each device (laptop, smart phone, etc.) has a unique serial code that identifies it. If this information is being passed along to 3rd parties, its a unique fingerprint of the person. Let's take an easy fictional example -- let's say a client creates a Google account. In the process of creating the Google account, the client enters their name. Let's say Google also captures their unique device identifier at that time. Now then, if the unique device identifier is passed along to Google whenever that person visits a website (say doxy.me for example), Google knows the name of the person visiting the website because its already in Google's database. "de-identified and anonymized" data -- Sure. Internet Protocol address, browser type, browser version, unique device identifiers, and other diagnostic data do not have the client's name attached -- or any other PHI data. But so what -- the data broker already has a database to readily reattach the client's name when/if this information is provided. ............................. "We may also collect information that Your browser sends whenever You visit this Website " Well, I don't know -- does this mean they can capture anything else your web browser is sending out at the time you are connected to their website? ......................... Cookies: "Any use of Cookies – or of other tracking tools – by Us or by the owners of third-party services used by Us serves the purpose of providing the Service as requested by You." Hmmm... Slippery. We are requesting/consenting to anything they do as defined earlier in the document. From: https://doxy.me/en/cookie-policy/ " Please be aware that some Cookies are required to use the Doxy.me Service; some are useful but not mandatory to measure and improve performance; and some are used for advertising or marketing activities that customize information based on your interests." So -- yes -- they ARE using cookies to advertise and market to our clients. ............................. They do at least promise not to pass along PHI or name information. They may or may not be passing along the above information to 3rd parties, but my September 2021 investigation showed that their servers WERE contacting 3rd parties (some known to be data brokers / ad networks). SOMETHING was passed along. -- Michael On 4/13/2022 5:24 PM, ____NAME REDACTED______ wrote: Based on Michale's recent post, I contacted the legal office at doxy.me to ask whether doxy.me does the following: "Doxy.me reports out cross-site tracking cookies to at least 10+ different services including Google, YouTube, Facebook, LinkedIn, and Hotbot." The legal department directed me to their policies here: https://doxy.me/en/privacy-policy/ Please look at this page, especially the sections labeled "If You are a Provider" and "If You are a Patient." I could not find anything to indicate that doxy.me shares cookies or any other information with anyone. If anyone can find specific information to the contrary in doxy.me's policies, please share. Thank you-- NAME REDACTED #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #telehealth #video #doxy #healthcare

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    So... no safe topics in politics, but maybe that is okay. Keep it reasonably polite and safe and tied to psychological/counseling topics. There may be a few elbows thrown in this community (and NONE of the others) -- so you are warned. Perhaps a good place for pseudonyms... In the USA, most of the professional associations are working on agreements for psychotherapists licensed in one state to be able to practice in other states. This is mostly due to shortages of counselors and the realization that telehealth works. The Psychologists have PSYPACT, Professional Counselors have the Interstate Compact, and Social Work is building one too. I'm wondering: a) Just how long interstate counseling agreements are actually going to hold-up between Red states and Blue states? b) If counselors in Blue states are going to be subject to extradition when they violate Red state laws (not telling parents a kid is transgender, discussing abortion, etc.)

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    Signing away most all of your medical privacy rights in order to become a customer is way uncool and unacceptable: https://wapo.st/3p1uTJG ~~~ To become an Amazon Clinic patient, first you sign away some privacy You agreed to what? The ‘HIPAA authorization’ for Amazon’s new low-cost clinic offers the tech giant more control over your health data. https://wapo.st/3p1uTJG -- Michael Reeder, LCPC Hygeia Counseling Services : Baltimore / Mt. Washington Village location #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #pharmacy #medicationchecker #drugs #druginteractions #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons

