DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com
DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com
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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. Through MandelNews.com Breaking News Alerts and Daily News Coverage, I provide timely updates on developing human rights stories.
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 System Built on Coercion Must Fall
By Dr. Harold Mandel | MandelNews.com Source: CCHR International
The global psychiatric system has been put on notice. A new report from the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights — highlighted by CCHR International — exposes a worldwide pattern of forced drugging, involuntary confinement, a
A System Built on Coercion Must Fall
By Dr. Harold Mandel | MandelNews.com Source: CCHR International
The global psychiatric system has been put on notice. A new report from the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights — highlighted by CCHR International — exposes a worldwide pattern of forced drugging, involuntary confinement, and degrading treatment that the UN bluntly identifies as human rights violations, not “healthcare.”
This is not a policy disagreement. It is a human rights emergency.
A Global Pattern of Coercion the UN Says Must End
The UN report documents what survivors have been saying for decades: psychiatric institutions across the world continue to operate as zones of legalized coercion. People are locked away, drugged against their will, restrained, isolated, and in some regions literally chained — practices the UN states violate international law, including the Convention Against Torture.
The message is unmistakable: Forced psychiatric treatment is incompatible with human rights.
Profit‑Driven U.S. Psychiatric Chains Called Out
CCHR International’s analysis underscores the United States as a major offender, where for‑profit psychiatric hospital chains — including Universal Health Services (UHS) and Acadia Healthcare — have faced federal investigations and lawsuits alleging involuntary detainment, fraudulent billing, and systemic abuse.
These corporations have paid hundreds of millions in settlements, yet the abuses continue. The UN report cites these cases as evidence of a system where profit incentives collide with human vulnerability, creating a perfect storm for exploitation.
UN Calls for Abolition of Coercive Psychiatry
The UN is not asking for minor reforms. It is calling for a paradigm shift:
Jan Eastgate, President of CCHR International, emphasized that governments can no longer hide behind medical rhetoric. “Coercive psychiatric practices violate human rights and must be abolished,” she said.
A Turning Point — If Governments Choose to Act
The UN’s stance aligns with growing global pressure from disability‑rights advocates, survivors, and human‑rights organizations demanding an end to coercive psychiatry. WHO guidance and CRPD testimony have already shifted toward rights‑based, consent‑driven models of care.
The question now is whether governments will act — or whether they will continue to allow institutions to operate with impunity.
The World Has Been Warned
The UN has drawn a line. CCHR International has amplified it. Survivors have been shouting it for decades.
Forced psychiatric treatment is a human rights violation — and the world can no longer pretend otherwise.
CCHR Source: http://bit.ly/4uUrqZu

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DrHaroldMandel.org — Holistic Wellness & Progressive Healthcare
At The Holistic Pulse, we explore the deep connections between daily life and whole‑person wellness. Health is not created only in clinics, kitchens, or gyms—it is shaped in the environments where people spend most of their waking hours. Workplac
DrHaroldMandel.org — Holistic Wellness & Progressive Healthcare
At The Holistic Pulse, we explore the deep connections between daily life and whole‑person wellness. Health is not created only in clinics, kitchens, or gyms—it is shaped in the environments where people spend most of their waking hours. Workplaces, for better or worse, function as powerful health ecosystems. When they honor human dignity, support growth, and provide stability, they become engines of vitality. When they fail to do so, they become sources of chronic stress, emotional injury, and long‑term harm.
This article examines why humane, respectful, and empowering work conditions are not optional—they are essential to the health of the body, the clarity of the mind, and the strength of the human spirit.
🌿 Human‑Centered Work as a Biological Necessity
Healthy work conditions are not a luxury; they are a biological requirement. When employees are treated with respect, recognized for their credentials, and supported in their natural aptitude and potential, the human organism responds with resilience and vitality. Fair pay, autonomy, benefits, and genuine opportunities for upward mobility form the foundation of a stable life. Without these elements—especially for individuals who do not begin their careers with inherited wealth—work becomes a source of chronic stress that erodes health at every level.
