25 09, 2025

KRATOM: A Wellness Trend with Hidden Risks

2025-11-25T02:44:33+00:00September 25, 2025|Addiction & Recovery, Psychiatry, Psycho Education|

I feel compelled to share a public service announcement about something I've been noticing more often in my clinical work: a surprising rise in Kratom use. Some people are intentionally using Kratom, aware that it's a plant with opioid-like properties. But more concerning are those who are unknowingly consuming it—often through "health drinks" sold at upscale health food stores, where Kratom is just one ingredient on the label. Kratom is derived from the leaves of the Mitragyna speciosa tree, native to Southeast Asia. While it has traditional uses and can act as a pain reliever or even help with opioid withdrawal, it also carries serious risks. In fact, it's banned in countries like Malaysia and Thailand due to its addictive potential, yet its availability in the U.S. continues to rise. [...]

23 06, 2025

Ketamine Assisted Psychotherapy as Published in Los Angeles Psychotherapy Association Digest, Spring Volume 2024

2025-11-25T02:16:32+00:00June 23, 2025|Addiction & Recovery, Personal/Spiritual Growth, Psychiatry, Trauma|

Eva Altobelli, MD David Laramie, PhD We are experiencing a mental health crisis, and rates of depression and suicide continue to rise. According to the Surgeon General, Dr. Vivek Murthy, “Mental health has become the defining public health and societal challenge of our time ” (CDC, 2023). Over 30% of the population is suffering from mental health disorders and addiction (SAMHSA, 2021), and seventy percent of those suffering do not receive any mental health treatment. (Chatterjee, 2023). In the face of this, it is imperative that the field of mental health broaden its horizons in search of potential treatments.

25 03, 2025

Brave New Medicine: Ketamine’s Promise and Pitfalls

2025-11-25T02:31:19+00:00March 25, 2025|Addiction & Recovery, Psychiatry, Psycho Education|

Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World describes a futuristic society pacified by a daily dose of soma—a drug that ensures collective compliance and emotional numbness at the expense of curiosity, dissent, and authentic feeling. As an addiction psychiatrist and clinician who offers Ketamine-Assisted Psychotherapy (KAP), I often find myself reflecting on the parallels between Huxley’s vision and the rapidly expanding, commercialized use of ketamine in modern psychiatry. Ketamine has undeniable therapeutic potential Ketamine has undeniable therapeutic potential. When delivered within a structured, multidisciplinary framework—including careful preparation, guided administration, and integrative psychotherapy—it can be profoundly transformative. It offers individuals the possibility of loosening rigid patterns of thought, healing trauma, and reconnecting with meaning. However, when ketamine is prescribed or distributed without context—especially in the form of at-home lozenges or mail-order businesses —it [...]

25 01, 2025

Integrative Psychiatry: Remembering the Soul of Our Work

2025-11-25T02:30:57+00:00January 25, 2025|Psychiatry, Trauma|

The word psychiatry carries a history that most of us rarely pause to consider. Its roots trace back to the Medieval Latin psychiatria, which itself is woven from two Greek words: psykhē, meaning mind or soul, and iatreia, meaning healing or care. Built into the very language is an ancient understanding that this field was always meant to tend to the soul. And yet, somewhere along the long arc of scientific progress, we drifted from that. For decades—and in some ways, centuries—we leaned heavily into models that viewed human beings primarily as biological systems, fascinating and intricate, yes, but too often stripped of meaning, history, and inner life. My hope is that we are now in a season of returning. Returning to a recognition that we are far more [...]

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