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    A therapist colleague of mine contacted Ring Central (a video and telephone platform that provides HIPAA BAA subcontractor paperwork upon request) with questions about their messaging capabilities and encryption. They were looking for a compliant way to text message with clients. The support staff directed them to this article: https://support.ringcentral.com/article-v2/Intro-to-end-to-end-encryption-in-RingCentral-messaging.html?brand=RingCentral&product=MVP&language=en_US At first glance, the article would seem to make messaging with clients golden as a good level of encryption is described and the therapist has a HIPAA BAA with Ring Central. Right? Wrong. A few different topics are getting confused here -- smart phone SMS text messaging, messaging within Ring Central apps and websites, and HIPAA BAA subcontractor agreements. With SMS text messaging by phone it will never be HIPAA compliant (even if the therapist sends it from within Ring Central) because the client will get the SMS text message unencrypted on their smartphone. Messaging within the Ring Central apps and website *IS* at an excellent level of encryption -- but won't be covered by the therapist's HIPAA BAA agreement unless the people messaged are also part of the therapist's company account or are other therapists with their own Ring Central accounts with HIPAA BAA subcontractor agreements. This will rarely if ever cover therapy clients. This gets confusing. So -- for example -- when I go into my Ring Central account online and click on "Message" I'm invited to email a messaging link to anyone I choose. So far so good. But when that person (like a client for example) goes to that messaging link, Ring Central REQUIRES them to sign up for their own FREE Ring Central account. That FREE account WILL NOT be covered by a HIPAA BAA agreement. So the messages sent to them (inside a Ring Central app or website) will be encrypted but not HIPAA compliant. Similar problem with Ring Central video conferencing. As long as the client DOES NOT sign in with their own free account -- and instead goes to my anonymous video link -- it will be covered under my BAA agreement with Ring Central. However, Ring Central invites clients to sign up for their own FREE account in order to video conference with me. If the client makes that mistake, then its no longer a HIPAA compliant video conference session because only one of our two Ring Central accounts is covered by BAA. I sometimes wonder why this all is left in such a confusing state? Of course, I'm not a lawyer, so do your own research too. ~~~~~~~~ #psychology #neurology #socialwork #psychiatry @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #psychotherapists @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #pharmacy #medicationchecker #drugs #druginteractions #cookies #tracking #hacking #3rdpartytrackers #HIPAA #privacy #dataprivacy #webbeacons #RingCentral #VoIP #telephony

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    3rd party data aggregators can follow people across multiple websites. When they track browser cookies, pixels, beacons, mobile application identifiers, and Adobe Flash technology it is very possible for them to figure out specific people. This sort of computing device data often qualifies as PHI according to HHS: Use of Online Tracking Technologies by HIPAA Covered Entities and Business Associates https://www.hhs.gov/hipaa/for-professionals/privacy/guidance/hipaa-online-tracking/index.html Thank you Dr. Pope for summary below. Michael Reeder, LCPC -------- Forwarded Message -------- Medpage includes an article: “Nearly All Hospital Websites Send Tracking Data to Third Parties — Most common recipients of data were Alphabet, Meta, Adobe, and AT&T.” Here are some excerpts: Third-party tracking is used on almost all U.S. hospital websites, endangering patient privacy, a cross-sectional observational study found. Of 3,747 hospitals included in the 2019 American Hospital Association (AHA) annual survey, 98.6% of their website home pages had at least one third-party data transfer, and 94.3% had at least one third-party cookie. "In the U.S., third-party tracking is ubiquitous and extensive," researchers led by Ari B. Friedman, MD, PhD of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, wrote in Health Affairs. "The high number of entities engaged in tracking on hospital websites heightens potential privacy risks to patients." The tracking data most commonly went to Google's parent company Alphabet (98.5% of homepages), followed by Meta (formerly Facebook), which was used in 55.6% of hospital homepages. Adobe Systems and AT&T collected data from 31.4% and 24.6% of hospital pages, respectively. "What we found is that it's virtually impossible to look at any hospital website in the country without exposing yourself to some tracking," study coauthor Matthew McCoy, PhD, of the University of Pennsylvania, told MedPage Today. "That's really significant, because even if you were a patient with privacy concerns and you wanted to avoid this kind of thing, what that means is you really don't have an option to do that." Hospital website home pages had a median of 16 third-party transfers, with more third-party transfers from medium-sized hospitals as opposed to small and large ones (24, 17, and 13 transfers, respectively). Of hospital characteristic factors, membership in a health system, having a primarily urban patient population, and having a medical school affiliation were all significantly associated with a greater number of third-party transfers on hospital website home pages. <snip> On 100 randomly sampled hospital websites, searches for six "potentially sensitive" conditions turned up 30 patient-facing pages for those conditions -- and all had at least one third-party data transfer. McCoy said the number of companies tracking data on any given website was alarming. "Imagine you were browsing a hospital website for something related to your health, and you had one person looking over your shoulder and gleaning information about your health from a browsing session -- that would probably make you pretty uncomfortable," he said. "Multiply that by 16, by 20, and you've got that many more people looking over your shoulder." <snip> According to the study, "Many of the third parties to which data are transferred have business models built on identifying and tracking people for the purposes of targeting online advertisements.” Some tracking companies, like Acxiom, sell the data to other companies or allow health-related profiling, like Adobe and Oracle. Because of this tracking, patients might see more targeted advertising for drugs, supplements, or insurance based on their personal medical conditions. Health-related information, the authors wrote, could even be used in risk scores that affect credit or insurance eligibility. <snip> "Setting aside those kinds of questions about legal liability..., I think most healthcare providers would recognize themselves as having a responsibility to protect the interests of their patients, and that means also protecting their patients' interest in privacy," McCoy said. <snip> Researchers used a tool called webXray to record third-party tracking from hospital home pages, count the data transfers that occurred when a page loaded, and linked individual tracking domains to their parent companies. Ken Pope ~~ Merely forwarded by: Michael Reeder LCPC Baltimore, MD #Ethics #EthicalAI #AI #CollaborativeHumanAISystems #HumanAwareAI #chatbotgpt #bard #security #dataanalytics #artificialintelligence #CopyAI #HIPAA #privacy #psychology #counseling #socialwork #psychotherapy #research @psychotherapist@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialpsych@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #EHR #mentalhealth #technology #psychiatry #healthcare #medical #doctor​ #healthcare #hospital

