Hoopoe
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
At his psychiatric clinic at QEII Health Sciences Centre in Halifax, Allan Abbass is showing video clips of his therapy sessions.
A man arrives via wheelchair, dragging frozen feet the last few steps, leaning heavily on a cane. He takes a seat, talks to Dr. Abbass. When he leaves, he carries his cane under his arm.
A pixie-haired woman who has not spoken for a month sits before him in another clip. She’s been seen by a team of doctors, who found nothing. By the end of the first session, she speaks, in full, clear sentences.
A middle-aged office manager with an uncontrollable tremor is being considered for brain surgery; 90 minutes of therapy later, she triumphantly waves a stapler in the air, her tremor gone.
Dr. Abbass knows how it sounds. He’s used to skeptics, at least until he rolls the tape.
But these aren’t miracles, he says. This is science.
I'm still skeptical. It sounds like he is encouraging patients to hide their symptoms and behave more normally, and even a temporary change in that direction is taken as evidence that a mysterious mind-body illness was successfully treated.
This is also not innovative. It's the same old Freudian claim of being able to cure physical symptoms with talk therapy.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/lif...-for-patients-with-mystery-illnesses-help-is/
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