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» GeneSight multi-gene test more predictive of antidepressant responseRetrospective chart review also showed GeneSight results can help predict increased healthcare visits and higher disability claim benefitsThe combinatorial, multi-gene GeneSight test has been...» Successful cognitive behavioral therapy in youth equals decreased thinking about suicidePenn Medicine researchers found that patients who did not respond to cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for anxiety in childhood had more chronic and enduring patterns of suicidal ideation at 7 to 19...» More on the “Art” of Benign ConfrontationConfrontation doesn't have to mean making judgments about character, and it doesn't have to mean putting people on the defensive.Tags: in practice, relationships, responsibility» Are people who bite their nails perfectionists?Pulling hair, biting nails, picking skin are not simply 'nervous' habits, a new study finds, suggesting they are instead associated with perfectionism, frustration and boredom.
» GeneSight multi-gene test more predictive of antidepressant responseRetrospective chart review also showed GeneSight results can help predict increased healthcare visits and higher disability claim benefitsThe combinatorial, multi-gene GeneSight test has been...
» Successful cognitive behavioral therapy in youth equals decreased thinking about suicidePenn Medicine researchers found that patients who did not respond to cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) for anxiety in childhood had more chronic and enduring patterns of suicidal ideation at 7 to 19...
» More on the “Art” of Benign ConfrontationConfrontation doesn't have to mean making judgments about character, and it doesn't have to mean putting people on the defensive.Tags: in practice, relationships, responsibility
Confrontation doesn't have to mean making judgments about character, and it doesn't have to mean putting people on the defensive.
Tags: in practice, relationships, responsibility
» Are people who bite their nails perfectionists?Pulling hair, biting nails, picking skin are not simply 'nervous' habits, a new study finds, suggesting they are instead associated with perfectionism, frustration and boredom.