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    I am informed that a new product called #Mentalyc has entered the market. It's mission is to write psychotherapy notes for clinicians AND to gather a non-identifiable dataset for research into clinical best practices. I have no firm opinion yet on Mentalyc, but it's expensive ($39-$69 per month per clinician) and I'd personally need to know a lot more about what's in that dataset and who is benefiting from it. **So I'm asking the community for thoughts on what acceptable ethical and practical criteria would be for an AI to write psychotherapy notes or medical notes.** Here are MY thoughts so far: 1) REQUIRED: The AI either: 1a) Invents NOTHING and takes 100% of the information in the note from the clinician, or 1b) Prompts the clinician for additional symptoms often present in the condition before writing the note, or 1c) Presents a very clear information page before writing that lets the clinician approve, delete, or modify anything the AI got creative with and was not told explicitly to include. (So, for example, in an experiment with Bard a clinician found that Bard added sleep problems as an invented symptom to a SOAP note for a person with depression and anxiety. This is a non-bizarre symptom addition that makes lots of sense, is very likely, but would have to be approved as valid for the person in question.) 2) OPTIONAL: The AI is on MY computer and NOT reporting anything back to the Internet. This will not be on everyone's list, but I've seen too many BAA subcontractors playing loose with the definition of HIPAA (medical privacy) and there is more money to be made in data sales than clinician subscriptions to an AI. 3) OPTIONAL: Inexpensive (There are several free AI tools emerging.) 4) OPTIONAL: Open Source 5) Inputting data to the AI to write the note is less work than just writing the note personally. (Maybe a complex tablet-based clickable form? But then, a pretty high percentage of a note can be in a clickable form format anyway.) 6) The AI does NOT record the entire session and then write a note based upon what was said. (It might accept dictation of note directions sort of like doctors dictate notes to transcribers today.) I think I may be envisioning a checkbox and drop-down menu form along with a space for a clinician to write a few keywords and phrases, then the AI (on my laptop) takes this and writes a note -- possibly just a paragraph to go along with the already existing form in the official note. I think. It's early days in my thinking. I have this same discussion set-up here: https://mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org/@admin/110153358784312024 You do not have to have a Mastodon account to read it -- only to post. This should also get the attention of computer science, AI researchers, and other technical folks as well as counseling professionals.

