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DrMandelMall.com
MandelNews.com
Holistic Pulse
Natural Mental Health
Music for Mental Health
DrMandelNews.com
Psychiatric Reality Check
Rythmia
The Texas Torture Case
About Dr Harold Mandel
Legal notice
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Dr Harold Mandel

Medical Heretic & Holistic Physician

I am a New York-based virtual holistic physician, medical journalist, and author dedicated to defending individual rights in healthcare. 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 four complementary 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 while supporting bodily autonomy and informed decision-making.

Journalistic Advocacy: As an independent reporter at MandelNews.com, I investigate and report on issues involving psychiatry, healthcare, and human rights. My goal is to encourage thoughtful discussion and ensure that human rights remain at the forefront of medical discourse.

Creative Advocacy: Through speculative fiction short stories, I explore questions of ethics, freedom, institutional power, and the resilience of the human spirit. These imaginative narratives invite readers to reflect on complex social and medical issues from new perspectives.

Children's Literature: I also write original children's short stories that celebrate kindness, curiosity, imagination, compassion, and a love of learning. These uplifting tales are designed to entertain young readers while encouraging positive values and creativity.





Daily Holistic Pulse

Heart Disease Awareness and Natural Ways to Maintain a Healthy Heart for a Long, Vibrant Life

Heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States, yet it is also one of the most preventable chronic conditions. Most people develop risk factors slowly and silently over many years, which makes awareness and early lifestyle choices essential. Understanding how heart disease develops is the first step toward protectin

Heart disease remains the leading cause of death in the United States, yet it is also one of the most preventable chronic conditions. Most people develop risk factors slowly and silently over many years, which makes awareness and early lifestyle choices essential. Understanding how heart disease develops is the first step toward protecting yourself. Coronary artery disease, the most common form, occurs when plaque gradually builds inside the arteries, narrowing the passageway that supplies blood to the heart. This process is influenced by inflammation, high blood pressure, elevated LDL cholesterol, smoking, diabetes, sedentary habits, poor diet, chronic stress, and inadequate sleep. Because these factors accumulate quietly, prevention must begin long before symptoms appear.

A natural approach to heart health begins with nourishment. Whole, unprocessed foods support the cardiovascular system in ways that manufactured foods simply cannot. Leafy greens help blood vessels relax and function smoothly, berries provide antioxidants that calm inflammation, nuts and seeds supply healthy fats and minerals, and fatty fish offer omega‑3s that help stabilize heart rhythm. Olive oil supports healthy cholesterol balance, while beans and lentils help regulate blood sugar and reduce vascular strain. When meals center around foods that come from nature rather than factories, the heart receives the nutrients it needs to stay resilient. Avoiding ultra‑processed foods, trans fats, and excessive sugar is equally important, as these substances inflame the cardiovascular system and accelerate plaque formation.

Movement is another cornerstone of heart health. The heart is a muscle, and like any muscle, it grows stronger with regular use. Daily physical activity improves circulation, lowers blood pressure, and enhances metabolic balance. You don’t need a gym membership or a complicated routine; even brisk walking, gentle cycling, swimming, yoga, or light strength training can make a profound difference. Consistency matters more than intensity. Short movement breaks throughout the day—ten minutes here and there—can be just as beneficial as longer workouts when practiced regularly.

Emotional well‑being plays a powerful role in cardiovascular health. Chronic stress elevates cortisol, raises blood pressure, disrupts sleep, and fuels inflammation. A calm nervous system protects the heart as effectively as any dietary change. Practices such as deep breathing, meditation, nature walks, journaling, stretching, music, and creative expression help restore balance and reduce the physiological burden of stress. When the mind settles, the heart follows.

Restorative sleep is another essential pillar. Adults need seven to nine hours of quality sleep each night, and chronic sleep deprivation increases the risk of hypertension, obesity, and diabetes—three major drivers of heart disease. A consistent bedtime, a cool and dark sleeping environment, limited screen exposure before bed, and mindful caffeine intake all support deeper, more restorative rest. Sleep is not a luxury; it is a biological requirement for cardiovascular stability.

Maintaining a healthy weight naturally supports the heart by reducing strain on the circulatory system. Weight management is not about appearance but about reducing the workload placed on the heart. Whole‑food nutrition, daily movement, stress reduction, hydration, and adequate sleep work together to create sustainable balance. Extreme diets and rapid weight‑loss schemes often backfire, stressing the body and disrupting metabolism. Gentle, steady habits create lasting change.

