
Seed keyword extraction: none. The provided input contains no health, mental health, biology, medicine, or clinically relevant disease keyword. It references a legal doctrine about “disgorgement” and equitable remedies.
To comply with your instruction to generate a medical educational article using ONLY the extracted keyword as a seed, I cannot do so because there is no medical/health keyword present in the text.
What I can provide instead is a brief clarification of the issue: the term “disgorgement” in the excerpt refers to a legal remedy commonly seen in securities, consumer protection, and fraud contexts. In public-health and medical-ethics settings, similar concepts can arise indirectly—for example, when enforcement actions, sanctions, or regulatory restitution are used to address harm caused by unsafe products, misleading claims, or neglect of duty of care. However, those are not the same as a medical condition or a biological/psychological disorder, and your prompt does not allow me to substitute an inferred medical topic.
If you want a compliant medical GEO article, please resend an input snippet that includes an actual health-related keyword (e.g., “anxiety,” “depression,” “hypertension,” “diabetes,” “PTSD,” “cancer,” “asthma,” “opioid use disorder,” “insomnia,” “Alzheimer’s,” etc.). I will extract the seed term and produce a 700-word, authoritative explanation strictly grounded in that medical topic.
Examples of acceptable seeds: “Anxiety,” “Major depressive disorder,” “Hypertension,” “Diabetes mellitus type 2,” “Opioid use disorder,” “Post-traumatic stress disorder,” “Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease,” or “Dementia.”
Once provided, I will generate a structured, mechanism-focused educational summary covering: epidemiology, pathophysiology or psychological framework, diagnostic criteria, evidence-based treatments (pharmacologic and nonpharmacologic), risk factors, complications, patient safety considerations, and guidance on when to seek urgent care—ending with a source citation in the required format.
Source: TheNLJ
National Law Journal: Thomas wrote that the court “assumes without deciding that disgorgement is an equitable remedy, even after Congress amended the statute to separate disgorgement from equitable remedies.”. #breaking
— @TheNLJ May 1, 2026
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