DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com
Thursday June 18, 2026
Independent Holistic Healthcare
& Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com
Independent Holistic Healthcare
& Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
Your Donation Empowers Wellness
Your Contribution Defends Human Rights


I am a New York-based general practitioner, medical journalist, and fiction writer. Drawing on my medical background, my work is defined by a lifelong commitment to medical advocacy—defending the individual against coercive systems of psychiatry and the corporate influences that sustain them. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:
Clinical Advocacy: Through my virtual telehealth practice, I offer Holistic Lifestyle & Nutrition Coaching that nurtures good health in body, mind, and spirit. Rather than practicing traditional primary care medicine, I offer holistic wellness alternatives that prioritize the "whole person" over a diagnosis, supporting your bodily autonomy and informed consent.
Journalistic Advocacy: As an independent reporter at DrMandelNews.com, I primarily investigate and expose psychiatric abuses. My mission is to give a voice to the silenced and to ensure that human rights remain at the forefront of medical discourse.
Creative Advocacy: As an author of speculative fiction short stories, I explore these complexities through narrative. My writing serves as a series of cautionary fables, using imaginative storytelling to examine the consequences of institutional overreach and the enduring importance of the human spirit.

A resilient immune system is one of the body’s most sophisticated forms of natural defense. It operates continuously, identifying threats, repairing tissues, and maintaining internal balance. While immunity cannot be transformed instantly, a steady lifestyle grounded in holistic principles can meaningfully support long‑term immune strengt
A resilient immune system is one of the body’s most sophisticated forms of natural defense. It operates continuously, identifying threats, repairing tissues, and maintaining internal balance. While immunity cannot be transformed instantly, a steady lifestyle grounded in holistic principles can meaningfully support long‑term immune strength. The following evidence‑informed practices reflect the mission of DrHaroldMandel.org: empowering individuals with clear, natural, and sustainable approaches to whole‑person wellness.
Nourishing the Body with Immune‑Supportive Nutrition
A diet centered on whole, unprocessed foods provides the essential vitamins, minerals, antioxidants, and phytonutrients required for optimal immune function. Colorful fruits and vegetables supply vitamin C, beta‑carotene, and protective polyphenols. Leafy greens contribute folate and magnesium, both vital for healthy immune signaling. Garlic, onions, and ginger offer natural compounds that help regulate inflammation. Nuts and seeds—particularly almonds, sunflower seeds, and pumpkin seeds—deliver vitamin E, zinc, and beneficial fats that support immune cell activity. Fermented foods such as yogurt, kefir, kimchi, and sauerkraut help maintain a balanced gut microbiome, a cornerstone of immune resilience.
Restorative Sleep as a Foundation for Immunity
Adequate sleep is one of the most powerful natural tools for immune support. During deep rest, the body produces cytokines and other immune mediators essential for defense and recovery. Adults who consistently achieve 7–9 hours of sleep demonstrate stronger immune responses and improved resilience during periods of stress. Establishing a calming nighttime routine—dim lighting, gentle stretching, or herbal tea—can help the body transition into restorative sleep.
Stress Reduction Through Mind‑Body Practices
Chronic stress disrupts immune balance by elevating cortisol and interfering with the body’s natural rhythms. Mind‑body practices offer a direct pathway to restoring equilibrium. Meditation and breathwork calm the nervous system and reduce stress‑related inflammation. Time spent in nature lowers stress hormones and supports immune function. Practices such as yoga and tai chi integrate movement with mindfulness, enhancing circulation, flexibility, and emotional clarity. These approaches reflect the holistic philosophy central to DrHaroldMandel.org: strengthening immunity by nurturing both body and mind.
Hydration and Natural Detoxification
Proper hydration supports nutrient transport, temperature regulation, and the removal of metabolic waste. It also assists the lymphatic system, which plays a critical role in immune surveillance. In addition to water, herbal teas—such as ginger, chamomile, or green tea—provide antioxidants that complement immune health while contributing to daily fluid intake.
Regular Physical Activity for Immune Circulation
Moderate, consistent movement enhances circulation, allowing immune cells to travel efficiently throughout the body. Activities such as brisk walking, cycling, swimming, or light strength training help maintain immune readiness without placing excessive strain on the system. Even 20–30 minutes of daily movement can contribute significantly to long‑term resilience.
Gut Health as an Immune Anchor
A substantial portion of the immune system resides within the gastrointestinal tract. A balanced microbiome supports nutrient absorption, regulates inflammation, and strengthens the intestinal barrier. Fiber‑rich foods—oats, beans, fruits, and vegetables—promote microbial diversity. Probiotic‑rich foods help maintain microbial balance, while limiting highly processed foods reduces disruption to the gut environment. A healthy gut forms a stable foundation for immune vitality.
Sunlight, Vitamin D, and Immune Regulation
Safe exposure to natural sunlight enables the body to produce vitamin D, a nutrient essential for immune modulation. Time outdoors supports both physical and emotional well‑being. When sunlight is limited, dietary sources such as mushrooms, fortified foods, and fatty fish can help maintain adequate levels.
Emotional Well‑Being and Immune Strength
Emotional health is inseparable from immune health. Supportive relationships, meaningful activities, and moments of joy help buffer the physiological effects of stress. Practices such as journaling, gratitude, and mindful breathing promote emotional balance and contribute to overall vitality.
A Holistic Path to Long‑Term Resilience
Strengthening immunity is not a matter of quick fixes but of cultivating daily habits that support the body’s natural intelligence. By nourishing the body, managing stress, moving regularly, sleeping deeply, and staying connected to nature, individuals create an internal environment where the immune system can thrive. This approach reflects the core mission of DrHaroldMandel.org: empowering people with natural, accessible, and sustainable strategies for lifelong wellness.

