Editorial

Editorial

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.70205/jptmh.v2i2.17035

Abstract

Some time ago, a student shared an anecdote with me that caught my attention. She told me that in the house where she was staying—shared with other students from our university—there was a common practice: watching television series at twice its normal speed. In this accelerated version, the students moved from one episode to the next, devouring entire seasons. My first reaction was one of disbelief. Why would someone choose to watch something in this way, losing virtually everything that gives a narrative its meaning? What remains after this form of binge-watching, when settings, characters, stories, and contexts rush past the viewer?

The answer I arrive at is simple: information. Knowing what comes next, finding out what happens afterward—everything reduced to the smallest possible units of data.

Author Biography

Moisés Magos, Founder and General director of the Journal of Physiotherapy in Mental Health.

Physiotherapist, specializing in Mental Health and Psychiatry. 

Has experience in clinical work with diverse mental health issues and vulnerable populations, including individuals experiencing homelessness, addiction, schizophrenia patients, trauma survivors... among others.

Founder and General director of the Journal of Physiotherapy in Mental Health.

Currently leading several research projects in Physiotherapy in Mental Health and Gender-Based Violence

He is the Bachelor’s Program Coordinator in Physiotherapy, at the Anáhuac University México

 

Published

2025-12-31 — Updated on 2026-02-23

Versions

How to Cite

Magos, M. (2026). Editorial. Journal of Physiotherapy in Mental Health, 2(2), 8–10. https://doi.org/10.70205/jptmh.v2i2.17035 (Original work published December 31, 2025)
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