Dr. Ramani Durvasula, Food Addiction on Dr OZ
Dr. Ramani Durvasula, Food Addiction on Dr OZ – By keeping it simple – Dr. Durvasula (“Dr. Ramani”) makes psychology useful and usable for a wide variety of audiences. Dr. Ramani is a licensed clinical psychologist and Professor of Psychology. Drawing upon her years of clinical experience, graduate and undergraduate teaching, and published research – she is masterful at taking all things psychological and making them interesting and understandable for a wide variety of audiences. Her versatility makes her a useful presenter for audiences ranging from adolescents to professionals, laypeople to mental health professionals. There are a limited number of simple truths offered by the field of psychology – and psychologists often miss the point and hide these simple truths behind fancy statistics and technical jargon. Years of teaching thousands of students have equipped Dr. Ramani with a knack for cutting to the core of the issue and cutting out the filler. Understanding these truths can help people reach their full potential in their relationships, jobs, and family time. By getting past the jargon and the simplifying the statistics – Dr. Ramani keeps it real and makes psychology a useful tool for everyone.
The Kennedys On Addiction
Filed under: food addiction help
“I have issues with food, no question about it. I inhale my food. It's not healthy, not good, on a …. Chris's book—which he researched and wrote with the help of journalist Randall Fitzgerald—is a user-friendly roadmap of dependency and treatment …
Read more on Daily Beast
Yes, You Can Enjoy Losing Weight!
Filed under: food addiction help
… breads, to salty foods, even to roast chickens. By the time we try to lose weight, many of us are — no exaggeration — sugar addicts. … A bite less a day may help take the habit away. If you have a six-cookie-a-day habit, cut it down … In that …
Read more on Huffington Post (blog)
Love: The Healthy Addiction?
Filed under: food addiction help
or behavioral addictions (gambling, sex, spending, etc.) share the same neurobiological motivation and activation systems may help to explain the strength of obsessive behaviors in certain rejection-sensitive lovelorn individuals, as cross-culturally …
Read more on PsychCentral.com (blog)
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