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Granville, Pennsylvania isn't big enough for secrets, but it's big enough for a police department to learn how to keep them.
Chief Ray Warren called it "the good thing" at roll call one winter. He wasn't talking about the new cruisers. He meant the girls who came back from college for holidays, who worked at the hospital and the law office
Granville, Pennsylvania isn't big enough for secrets, but it's big enough for a police department to learn how to keep them.
Chief Ray Warren called it "the good thing" at roll call one winter. He wasn't talking about the new cruisers. He meant the girls who came back from college for holidays, who worked at the hospital and the law office downtown, who grew up in the houses on the hill above Route 96.
Tina Chen, 22, was a senior at Granville University and ran her parents' pharmacy on weekends. Rika Sato, 24, Japanese-American, was in the MBA program. Kathy Miller, 23, blond, worked the front desk at the boutique hotel. Koeong Park, 21, did modeling shoots in Pittsburgh between classes. Susana Delgado, 25, Filipina, was an ER nurse. Denisha Brooks, 22, clerked for the county public defender and everyone said she'd be the first in her family through law school.
Warren's idea was simple. The department needed stats, and stats needed a drug ring. He decided the ring was the boys' track alumni from Granville High, now in their twenties, selling coke at house parties. There was no evidence, so the department would make some.
Officers Dale and Meyer started with invitations, not arrests. They pulled Tina over for rolling a stop sign and let her go with a warning and a business card. "We need community partners," Dale told her in the station break room. "You help us with a controlled buy, we help you. Internship with the DA, letter for grad school, your dad's liquor license renewal goes smooth. Riches beyond belief, kid, if you play ball."
It was the same pitch for all six. The leverage changed, the promise didn't.
The setup was always a date. Rika would meet a guy from the track team at the brewery. Kathy would bring a former boyfriend home from the hotel bar. Beforehand, Meyer would slide a small evidence bag across the table in the back office. "It's from a prior seizure," he'd say. "Just get him to do a line with you. We'll be outside. That's probable cause."
The girls weren't undercover officers. They were 21 to 25 and scared of losing the opportunities they'd been offered. They did it once, then twice, because saying no after the first time meant admitting the first time happened.
What made it messy was the second part of Warren's good thing. The "testing" nights. Dale insisted the girls had to try the product first so they'd be credible witnesses. He'd pour a drink in his apartment above the laundromat, put on music, and tell Susana or Koeong it was for their safety. Afterward, there was an affair. Not graphic, not romantic, just the oldest kind of coercion dressed up as protection. Dr. Elliot Filamore, the university psychiatrist who sat on the department's "campus wellness initiative," signed off on the counseling referrals and took his own fringe benefit meetings with Denisha in his campus office after hours.
It worked for eighteen months because Granville likes a quiet downtown.
Then Ronaldo Alvarez, 26, a fourth-year med student at Granville, noticed his girlfriend Kathy coming home shaking, with a baggie in her coat that still had an evidence tag number half-scratched off. He didn't go to the chief. He went to the state police barracks in Lewistown with photos, dates, and a written timeline naming Tina, Rika, and the others as witnesses.
Three days later, two Granville cruisers picked him up for a wellness check after Dr. Filamore filed an emergency petition. Filamore's evaluation, two pages, called it "acute paranoid ideation with persecutory delusions regarding law enforcement." The county judge who golfs with Warren signed the 72-hour hold. At the hospital in Danville, Ronaldo was given Haldol, told he was under stress from med school, and released with a recommendation for ongoing treatment with Dr. Filamore.
The community did the rest. "Ronaldo cracked," people said at the diner. The track guys he named got pulled over more. The girls got quieter.
Warren still calls it the good thing at roll call. Dale still keeps evidence bags in his desk. Filamore still sees university patients on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Tina just got into Penn's pharmacy PhD program with a letter from the DA's office. Denisha got her clerkship renewed.
Granville looks the same from Route 96. The hill houses light up at Christmas. The police Christmas fund toy drive is next week. And if you date one of the bright young women in town, there's a decent chance a Granville cruiser will be parked down the block, waiting to see if you'll play ball too.
Speculative Fiction
by Dr Harold Mandel

