I very much agree. Particularly in the aspect where behavioral aberration is traceable to environmental stressors. Nothing comes from nothing. Nothing becomes nothing. This is NOT to excuse individual responsibility, but to determine what responsibili
How very true.
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | NEJM https://t.co/CYnVcp4Hb7
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | NEJM https://t.co/K9SWNxVfUW
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | NEJM https://t.co/U1jI7buMiL
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | NEJM https://t.co/8UiTCwlScW
This perspective piece sits with this question and others through a careful examination of one physician’s experience working “on the frontlines of decarceration.” https://t.co/0mrLTpoZ1q
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | NEJM https://t.co/mf2l6IbPw4
While not perfect collaborative courts are a small part of justice reform From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration https://t.co/YOiz43a2uU
RT @jack_turban: “When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informati…
RT @jack_turban: “When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informati…
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | Ultra-Liberal NEJM https://t.co/KPYyt3VsrW
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | NEJM https://t.co/NrhDDdDtkh
In our medical model of care, often we believe we are keepers of health, but end up being witness to determinants of health. There is a sense of fatalism because we cannot "solve" these issues | NEJM https://t.co/v45PJt0H52
RT @jack_turban: “When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informati…
RT @awaisaftab: "I have learned that the problems in need of solving are less often those of the patients themselves than of the systems th…
RT @awaisaftab: "I have learned that the problems in need of solving are less often those of the patients themselves than of the systems th…
"I have learned that the problems in need of solving are less often those of the patients themselves than of the systems that surround them." Nathaniel Morris, on the intersection of health care and criminal justice https://t.co/KNz9ZEGbo4
RT @DavidGratzer: "When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors." A terrific and lively paper by Dr…
``I worry about the extent to which criminal justice systems mete out punishment in the name of treatment.'' From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration https://t.co/Dgk4bQoQc8
RT @jack_turban: “When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informati…
RT @jack_turban: “When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informati…
RT @jack_turban: “When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informati…
RT @jack_turban: “When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informati…
RT @jack_turban: “When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informati…
“When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors.” A thought-provoking and informative read by one of my favorites, Nate Morris, on the interface between psychiatry and the justice system. #medtwitter @NEJM https://t.
"When I became a physician, I was not expecting to learn so much about ankle monitors." A terrific and lively paper by Dr. Nathaniel P. Morris on decarceration and medicine. @NEJM https://t.co/cmbIZMW25N
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | NEJM https://t.co/t34XGt9tQj
From Crime to Care — On the Front Lines of Decarceration | NEJM https://t.co/KDc3e0p3Rp