What does real healing look like
Описание
The brain Taking MDMA may End up where CBT can never Reach | Rachel Yehuda: Full Interview
Injury does not end with danger, and for decades science has been unable to explain why.
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Rachel Yehuda, a leading researcher on PTSD, has devoted her career to studying this issue, figuring out how trauma affects our genes, sometimes passing on biological echoes to the next generation.
Right now, she's focused on therapy that could really break this chain.
0:08 Introduction: What injury does to the brain
0:28 Chapter 1: Why Trauma Stays for a Long time
3:13 Stress versus Injury: What's the difference?
6:03 Why most people Don't Develop PTSD
8:45 a.m. Chapter 2: How MDMA Therapy can Break the Vicious Circle
9:27 How trauma distorts self-perception
12:48 p.m. Explanation of MDMA therapy
16:46 How social stereotypes affect (or worsen) recovery
23:12 The reality of psychedelic therapy (it's not a quick fix)
29:03 Chapter 3. Healing can be passed down from generation to generation
30:56 Explanation of epigenetics
40:08 Can healing be inherited?
43:51 PTSD beyond Fear: Guilt, Shame, and Trauma
47:09 What does real healing look like
About Rachel Yehuda:
Rachel Yehuda, Ph.D., professor of psychiatry and neurology, is director of the Department of Traumatic Stress Studies at the Icahn School of Medicine and director of the Center for Mental Health Patient Care at the James J. Smith Veterans Affairs Medical Center. Peters.
Dr. Yehuda is the author of over 300 published articles, chapters, and books in the field of traumatic stress and the neurobiology of PTSD. Her current interests include the study of new treatments for PTSD, the study of risk factors and resistance to them, the study of psychological and biological factors influencing treatment responses in PTSD, genetic, epigenetic and molecular biological studies of PTSD, as well as the transmission of trauma and PTSD from generation to generation. Her team's research on cortisol and brain function has revolutionized our understanding and treatment of PTSD worldwide.
Dr. Yehuda has received numerous awards in recognition of her work, including the Kurt Richter Prize in Psychoneuroendocrinology and the Laufer Prize from the International Society for the Study of Traumatic Stress. In 2004, she was also awarded the title of Visiting Professor of Psychiatry and Neurology at the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry (Munich, Germany) and the Markus Tauska Professorship at Leiden University in recognition of her achievements in the field of endocrinology of PTSD.
Dr. Yehuda holds a Ph.D. in psychology and neurochemistry and a Master's degree in Biological Psychology from the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, and has completed postdoctoral training in biological psychiatry from the Department of Psychiatry at Yale Medical School.
She has an active clinical and research program, funded from the federal budget, in which students and clinicians participate.
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