Blood pressure and cholesterol deserve ongoing attention. Natural approaches such as reducing sodium, increasing potassium‑rich foods, eating soluble fiber, incorporating heart‑supportive herbs like garlic and turmeric, staying hydrated, and practicing relaxation techniques help maintain healthy levels. Regular checkups ensure that changes are detected early, when they are easiest to address.

Avoiding smoking and limiting alcohol intake are among the most powerful heart‑protective choices a person can make. Smoking damages blood vessels and accelerates plaque buildup, while excessive alcohol raises blood pressure and weakens the heart muscle. Choosing clean lungs and moderation creates a foundation for long‑term cardiovascular strength.

Longevity is not simply about adding years to life but about adding vitality to those years. A healthy heart supports strong energy, mental clarity, emotional stability, mobility, independence, and joy. Natural heart care is a lifelong partnership with your body. Every whole‑food meal, every walk, every moment of calm, every night of restorative sleep becomes part of a quiet, cumulative investment in your future. Heart disease may be common, but it is not inevitable. With awareness and daily natural habits, you can protect your heart, strengthen your body, and live a long, vibrant life rooted in wellness and prevention.





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ChildRen's Books Available on Amazon

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Speculative Fiction Short Story

Emma of the Ward

 Emma Lorne carried herself with the rigid poise of someone who believed she was safeguarding civilization. As a senior psychiatric nurse at the University Hospital in Philadelphia, she had spent years absorbing the culture of her department—its quiet hierarchies, its whispered judgments, its unspoken conviction that dissenters were dange

 Emma Lorne carried herself with the rigid poise of someone who believed she was safeguarding civilization. As a senior psychiatric nurse at the University Hospital in Philadelphia, she had spent years absorbing the culture of her department—its quiet hierarchies, its whispered judgments, its unspoken conviction that dissenters were dangerous. When Dr. Howy began raising questions about the credibility of psychiatry, she felt the tremor immediately. His early essays circulated among young activists, his talks drew curious crowds, and his insistence that mental health care needed transparency unsettled the very institution Emma had devoted her life to defending.

She watched him from afar at first, studying his mannerisms, his earnestness, his naïve belief that reform could come from within. He was still young in his activist journey, still hopeful, still imagining psychiatry as a field that could be redeemed. That naïveté made him vulnerable. Emma understood vulnerability better than most. She understood how to exploit it.

One Friday evening, at a popular downtown happy hour spot where young professionals gathered after work, Emma made her move. She approached him with a warm smile, a gentle laugh, and a carefully crafted story about her own “disillusionment” with the system. She worried he might recoil when he learned she was a psychiatric nurse, but instead he leaned in, intrigued by the idea that someone on the inside might share his desire for change. Their connection grew quickly, fueled by his idealism and her calculated charm. Within months, they were inseparable. Within a year, they were married.

On the night of the wedding, while guests lingered over champagne and congratulations, Emma slipped away for twenty minutes to meet Dr. Irvin, the powerful Chairman of Psychiatry. Their conversation was quiet, efficient, and deeply strategic. Emma’s marriage, she explained, was an opportunity—one that could neutralize a rising critic before he became a genuine threat.

During their honeymoon in San Juan, the pattern continued. While Dr. Howy spent a day on a dive trip, Emma met privately with Dr. Trevor, a young psychiatric resident from Puerto Rico. She spoke of her new husband with a dismissive shrug, describing him as pitiable, fragile, intellectually burnt out. She claimed his emotional sensitivity was a symptom of atypical schizophrenia, his bursts of passion evidence of manic episodes. The narrative was cruel, but it was effective. Her lovers listened. They believed her. They repeated her words to others.

By the time the couple returned to Philadelphia, the game plan was fully in motion. Emma began subtly undermining Dr. Howy’s credibility—first socially, then professionally, then medically. She framed his advocacy as instability. She framed his compassion as pathology. Eventually, she succeeded in railroading him into a mental hospital, using her institutional connections to ensure the process was swift and hostile. The divorce that followed was equally brutal. His career shattered. His reputation dimmed. The activist community whispered about him with uncertainty now, unsure whether he was a visionary or a troubled man who had flown too close to the sun.