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    TITLE: Threads, Meta’s Twitter competitor, is now live "Information provided about the app’s privacy via mandatory disclosures required on iOS shows the app may collect highly sensitive information about users in order to profile their digital activity — including health and financial data, precise location, browsing history, contacts, search history and other sensitive information." https://techcrunch.com/2023/07/05/threads-no-eu-launch/ TITLE: Meta will nuke your Instagram account if you delete Threads profile "In a ‘Supplemental Privacy Policy,’ Meta says: “You may deactivate your Threads profile at any time, but your Threads profile can only be deleted by deleting your Instagram account.” " https://techcrunch.com/2023/07/06/threads-delete-profile-instagram-meta/

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    "Initials" by "Florian Körner", licensed under "CC0 1.0". / Remix of the original. - Created with dicebear.comInitialsFlorian Körnerhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearPS
    Psychology mreeder 1y ago 100%
    ADHD: Disentangling Genetic, Environmental, &amp; Developmental Risk Factors—New Research Findings

    Forwarded from Dr. Ken Pope with small edits to get under size limits. -------- Forwarded Message -------- Subject: ADHD: Disentangling Genetic, Environmental, & Developmental Risk Factors—New Research Findings The new issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry includes an article: “ADHD: The Mammoth Task of Disentangling Genetic, Environmental, and Developmental Risk Factors.” Sarah Kittel-Schneider, M.D., is the author. Here are some excerpts: The first medical description of what is currently labeled attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) was published as early as the 18th century .... The underlying causes of ADHD, however, were unclear for nearly 200 years. Since the beginning of the 21st century, it is largely validated that ADHD is a disorder with a heritability of about 80%, estimated from twin and family studies (4). .... Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) summarize the risk alleles of an individual and weigh the effect size in an independent GWAS. Using PRSs seems to be useful to capture the synergistic effects of common risk variants of low effect sizes and to identify individuals carrying a higher genetic burden of those common variants (9). Moreover, more rare variants, such as copy number variants (CNVs), are also shown to play a role in ADHD pathogenesis, since there is a significantly increased burden in individuals with ADHD compared with the general population (10). <snip> Not only genetic but also environmental and developmental risk factors and their interaction are suggested to contribute to the onset of ADHD (11). But the investigation of the causality of environmental and developmental risk factors in ADHD is even more complex. Earlier studies investigating, for example, the impact of smoking during pregnancy on ADHD risk in the exposed child often did not take the mother’s psychopathology or genetic risk into account (12). The same is true for the effect of breastfeeding on ADHD risk (13). Better-designed studies already hinted that the genetic risk of the mother might be the causal factor rather than the harmful effects of smoking in ADHD (14). Only few studies have been published so far looking at pregnant women with ADHD and mother-child interaction in early infancy in mothers (and fathers) with ADHD. Early data hint that women with ADHD are at a greater risk of smoking, drinking alcohol, and using illegal drugs as well as greater risk of pregnancy and birth complications, compared with the general population (15). Therefore, it is highly challenging to disentangle the genetic from the environmental and developmental risk factors. For example, preterm birth has been shown to have a relatively consistent association with an increased ADHD risk, but the direction of the effect is less clear (16). Does prematurity lead to ADHD symptoms, or do fetuses with a genetic ADHD risk tend to be born prematurely for unknown biological reasons? Or, as a third possibility, are mothers with ADHD more prone to give birth to premature infants as a result of increased psychosocial stress and unhealthy lifestyle and the causal link is rather the transmission of the genetic risk variants? Finally, is there an interaction or interplay between those different risk factors? To make it even more complex, several potential environmental risk factors (in pregnancy or after birth) may also share genetic risk with ADHD, such as obesity, gestational diabetes mellitus, autoimmune disorders, allergic disorders, and so