Shifting our perspective on schizophrenia means recognizing that people aren't defined by their diagnosis. This fundamental truth forms the foundation of positive psychiatry—a complementary approach that acknowledges the serious nature of schizophrenia while focusing on strengths, resilience, and possibilities for a meaningful life. Traditional psychiatry views patients through a deficits-based lens, treating them as collections of symptoms to be fixed. This creates a missed opportunity to f...
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Shifting our perspective on schizophrenia means recognizing that people aren't defined by their diagnosis. This fundamental truth forms the foundation of positive psychiatry—a complementary approach that acknowledges the serious nature of schizophrenia while focusing on strengths, resilience, and possibilities for a meaningful life. Traditional psychiatry views patients through a deficits-based lens, treating them as collections of symptoms to be fixed. This creates a missed opportunity to f...
Reframing ADHD: Beyond Deficits to Discovering Strengths
Positive Psychiatry - with Rakesh Jain, MD
35 minutes
4 months ago
Reframing ADHD: Beyond Deficits to Discovering Strengths
Imagine a world where ADHD isn't just viewed as a collection of deficits but as a unique neurological variation with both challenges and remarkable strengths. That's the revolutionary perspective Dr. Rakesh Jain explores in this thought-provoking episode that challenges conventional thinking about one of the most misunderstood conditions in psychiatry. Drawing on over three decades of clinical experience, Dr. Jain proposes a fundamental shift from the traditional deficit model to a diversity...
Positive Psychiatry - with Rakesh Jain, MD
Shifting our perspective on schizophrenia means recognizing that people aren't defined by their diagnosis. This fundamental truth forms the foundation of positive psychiatry—a complementary approach that acknowledges the serious nature of schizophrenia while focusing on strengths, resilience, and possibilities for a meaningful life. Traditional psychiatry views patients through a deficits-based lens, treating them as collections of symptoms to be fixed. This creates a missed opportunity to f...