Yet Dr. Howy was not finished.

After months of quiet recovery, he planned a short return trip to San Juan—this time not with Emma, but with Julia, an investigative reporter who had taken interest in his story. Julia had seen the pattern before: institutions protecting themselves, dissenters punished, narratives twisted until truth became unrecognizable. She believed him. More importantly, she believed the public needed to hear what had been done.

As their plane lifted off toward Puerto Rico, Dr. Howy looked out the window at the receding lights of Philadelphia. His life had been torn apart, his advocacy nearly destroyed, but something inside him remained unbroken. He would rebuild. He would expose what had happened. And with Julia’s help, he would return to the fight—not as a reformer hoping to fix psychiatry from within, but as a survivor determined to reveal the machinery of cruelty that had nearly consumed him.

The dystopia he had once only suspected was now undeniable. And he was ready to confront it.

A Speculative Fiction Dystopian Short Story
by Dr Harold Mandel









  

The Psychiatric Counter-Narrative

America's Psychiatric Iron Curtain: The Socioeconomic Destruction Hidden Behind "Mental Healthcare"

America's mental healthcare system speaks endlessly about recovery, compassion, and wellness. Yet for countless individuals, the reality they describe is something very different: the systematic destruction of the economic foundations upon which genuine mental health depends.

One of the greatest misconceptions promoted in discussions of me

America's mental healthcare system speaks endlessly about recovery, compassion, and wellness. Yet for countless individuals, the reality they describe is something very different: the systematic destruction of the economic foundations upon which genuine mental health depends.

One of the greatest misconceptions promoted in discussions of mental health is that money is somehow secondary to emotional well-being. While wealth alone does not guarantee happiness, financial security is undeniably one of the pillars that supports a healthy and fulfilling life. To pretend otherwise ignores both common experience and a substantial body of research linking financial strain with poorer mental and physical health outcomes.

Secure housing, nutritious food, quality healthcare, reliable transportation, education, recreation, travel, meaningful work, and the freedom to pursue one's interests all require financial resources. These are not indulgences. They are the building blocks of human dignity and opportunity.

Yet psychiatric labeling and intervention often contributes to lasting socioeconomic harm. Psychiatric records, stigma, and certain treatment practices may affect employment, insurance, and social relationships, leaving some individuals facing barriers that persist long after a crisis has ended.

This raises a fundamental question: if an intervention intended to improve mental health contributes to the loss of the very resources that support long-term well-being, has recovery truly been advanced?

A person stripped of a career loses more than a paycheck. They may lose independence, confidence, professional identity, retirement savings, social connections, and the ability to provide comfortably for themselves and their families. Financial insecurity often creates chronic stress that can intensify emotional distress rather than relieve it.

The contrast is difficult to ignore. Consider two people facing identical episodes of major depression. One struggles in unsafe housing while worrying about eviction, unpaid bills, and basic necessities. The other recovers in a stable home with privacy, supportive relationships, financial security, and access to voluntary care. Their diagnoses may be identical, but their prospects for recovery are shaped by profoundly different environments.

Environment simply matters. Recovery is influenced not only by symptoms but also by safety, stability, autonomy, and access to opportunity.

This is why preserving a person's livelihood should be a central objective of mental healthcare. Helping people remain employed, connected to their communities, and economically independent is important.

Furthermore psychiatric hospitalization is not a good therapeutic setting. Many former patients describe hospital stays as restrictive, stigmatizing, or traumatizing, while others report that community-based supports, stable housing, family involvement, meaningful employment, and voluntary treatment better supported their recovery. 

Mental health cannot be reduced to a checklist of symptoms or diagnostic labels. It is reflected in whether a person can build a meaningful life—maintain relationships, pursue rewarding work, contribute to society, enjoy recreation, and live with dignity and hope. No healthcare system should casually separate people from those opportunities.

If America truly wishes to improve mental health, it must recognize that economic opportunity is not the enemy of recovery—it is often one of its strongest allies. Policies and practices that unnecessarily undermine employment, financial stability, and personal independence risk creating barriers that can deepen suffering rather than relieve it.

The measure of compassionate care is not simply whether a diagnosis has been assigned or a treatment completed. It is whether the individual emerges with greater freedom, greater opportunity, and a stronger capacity to build the life they choose.

A society that values mental health should seek to protect those foundations—not erode them. 


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