on, and there are hints that polygenic liability of ADHD is associated with an increased risk of exposure to environmental ADHD risk factors in individuals without an ADHD diagnosis as well. A 2019 study by Leppert et al. (17) investigated mothers without a clinical ADHD diagnosis but carrying risk alleles associated with ADHD, compared with mothers without those risk alleles. Of most interest was the fact that the mothers with ADHD risk alleles had increased lifestyle-related negative exposures, such as more mental health issues and pregnancy complications and increased markers of unhealthy nutritional status. However, that study was unable to show a significant association of preterm birth with maternal ADHD genetic risk or with ADHD risk genes in the exposed children. In this issue of the Journal, Brikell et al. (18) report on a study of the interaction between ADHD PRS, ADHD diagnosis, and environmental risk factors. They studied the association of 24 environmental and developmental risk factors and ADHD polygenic risk scores in a large cohort of 13,697 ADHD case subjects and 21,578 control subjects from a general population sample. There were three times more affected males than females in the sample, which needs to be mentioned, as we estimate that rates of adult ADHD are only 1.5 times higher in men compared with women in population-based studies. Brikell et al. included birth-related, somatic, and psychosocial risk factors, including parental mental disorder diagnoses, to evaluate potential gene-environment interactions. Not surprisingly, they could confirm a significant association of ADHD PRS with ADHD diagnosis. The higher the PRS burden, the greater the ADHD risk, which is confirmed in other studies (19). It is most interesting that in the general population sample, the authors could show a significant association of ADHD PRS with half of the 24 environmental risk factors. Small for gestational age, maternal autoimmune disorder, having had at least one infection, having had five or more infections, and a history of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) were significantly associated. Furthermore, ADHD PRS was significantly associated with most of the psychosocial risk factors, such as income in the lowest quintile, low education level, living in a single-parent household during the first 5 years of life, being under age 20 at birth of index child, and parental history of mental disorder. Nineteen of the 24 risk factors were associated with a diagnosis of ADHD. The most significant associations were reported for low birth weight, epilepsy, and low parental education. Adjusting for ADHD PRS load and parental mental disorder diagnosis did not largely change the findings. Surprisingly, Brikell et al. only found a tendency of gene-environment interaction between ADHD PRS and four of the 24 risk factors, namely, maternal autoimmune disease, TBI, paternal unemployment, and lower paternal age at birth of index child. This suggests that individuals who are burdened with a higher ADHD PRS load and are additionally exposed to one of these four environmental risk factors might have a higher probability of developing ADHD. The only gene-environment interaction that survived false discovery rate correction for multiple comparison, however, was the interaction of maternal autoimmune disease and high ADHD PRS load. The results from the Brikell et al. study are very promising and point out the importance of what data should be included in future studies on the etiopathology of ADHD. They strengthen the evidence of the heterogeneity of ADHD disease mechanisms and point toward the possibility of disentangling genetic and environmental risk factors as well as studying their complex interplay and interactions. Recent studies give first hints as to how environmental factors can influence gene expression by changes in the epigenome, but this field is only in its infancy (20). More insight into ADHD pathomechanisms will reveal targetable risk factors that then can be addressed by interventions, and the causality will finally be proven in future interventional studies. REPRINTS & OTHER CORRESPONDENCE: kittel_s@ukw.de. Ken Pope ~~~~ Thank you Dr. Pope. Merely forwarded by: Michael Reeder LCPC Baltimore, MD https://www.hygeiacounseling.com https://lem.clinicians-exchange.org https://mastodon.clinicians-exchange.org https://www.clinicians-exchange.org

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    Besides tech-focused instances, what other subject focused Lemmy/Kbinstances have you found?
  • mreeder mreeder 1y ago 100%

    Self plug: Mental health instance -- members must be verified to be employed in mental health professions. lem.clinicians-exchange.org .

