Book Cover Flaps Of "Babies Need Mothers"
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Sometimes what is most profound is profoundly simple once revealed. This might apply to concepts found in this book. New understanding is presented with such simplicity that a child can comprehend, and it is changing the thinking of renown leaders in the field. A simple process is hypothesized, one that everyone already knows, one for which twelve precise parallels are drawn, one that is backed with significant data. Did the brightest minds, the costliest research, the mountains of peer-reviewed literature and the billions of research dollars fail to make the critical distinction between cause and effect? Could this possibly be? Evaluate this for yourself and see. If indeed a true cause has been identified, then true prevention is made possible, for the first time. Schizophrenia, depression, ADHD, school violence, autism, symbiosis, drug and alcohol dependence, eating disorders, bipolar disorder, borderline personality disorder and more, might fall into the ranks of what can be prevented, and prevented at three levels:1. prevention of origin, very early in life, 2. prevention of a first breakdown later 'in life, 3. prevention of a recurrence, based on new understanding of origin and mechanism |
Dr. Clancy McKenzie IS a widely acclaimed authority on the understanding of origins, mechanisms and treatment of schizophrenia. He graduated from the University of Michigan School of Medicine in 1962, and then focused his attention on the study of the human mind. Dr. McKenzie acquired valuable knowledge about the complex realm of mental illness while studying at the Menninger School of Psychiatry, followed by several years of training at the Philadelphia Psychiatric Center and the Philadelphia Psychoanalytic Institute. In 1986 Dr. McKenzie was nominated for the Dana Award for Pioneering Achievements in Health. In 1996, Dr. McKenzie wrote a textbookDelayed Posttraumatic Stress Disorders From Infancy: The Two Trauma Mechanism - with co-author Dr. Lance Wright. Dr. McKenzie's deep commitment to serving people was recognized when he was awarded Temple University's Nelson and Winnie Mandela's Humanitarian Award for his outstanding devotion to patients suffering from the effects of schizophrenia. Since 1966, Dr. McKenzie has studied the relationship between trauma and Schizophrenia. Through the years he has dedicated himself to the evaluation and analysis of trauma and its immediate and long-range effects on behavior and mental health. |
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