The body interprets exploitative or unstable work environments as a continuous threat, activating stress pathways that were never meant to remain switched on. Over time, this leads to inflammation, cardiovascular strain, hormonal imbalance, sleep disruption, and a cascade of preventable health conditions. What some employers dismiss as “stress” is, in reality, a slow and measurable form of physiological injury. A supportive workplace, by contrast, functions as a protective health intervention—one that strengthens immunity, stabilizes the nervous system, and promotes longevity.
🧠 The Psychological Architecture of Respectful Work
The mind depends on humane work conditions to remain healthy. People require dignity, agency, safety, and a sense of purpose to maintain psychological well‑being. When workplaces deny employees respect, suppress their autonomy, or block their growth, the result is not mere dissatisfaction but anxiety, depression, burnout, and emotional exhaustion.
Conversely, when employees are trusted, valued, and empowered, mental health improves as reliably as it does with exercise, meditation, or social connection. Respectful work environments nourish cognitive clarity, emotional stability, and long‑term resilience.
💫 The Spiritual Dimension of Meaningful Work
On a spiritual level, meaningful work is essential to a person’s inner vitality. When individuals are allowed to use their talents, develop their potential, and contribute to something larger than themselves, their spirit strengthens. When they are treated as interchangeable or disposable, that inner vitality fractures.
Work that honors human potential nourishes the spirit; work that diminishes it causes deep spiritual harm. Human‑centered work is therefore not just an economic or professional issue—it is a spiritual imperative.
💼 For Those Without Wealth, Work Conditions Become Life Conditions
For people who do not begin life with financial privilege, work conditions effectively become life conditions. When those conditions are unstable, disrespectful, or economically insufficient, the resulting harm is cumulative and profound. This is why inadequate pay, lack of benefits, and absence of mobility are not simply economic issues—they are public‑health failures. They shape the trajectory of a person’s health, stability, and lifespan.
🌈 Healthy Work Is Healthcare
If society truly values health in body, mind, and spirit, then it must value fair wages, respectful leadership, autonomy, benefits, safety, and upward mobility. These are not perks. They are essential health protections and fundamental human rights. They are the conditions under which people thrive, families stabilize, and communities grow strong. Anything less is not sustainable, not ethical, and not compatible with a society that claims to care about human well‑being.
Caring for the Body, Mind & Spirit DrHaroldMandel.org

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The Last Light of Dr. Bernard By Dr. Harold Mandel
Dr. Bernard Tran had once believed that medicine could heal not only bodies but societies. A holistic physician in New York City, he spoke of reforming psychiatry, of freeing the human mind from chemical chains and bureaucratic cages. His clinic was small but radiant with hope — a place
The Last Light of Dr. Bernard By Dr. Harold Mandel
Dr. Bernard Tran had once believed that medicine could heal not only bodies but societies. A holistic physician in New York City, he spoke of reforming psychiatry, of freeing the human mind from chemical chains and bureaucratic cages. His clinic was small but radiant with hope — a place where patients were treated as souls, not diagnoses. He wrote essays, gave talks, and dared to say aloud what others whispered: that America’s psychiatric system had become a machine of control, a gilded cage for the human spirit. But the machine heard him. It began with whispers — colleagues distancing themselves, grants withdrawn, licenses “under review.” Then came the police visits, the false reports, the sudden arrests. He was accused of “instability,” “noncompliance,” “delusional activism.” Each label was a weapon, each hearing a ritual humiliation. The same system he had tried to reform swallowed him whole. He was dragged through psychiatric wards, injected, restrained, and silenced. His name was erased from hospital directories. His accounts frozen. His reputation annihilated. Mia, his Vietnamese girlfriend, had stood by him through the first storms. She had met him years earlier in Hanoi, when he was traveling through Southeast Asia studying traditional medicine. She had admired his compassion, his belief that healing was sacred. But as she watched the United States destroy him — the beatings, the forced drugging, the isolation — something inside her broke. “This country is sick,” she told him one night, her voice trembling. “It kills its healers.” Within weeks, she defected back to the Communist Party of Vietnam, disgusted by the hypocrisy of the nation that had ruined the man she loved. Bernard never blamed her. He only regretted not leaving with her. He had dreamed of a different ending — of retiring to the Florida Keys, fishing for marlin off his sports boat, sipping cocktails at tiki bars as he had with his father before he died. He remembered the first trip at sixteen, flying Eastern Airlines to Miami, the