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  • Another Psychology Today article from one of our email listserv members! TITLE: New PT Piece - The Mystery of Narcissism :) https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-intelligent-divorce/202301/the-mystery-of-narcissism Hi all, This is a new PT piece that may help a client or two. It is part of a series that I've been thinking about. Mark Banschick, MD – Stamford, CT The Mystery of Narcissism https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-intelligent-divorce/202301/the-mystery-of-narcissism Mark Banschick M.D. on January 23, 2023 The origin of narcissistic personality disorder (or associated traits) is a great mystery to solve. #psychology #psychotherapy #psychiatry #personalitydisorders #socialwork #psychologytoday #narcissist #narcissism @psychology@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth @psychiatry@a.gup.pe

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    TITLE: SPEAKING THE UNSPOKEN by Ken Pope, Nayeli Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Adames, Janet Sonne, & Beverly Greene From Ken Pope: I am (extremely, exceptionally, over-the-top) happy to announce that APA will publish a special book later this year: Speaking the Unspoken: Breaking the Silence, Myths, and Taboos That Hurt Therapists and Patients. The book was a creative collaboration of 5 co-authors: Kenneth S. Pope, Nayeli Y. Chavez-Dueñas, Hector Y. Adames, Janet L. Sonne, and Beverly Greene. Speaking the Unspoken The Kindle and paperback versions can now be pre-ordered from APA, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Bookshop.org, eCAMPUS.com, and the other usual suspects. Below are reviews, followed by the Table of Contents. “Here, at last, is the book we never really knew we needed, but needed so desperately. ‘Silence and silencing have shaped the psychotherapy profession.’ Truer words were never (un)spoken.” —Eric Y. Drogin, JD, PhD, ABPP Harvard Medical School Former Chair, APA Committee on Professional Practice and Standards “This book is essential reading for anyone who practices, teaches, supervises, and studies psychotherapy. It will help you to recognize and overcome barriers to thinking clearly, speaking openly, and listening respectfully about unspoken topics in our profession. The engaging vignettes, thought-provoking exercises, suggested strategies, and informational pearls of wisdom will strengthen your courage, humility, readiness, and skills to engage in authentic discussions.” —Joan Cook, PhD Professor of Psychology Yale University “Kenneth S. Pope, the foremost psychological ethicist of our time (someone who walks the talk), and a diverse and distinguished cadre of co-authors provide a necessary exploration of censored and challenging topics in psychotherapy. They show how correct Sigmund Freud was in positing that suppressed material will ‘come forth later in uglier ways’.” —Etzel Cardeña, PhD Thorsen Professor in Psychology Lund University, Sweden Co-editor of Varieties of Anomalous Experience and founding editor of the Journal of Anomalous Experience and Cognition “What a treasure of a book! The teaching, practice, and profession of psychotherapy are enhanced when we openly and directly address, understand, and continuously process ‘taboo’ topics that are challenging. The amazing authors provide history and sources of resistance to topics such as group identity, anger, oppression, and sexual feelings regarding clients. Most importantly, and of significant value, the book provides strategies that inspire us to have the courage, confidence, and determination to address the relevant issues in the various contexts in which we work. After reading this outstanding, compelling, must-read contribution, you will agree that creating a culture of speaking up benefits us all!” —Melba J. T. Vasquez, PhD, ABPP Independent Practice Former President, American Psychological Association “Speaking the Unspoken: Breaking the Silence, Myths and Taboos that Hurt Therapists and Patients is a must-read for EVERY therapist. The authors raise awareness and brilliantly illustrate how to address critical, contemporary, and challenging issues in therapy and supervision, including oppression and racism. I highly recommend this book!” —Lillian Comas-Díaz, PhD Recipient of the American Psychological Association Gold Medal Award for Life Achievement in the Practice of Psychology Past President, Psychologists in Independent Practice, APA Division 42 Author: Multicultural Care: A Clinician’s Guide to Cultural Competence “Have you ever avoided talking about something important? Have you ever wished for the courage to speak up? In clear and accessible prose, Speaking the Unspoken explains what underlies the fear and the other obstacles that keep us silent. With remarkable clarity, the book models the courage to discuss complex topics and provides practical advice for how and when to discuss previously unspoken matters. Every psychotherapist should read this intelligent and transformative book.” —Jennifer Joy Freyd, PhD Founder and President, Center for Institutional Courage Professor Emerit, Psychology, University of Oregon Adjunct Professor, Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University Editor, Journal of Trauma & Dissociation “Brave and compelling, Pope and colleagues’ volume paves the way to change and enlightenment of mindsets in clinical training, supervision, and practice. This courageous book outlines what is NOT DISCUSSED in clinical practice, supervision, and consultation, the impacts of these, and guideposts to identify, reflect, and address them. The authors address emotionally, politically, and personally charged topics that are avoided. It is a “must-read” for educators, supervisors, and clinicians-in-training.” —Carol Falender, PhD Adjunct Professor, Graduate School of Education and Psychology, Pepperdine University Clinical Professor, University of California, Los Angeles, Psychology Department Co-author, co-editor of six books on Competency-based Clinical Supervision, one on Competency-based Consultation “‘Several topics have been historically avoided in psychotherapy.’ The opening line in this book sheds light on a central truth – we tend to avoid certain topics because we have been told it is ‘uncultured’ to address them in ‘polite society.’ Although we may wish it to be so, averting our gaze does not remove these issues and problems from reality—not in society and not in our practices. The authors, experts in ethics, multiculturalism, practice, and training, excellently guide us through our own necessary edification. They invite us not to collude with the silence and the avoidance created when we hide behind the veil of ‘politeness’ and the guise of clinical neutrality. The book aims to enhance our skills and tolerance to feeling distressed and uncomfortable when we do “Break the Silence.” In learning how to do the necessary yet uncomfortable, we benefit our profession and the people we serve. —Cynthia de las Fuentes, PhD Independent Practice Here’s the Table of Contents: Dedication Acknowledgments Introduction: Unspoken Topics in Psychotherapy and How This Book Can Help Break the Silence Part I: The Problem of the Unspoken A Chilling Context for Psychotherapy: Cancel Culture, Hyperpolarization, Books and Topics Banned by the State, Frightened Academics, and Self-Censorship A Silenced Profession: The Toxic Effects of Taboo Topics Systems of Silencing and Cognitive Cues for Keeping Quiet An Example of the Problem: Therapists' Sexual Attractions, Arousals, and Fantasies Part II: Preparing to Break the Silence Looking Inward: A Self-Assessment of How We Respond to Challenging Topics Strengthening the Courage to Speak Up: Creating a Supportive Context Part III: Speaking the Unspoken—Exercises for Explorating and Learning Talking About Physical Difference and Disability Talking About Sexual and Affectional Orientation Talking About Sexual Reactions to Clients Talking About Anger Talking About Oppression Speaking Up About White Supremacy Culture Talking About Religion Talking About Money and Fees Talking About Death and Dying Part IV: Speaking the Unspoken Beyond Psychotherapy Speaking Up in Supervision and Consultation Speaking Up in the Profession and the Community Part V: But What If... Hitting a Wall, or The Wall Hitting Us: What to Do When Confused, Scared, Disheartened, or Stuck References About the Authors Index I would greatly appreciate your passing the word to any lists or individuals who might be interested in this book. Ken Pope #psychology #psychiatry #socialwork #mentalhealth @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #supervision #taboos #psychotherapy

