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Comment on : PSYCHIATRIST DISCUSSES SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT FOR CHILDREN AND TEENAGERS, February 4, 2012


PSYCHIATRIST DISCUSSES SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT FOR CHILDREN AND TEENAGERS, February 4, 2012

What can you do if you have a child who is depressed or anxious? Or if your child seems out of it, or bored with everything? How, as a parent, can you help your child deal with raging hormones and peer pressure?

Young people often feel there has to be more to life, but they don’t have the tools or support to find the safe and practical answers they are looking for. For parents who don’t know where to turn for help for their child’s emotional or behavioral problems, medical orgone therapy may be the answer. This body-oriented, characteranalytic therapy is an effective treatment for many emotional problems. It has been shown to provide true change for youngsters and adults suffering with anxiety, depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder and bipolar affective disorder, to name a few – often without medication.

On Saturday, February 4, 2012, board-certified psychiatrist, Dale Rosin, D.O. will present “Medical Orgone Therapy for Children and Teens: Treating Emotional and Behavioral Problems” at the Paul Robeson Center for the Arts, 102 Witherspoon Street, Princeton, NJ from 3:00PM to 5:00PM as part of a series of social orgonomy talks sponsored by the American College of Orgonomy (ACO). Dr. Rosin will discuss the treatment of children and teens with medical orgone therapy and how trained therapists work extensively and closely with parents as a vital part of the treatment process. A brief description of medical orgone therapy will be given, case studies will be presented, and contemporary youth culture will also be explored. The presentation will be followed by a panel discussion with therapists from the ACO social orgonomy training committee, Drs. Dee Apple, Peter Crist and Virginia Whitener, who will join Dr. Rosin for further discussion of child-parent problems and the important implications of this kind of therapy for individuals and society.

Dr. Rosin received his medical degree from the Des Moines University School of Osteopathic Medicine in Des Moines, Iowa and completed his residency in general psychiatry and fellowship in child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of Medicine & Dentistry of New Jersey. Dr. Rosin maintains private practices in Somerville, New Jersey and the Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania where he treats children and adults. Dr. Rosin has authored numerous articles on the treatment of children and adults in the Journal of Orgonomy. He is available for interview prior to the event.

 

Admission is free thanks to underwriting support. Donations are welcome. Suggested adult, non-student donation is $45. Reservations are recommended. Call (732) 821-1144 or make your reservation online by visiting www.orgonomy.org.