Amazon S3 on MSN
How Carl Jung solved addiction and changed psychology
The big thinkers at Aperture explain how Carl Jung solved addiction and transformed psychology.
Dopamine—a neurotransmitter responsible for influencing motivation, pleasure, mood and learning in the brain—has experienced ...
The Christian Post on MSN
Faith-based organizations can now get funding for addiction recovery programs, HHS announces
U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. says faith-based organizations that meet evidence-based ...
After losing more than 200 pounds, Jelly Roll shared how his past cocaine addiction helped his weight loss journey and ...
The psychedelic 5-MeO-DMT seemed to induce similar patterns of brain activity in a lama - a revered spiritual teacher in ...
EatingWell on MSN
These Foods May Raise Your Depression Risk, New Study Says
Here's what the researchers found—and how you can shift your habits.
For more than a decade, the streets of Brockton have held a deadly secret. Two murdered women, three violent rapes, all ...
The wife of former North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum will help lead a national initiative to further prioritize addiction ...
As a clinician who treats veterans struggling with trauma, mental illness, and addiction, I’m careful about language. Words matter. They shape policy, treatment decisions, and public ...
Over time, these cascading effects contribute to a growing burden on the person, their family and the health-care system. As people live longer — but not necessarily healthier lives — the cost of ...
Prevention can mean removing risk factors but also cultivating promotive factors. Positive childhood experiences (PCEs) are an important aspect of addiction prevention.
We often view our cravings—whether for drugs, alcohol, food, or approval—as indictments of our character. Yet neuroscience and psychology say otherwise; here's why.
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