Yearly Archives: 2019

suicidal

How “Safe Messaging” Gaslights Suicidal People

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Suicide prevention constructs a reality in which the problems of suicide lie within suicidal people. Sanity is constructed around wanting to live, insanity around wanting to die. Within this paradigm, the suicidal person can never be trusted. They are fragile, vulnerable, demanding protection, surveillance, and management.

A Psychiatric Diagnosis Is Not a Disease

11
From Psychology Today: Here is the circular logic: How do we know a patient has depression? Because they have the symptoms. Why are they having symptoms? Because they have depression.

Craig Wiener – ADHD: A Return to Psychology

3
On MIA Radio this week, Miranda Spencer, Mad in America's Parent Resources editor, interviews Dr. Craig Wiener, a licensed psychologist who specializes in the treatment of children, adolescents, and families. He discusses approaches to helping children with "ADHD" behavior that don't involve drugs and constant monitoring.

Improving Mental Health Research through Community Participation

1
Clinical mental health research that includes community participation circumvents problems with traditional research.

Does Psychology Have a Conflict-of-Interest Problem?

0
From Nature: Speaking fees for "celebrity" psychologists "begin at $10,000 and can go as high as $100,000," says American motivational speaker Dave Sheffield.

Toward a Critical Self-Reflective Psychiatry: An Interview with Pat Bracken

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MIA’s Justin Karter interviews critical psychiatrist and philosopher Pat Bracken about the necessity of challenging received wisdom.

Helping People Come Off Medication—Bad for Business?

26
The message in journal editorials, comments and opinion articles, is that 'this new study shows great promise' and that 'we need further research'. My interpretation is: 'give us the money and we will be happy to carry this out'. With the implied promise that, once this new research has been done, we will get a better world. Sadly this is rarely ever the case.

How Community Environments Impact Mental Health

1
Drawing on the relationship between nature and wellbeing, researchers propose a model to improve community environments to improve mental health.
eugenics

Psychiatric Eugenics Then and Now—You Betcha It’s Still Happening

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Most are oblivious to the fact that psychiatric eugenics initiatives continued to exist—and beyond that, to flourish—long after the end of what is normally thought of as “the eugenics era” (roughly, late nineteen century to 1945). Sadly, we are not learning from history what we direly need to learn.

Rock Bottom: When You Are in Your Darkest Moment

12
The one big lie that your mind will tell you when you are in that dark night: I am never going to feel okay again. This is the lie that drives people to self-destruction. It’s also the lie that keeps dynamic, complicated individuals captive in a system that says: your struggle is a permanent and defining feature of your brokenness.

55 Steps: A Battle Cry Against Forced ‘Treatment’ for Us All

0
From Rachel Waddingham - Behind the Labels: We should work together to resurrect this hard-hitting film from 2018, starring Helena Bonham Carter and Hilary Swank, that has been effectively buried.

The Complexity of the Indigenous Historical Trauma Concept

6
Researchers explore how the processes of colonization may impact the well-being of indigenous populations today.

Antidepressants Blunt Ability to Feel Empathy

28
A new study suggests that taking antidepressants impairs empathy, while the experience of depression itself does not.

Why the Mainstream Media Has Failed to Tell Truths About Psychiatry

1
From Truthout: Several factors have combined to prime the mainstream media to embrace the conventional narrative and to discount research and critiques that challenged it.

FDA Approval of First Digital Pill Based on ‘Weak Evidence’

0
From Medscape: Investigators found that the data submitted to the FDA were limited to trials that only assessed whether patients could use the product as intended.
yellow wood therapy

Two Roads Diverged in a Yellow Wood: A Tale of Psychotherapy

15
Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, and not knowing which one to take, I stood straight, watching my life pass me by. But in therapy, I began to feel the knots of my life come alive inside me. The point is not just to talk, it is to feel your story inside, to hear your silences, and to realize who you are… and who you can be.
radical mental health

We’ve Been Too Patient: Voices from Radical Mental Health

10
LD Green and Kelechi Ubozoh are co-editors of We’ve Been Too Patient: Voices from Radical Mental Health, published by North Atlantic Books, distributed by Penguin Random House, and released July 9, 2019. In a brief interview by email, we asked them about their creation of this work.
Mind Fixers by Anne Harrington cropped

An “Even-Handed” History of Psychiatry as Damning as the “Polemics”?

13
Where Professor Harrington's book seems to differ from books that others might call polemics is that she does not attribute nefarious motives to the psychiatric establishment. I worry that she underplays the ways in which the current model causes harm, but I support her suggestion for a retraction of psychiatry's scope.

Why I Am Not a Psychiatrist

1
From the International Institute for Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal: Scott Waterman, Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus at the University of Vermont, writes about his personal journey through psychiatry over the past several decades.

Dr. Gabor Maté on Alienation, Inner Resilience, and Our True Nature

0
From Bioneers: We have the capacity to heal both ourselves and the planet by reconnecting with our true nature as empathic, nurturing, social beings.

Could Stress Turn Our Gut Bacteria Against Us?

1
From Psychology Today: New animal research shows that social stress alters both the composition and behavior of gut bacteria, leading to self-destructive changes in the immune system.

Structural Competency Training May Increase Empathic Connections in Psychiatry Residents

6
Identification, discussion of neighborhood structures cultivates connection, illustrates patients’ subjective experiences.
Janet Foner

We Lost a Giant Today: A Tribute to Janet Foner

10
Janet Foner, a longtime mental health liberation activist, passed away on July 24, 2019. Many people do not know that Janet helped form the very early Alternatives Conferences in the U.S. and she co-founded MindFreedom International and continued serving on its board to this day. Here we honor her wisdom, tenacity and courage.

Review Finds FDA Approval of Digital Antipsychotic Misguided

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The approval of the digital antipsychotic may open the door for more pharmaceutical company profits without evidence of benefits to patients.

Study Explores Extreme States Associated with Meditation

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Biomedical and alternative discourses frame people’s experiences of extreme mental states associated with meditation in different ways.