Dr. Astrid Heathcote

Dr. Astrid Heathcote I am Dr. Astrid Heathcote, world-known clinical psychologist on a mission to make your Life better!

My favorite place, a day at the beach will cure any ailment, go ahead, take a break, you need one!
12/18/2023

My favorite place, a day at the beach will cure any ailment, go ahead, take a break, you need one!

12/01/2023
11/20/2023

Loss can be overwhelming. But there are tools to help you reclaim your power and peace.

On (8/30), tune in to Dr. Thema’s Instagram Live for talks featuring special guests.

For more tools, visit https://www.apa.org/topics/grief/tools

11/20/2023

A growing body of research suggests mental health providers should treat the menstrual cycle as a "fifth vital sign."

Asking patients about their periods can help psychologists improve diagnoses and develop treatments that work: https://at.apa.org/2yk

11/20/2023

The APA 2024 Call for Proposals is open! Share your work with the field—submit proposals for sessions, posters, continuing education workshops, and "Psych Science in 3" presentations before January 10th.

Learn more: https://at.apa.org/544921

11/07/2023

Cheyenne men. ca. 1880. Photo by Cosand & Mosser. Source - Heard Museum.
The Cheyenne people are Plains Algonquian speakers whose ancestors lived in the Great Lakes region of North America. They began moving westward in the 16th or 17th century. In 1680, they met the French explorer René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle (1643–1687) on the Illinois River, south of what would become the city of Peoria. Their name, "Cheyenne," is a Sioux word, "Shaiena," which roughly means "people who speak in a strange tongue." In their own language, they are Tsétsêhéstaestse, sometimes spelled Tsistsistas, meaning "the people."
Oral history, as well as archaeological evidence, suggests that they moved into southwest Minnesota and the eastern Dakotas, where they planted corn and built permanent villages. Possible sites have been identified along the Missouri River, and they certainly lived at the Biesterfeldt site on the Sheyenne River in eastern North Dakota between 1724 and 1780. An outlier report is that of a Spanish official in Santa Fe, who as early as 1695 reported seeing a small group of "Chiyennes."
Around 1760, while living in the Black Hills region of South Dakota, they met the Só'taeo'o ("People Left Behind," also spelled Suhtaios or Suhtais), who spoke a similar Algonquian language, and the Cheyenne decided to align with them, eventually growing and expanding their territory.

10/19/2023

Address

10429 S. 51st Street, Suite 201
Phoenix, AZ
85044

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Dr. Astrid Heathcote posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Dr. Astrid Heathcote:

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram