One study went viral, the other did not
Bad intent is not required for an article or broadcast segment to qualify as potentially harmful misinformation. It only needs to be present in the most provocative way in the right forum.
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Posted by C. Scott McMillin | Jan 27, 2022 | Addiction Clinicians, Addictive Substances | 0 |
Bad intent is not required for an article or broadcast segment to qualify as potentially harmful misinformation. It only needs to be present in the most provocative way in the right forum.
Read MorePosted by C. Scott McMillin | Jan 24, 2022 | Addiction Clinicians | 0 |
Of course, clinicians who work with offenders are accustomed to the occasional client who shows up stubbornly insisting that he or she had consumed no alcohol whatsoever before arrest.
Read MorePosted by C. Scott McMillin | Jan 20, 2022 | Addiction Clinicians, People in Recovery | 0 |
“When you put a name to something, you gain a certain degree of power over it,” a psychologist told me, during a workshop on addictions.
Read MorePosted by C. Scott McMillin | Jan 17, 2022 | In the News | 0 |
In COVID terms, it’s as contagious as omicron, as fatal as delta. And targeted at the young, making use of their favorite platforms.
Read MorePosted by C. Scott McMillin | Jan 13, 2022 | Addiction Clinicians | 0 |
Yes, to an addiction counselor it will seem reminiscent of the control strategies employed by many folks who eventually wind up in treatment.
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