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    Let's Be Perfectly Queer: The Changing Face of HIV

    en-usMay 07, 2020
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    About this Episode

    LET'S BE PERFECTLY QUEER: HIV IS THE VIRUS; STIGMA IS THE DISEASE!  Dr. Beach and Randy Davis, HIV Activist, Sexual Health Coordinator, and TV Host discuss the changing face of HIV/AIDS since the 1980's. They explore the critical impacts of shame and homophobia, the physical advances in HIV science/medications and ongoing mental health and sexual risks. You don’t want to miss Randy’s incredibly courageous and inspirational journey!

    Additional Information:

    https://www.facebook.com/LetsBePerfectlyQueer/
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CEA0FQsBagM
    https://rogerstv.com/show?lid=12&rid=23&sid=8130
    HIV.gov
    https://www.greaterthan.org/state-hiv-aids-hotlines/?gclid=CjwKCAjw4871BRAjEiwAbxXi24NKwsPgWAGJE7COkAV4ZaSsYUFkuY3v9W-APoufOlvJgvFG7n18KhoCL74QAvD_BwE

    Recent Episodes from Mental Reality with Dr. Beach

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    Yale COPE Project: https://www.spirit.research.yale.edu/

    Behind the COPE Project is a team of individuals from all different communities--neuroscientists, therapists, mental health professionals, mental health advocates, individuals with lived experiences, and individuals who view their experiences as spiritually oriented. Our group is called the SPIRIT Alliance (SPIRIT meaning the multitude of characteristics that make up an individual).

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    My clinical work is focused upon the treatment of patients experiencing the very first signs of psychosis, as Medical Director of the Yale PRIME Psychosis Prodrome Research Clinic.

    Brittany Quagan: I am a Master Level Clinical Therapist and psychic/medium.  My personal experience with hearing voices began when I was about 15 years old. I personally see these voices as Spirit Guides. Along with the voices of Spirit came an influx of distressing experiences such as anxiety, panic attacks, depression, health paranoia, and suicidality. I didn’t know what was happening. I didn’t know what I was hearing. And because I was so distressed by the experiences, I self-medicated with substances and alcohol because, in those moments, the voices and the other uncomfortable sensations and thoughts would quiet down. There were periods of time I couldn’t leave my home, petrified of what I would hear or feel if I did. My sanctuary was the only place I felt safe—or, at the very least—safer. My relationships suffered, I had to drop out of college my first year, and every day I spiraled into what I felt at the time was a never-ending abyss. This continued until I was about 21 years old. 

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    Additional Information:

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