When the Behavior Isn’t the Whole Story
There is a pattern that appears often enough in clinical work to feel almost predictable — and yet each time it surfaces, it resists easy categorization.
There is a pattern that appears often enough in clinical work to feel almost predictable — and yet each time it surfaces, it resists easy categorization.
Clinicians working in behavioral health increasingly encounter patients presenting with concerns about their own patterns of behavior
Behavioral addiction is most often discussed in individual terms — a person, a behavior, a brain. This framing is clinically useful, but it is incomplete.