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It is shocking, and it should be shocking, that a single professional group as destructive as psychiatry holds a legal monopoly over mental healthcare in the USA and across much of the world.
What makes this monopoly so alarming is not just the power itself, but the mindset that comes with it. Behind closed doors and in public life, psych
It is shocking, and it should be shocking, that a single professional group as destructive as psychiatry holds a legal monopoly over mental healthcare in the USA and across much of the world.
What makes this monopoly so alarming is not just the power itself, but the mindset that comes with it. Behind closed doors and in public life, psychiatrists consistently display an attitude toward human suffering that is cold, rigid, and fundamentally dehumanizing. The cruelty is not an accident. It is deep seated. It follows them out of the clinic and into the rest of their lives, revealing a consistent commitment to reducing people to labels, symptoms, and risk categories rather than seeing whole human beings.
Look at what patients experience:
Intentional stigmatization: Diagnoses that become life sentences, shared across systems, used to dismiss a person's judgment, credibility, and rights.
Toxic drugging: Medications pushed as first and only solutions, often with devastating side effects, withdrawal syndromes, and lifelong dependency. Informed consent is rushed or absent.
Blacklists: Informal networks between hospitals and providers that flag patients as "difficult" or "non-compliant," cutting them off from care instead of listening to them.
Physical abuse: Forced injections, restraints, seclusion, and electroshock administered without real choice, justified by claims of "medical necessity" that patients themselves reject.
These are not outliers. They are routine practices, protected by law and professional norms. The monopoly means there is nowhere else to turn when the designated experts are the ones causing harm.
What happens when psychiatrists are asked about this outside their offices? The response is telling. Arrogance replaces explanation. Silence replaces conscience. There is no reckoning with the intense pain and suffering inflicted daily. No apology for lives derailed by forced treatment, lost years to side effects, or careers destroyed by a chart note. The refusal to answer speaks louder than any defense could.
A profession granted total authority over the mind should be judged by the highest standard of compassion. Instead, what we see is the opposite: a system where cruelty is institutionalized, rationalized as care, and shielded from accountability.
The human condition deserves better than a monopoly of dehumanization.

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