glistening beaches, the laughter, the promise of a life unburdened by cruelty. He had pictured Mia beside him, the sea breeze in her hair, the world finally at peace. Instead, he died half‑naked and dirty, homeless in Columbus Circle, begging for enough money to buy a yogurt. His once brilliant eyes were clouded, his voice reduced to murmurs of forgotten dreams. When his death hit the evening news, it was framed as another “tragedy of untreated mental illness.” But one person saw through the lie — Maria, the newly elected activist mayor of New York City. Watching the broadcast, she whispered, “If I had known his story in time, I would have helped him.” Her words echoed through the city like a confession from a conscience too late. Dr. Bernard’s body was buried in a public grave, but his story refused to die. It spread through underground networks, through activists and journalists who saw in him the reflection of a nation that had lost its soul. He became a symbol — not of madness, but of resistance. The man who tried to heal a country addicted to control. The doctor who fought for freedom of the mind and paid with his own. And somewhere, far across the Pacific, Mia stood on the shores of Vietnam, watching the sunrise over the South China Sea, whispering his name into the wind — a prayer for the man America destroyed, and for the world he had dreamed might still be healed. © DrMandelNews.com — Truth, Humanity, and the Fight for Mental Freedom.






The United States is a nation that can command satellites, manipulate global markets with algorithms, and engineer machines that outthink human beings—yet when it comes to understanding the human mind, it has chosen to operate with the worldview of a medieval theocracy. This is not an accident of history. It is the deliberate architectur
The United States is a nation that can command satellites, manipulate global markets with algorithms, and engineer machines that outthink human beings—yet when it comes to understanding the human mind, it has chosen to operate with the worldview of a medieval theocracy. This is not an accident of history. It is the deliberate architecture of a country where unimaginable technological power and obscene concentrations of wealth coexist with a primitive, punitive ideology about human emotion and human difference. The richest nation in the world has built its social order around a psychiatric mythology that functions less like medicine and more like a state religion—one that demands obedience, enforces conformity, and punishes deviation with chemical and legal force.
Psychiatry’s monopoly over “mental healthcare” in the United States is not a benign professional arrangement; it is a political instrument that has been granted extraordinary authority without the scientific foundation that would justify such power. A field with no objective biological tests, no reproducible biomarkers, and no definitive diagnostic criteria has been elevated to the status of unquestionable arbiter of sanity, safety, and citizenship. And because this monopoly is woven into courts, hospitals, insurance systems, and public policy, it has become a mechanism through which the state can override autonomy, silence dissent, and reshape the boundaries of acceptable thought. To pretend this is merely healthcare is to ignore the machinery of coercion humming beneath the surface.
What are people without their healthy, non‑drugged brains? What is a society when the clarity, sovereignty, and emotional integrity of its citizens can be chemically subdued or bureaucratically pathologized? A population that doubts its own perceptions is easier to manipulate. A population taught that distress is a “chemical imbalance” rather than a rational response to inequality, trauma, or exploitation is far less likely to challenge the systems that benefit from its suffering. And a population that fears psychiatric labeling is far more likely to self‑censor, comply, and retreat from activism. This is not accidental collateral damage—it is the quiet logic of a system that uses medicine as a mask for control.
The United States, despite its technological brilliance, has allowed its laws, institutions, and investment structures to harden into a psychiatric police state. Surveillance is reframed as “monitoring.” Coercion is reframed as “treatment.” Social suffering is reframed as “disorder.” And the public, bombarded with pharmaceutical advertising and institutional messaging, is conditioned to accept this framework as natural, scientific, and inevitable. But there is nothing inevitable about it. This is a political choice—a choice to prioritize control over compassion, profit over autonomy, and obedience over human dignity.
The tragedy is not only that this system masquerades as progress, but that it has been normalized so thoroughly that many Americans no longer recognize the authoritarianism embedded within it. A nation capable of building the most advanced machines in human history has chosen to use its power not to liberate minds, but to police them. And unless this trajectory is confronted with the urgency it demands, the psychiatric state will continue expanding its reach, tightening its grip, and redefining freedom itself—not as a birthright, but as a privilege granted only to those who comply.

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