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    TITLE: HIGHLY RECOMMENDED: JUDY HERMAN: TRUTH & REPAIR I’m writing to recommend a remarkable new book, Truth and Repair: How Trauma Survivors Envision Justice (Basic Books—Hardcover, Kindle, eBook, Audio CD, Audible.com Audiobook), by a giant in our field, Dr. Judith Herman. Here’s a brief bio: Judith L. Herman M.D. is a Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, and co-founder of the Victims of Violence Program at The Cambridge Hospital, MA. She is the author of two award-winning books: Father-Daughter Incest (Harvard University Press, 1981) and Trauma and Recovery (Basic Books, 1992) which have been translated into numerous languages and reprinted editions. Considered one of the world's leading experts in the field of psychological trauma, Herman has lectured widely on the subject of sexual and domestic violence. She has received numerous awards including: a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1984, the 1996 Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies, and the 2000 Woman in Science Award from the American Medical Women's Association. In 2007 she was named a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. The reviews have been stunning. Here’s a small sampling: “Herman has written some of the most seminal, life-changing books on violence against women. Here in her new book, Truth and Repair, she does something even more radical. She listens to the survivors themselves and skillfully shapes their voices and wisdom into a practical and truly enlightened road map for our future. Every word rang true and essential.” ―V (formerly Eve Ensler), playwright of The Vagina Monologues “For thirty years, every single book written about the impact of trauma has stood on the shoulders of Herman’s groundbreaking book Trauma and Recovery. Now, thirty years later, we receive a bookend to that masterpiece, examining how survivors of gender-based violence seek justice and healing. Truth and Repair is a deeply researched and thought-provoking book offering hope and healing for victims of violence, many of whom have felt betrayed, ignored, or retraumatized by existing larger societal institutions.” ―Michelle Bowdler, author of Is Rape a Crime? “Herman’s earlier studies of abuse of women and children recast our understanding of trauma. Now, in Truth and Repair, she comes full circle in describing how initially powerless victims can, through innovative social arrangements, achieve hard-won survivor justice. In the process, we learn much about what justice really means for traumatized people. Herman’s perspective is deeply humane and grounded in historical and political reality. Her work stands alone in its arc and originality.” ―Robert Jay Lifton, MD, Columbia University “Three decades after the publication of her foundational Trauma and Recovery, Herman brilliantly confronts us with another vital, but much ignored, aspect of recovery: social justice. Justice is an essential component for healing the godforsaken sense of humiliation and abandonment so central in traumatizing experiences. When justice is denied, trauma’s imprint is likely to fester in the form of helpless rage. A magnificent and inspiring contribution with profound implications for the healing professions and for society at large.” ―Bessel van der Kolk, MD, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller The Body Keeps the Score “This book is a revelation. With careful precision and dogged research, Judith Herman offers us not only a diagnosis of our most pressing social ailments, but a prescription for healing. Rarely does a book offer this level of insight, hope and remedy.” ―Rachel Louise Snyder, author of No Visible Bruises “Through masterful storytelling, Judith Herman charts the course from trauma to justice and compels us to follow it. An inspiring and practical call to action, Truth and Repair celebrates survivors’ wisdom and their power to heal themselves and the world we live in.” ―Anita Hill The book can be pre-ordered (it’ll be out March 14) from Basic Books, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Google Play, etc. PLEASE NOTE: IF YOU ORDER TODAY THROUGH JANUARY 27 AT BN.COM, YOU CAN GET 25% OFF WITH CODE PREORDER25! It would be great if everyone would pass the word about this new contribution to any lists or individuals who might be interested. Thanks! Ken Pope #psychology #socialwork #psychotherapy #psychiatry #trauma @psychology@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe #mentalhealth #bookreviews

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    TITLE: Video on Autism and Women Absolutely brilliant video on female pattern Autism. Any individual can have aspects of either the stereotyped "male" pattern, "female" pattern, or both: https://vimeo.com/122940958 Book: Aspergirls https://smile.amazon.com/Aspergirls-Empowering-Females-Asperger-Syndrome/dp/1849058261/ -- Michael #autism #femaleautism #aspergirls #psychology #socialwork #psychiatry #mentalhealth #psychotherapy @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe @psychology@a.gup.pe #aspergers

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    I've heard counselor, psychotherapist, mental health professional, and of course the infamous "provider" (thank you insurance companies). Now I am a "supplier" -- thank you to another insurance company for feeding my ego today. Not. As another therapist said on a related conversation -- the less prestigious and individual we sound, the more replaceable we are, the less we can be paid. They went on to speculate that soon we will be called titles that imply we are a financial burden by existing. Michael Reeder LCPC Baltimore, MD #psychology #psychiatry #mentalhealth #socialwork #healthpay @psychology@a.gup.pe @psychiatry@a.gup.pe @socialwork@a.gup.pe @psychotherapists@a.gup.pe #psychotherapy

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    Facebook turns over mother and daughter’s chat history to police resulting in abortion charges
  • mreeder mreeder 1y ago 75%

    Madcow -- While you are not wrong, we are talking about the unwashed masses here who are not necessarily savvy. "Private chat" really should have been.

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  • Who needs Lemmy?
  • mreeder mreeder 1y ago 100%

    Wouldst thou like a new dress?

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