The Questions Are Not the Problem
It is possible that if we ask âWhat happened to you?â instead of âWhatâs wrong with you?â, we wouldnât see much of a change at all. Those people who are inclined to think of mental health problems as illnesses, as something âwrong,â would be able to explain that what happened to you was the cause of the illness; it produced what is wrong with you. It is much more crucial to understand âWhat is happening for you now?â
Passage
When I was twenty-eight, I had what is commonly referred to as a âpsychotic break.â It was nothing like what I wouldâve imagined, given the cultural stereotypes. It was not in the least nonsensical. There was an exacting inner logic and meaning. Twenty-two years later, I continue to believe in the harrowing greatness of what my younger self went through.
Recovery: Compromise or Liberation?
The 90s were labeled - rather optimistically - as the âdecade of recovery.â More recently, recovery has been placed slap bang central in mental health policy. Is supporting recovery pretty much good common sense? Or is the term being misused to pressure those suffering to behave in certain ways?
False Information in UK Package Inserts for Antidepressants About a Chemical Imbalance
To state something that is blatantly false is not a âparadigm,â it is a lie, plain and simple.
Chemicals Have Consequences: Antidepressants, Pregnancy, and the New York Times
Depressed pregnant women need good care. They should not be made to feel guilty for the choices they make concerning their depression or lectured to by those who donât understand the area or lack compassion for them. In that sense, Andrew Solomon does the public a service by turning his attention and writing talents to the topic of depression and pregnancy this week in the New York Times. However, a crucial part of providing good care to depressed pregnant women is to give them accurate information on the topic. In this sense, Andrew Solomon falls short.
#ADA25 Birthday, Mental Health, Justin Dart and My Crazy Hashtags
This weekend I am celebrating the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act. Let us get a little bit crazy now! I am introducing a new segment where I boycott so-called normality. Our choice, our only choice, and we always have a choice, is what kind of madness we want.
White Paper Presents Case Against Forced Treatment
"I see the white paper as the culmination of my 40+ years of advocacy for people subjected to psychiatric incarceration and forced drugging."
Antidepressants & The Undead
Several of us involved in RxISK.org monitor other groups setting up to offer information on medicines. Some of these, like eHealthMe, offer useful information. As ever, though, pharmaceutical companies are in there early. The Brintellix website is a masterclass in how to appear patient-centered, and patient-friendly. How to move with the times and make the new way of doing things yours.
Defining Recovery
Yesterday, Dr. Daniel Fisher emailed and asked my thoughts with regard to ârecoveryâ. Even before I walked away from prescription-pad-only psychiatric work, others asked me about this. Other treatment providers, designated patients and family members asked what I thought they could expect to happen next and what they should do to make things better. I told them that chemical interventions are not the only, or even the essential, tool for recovery.
Why Social Isolation Leads to Inflammation
We are wired for community. If we disconnect, our bodies will call us back to the sense of human connection that we are wired for, using the unexpected language of inflammation.
The Right to Profit vs. The Right to Know
For years, drug companies have sought to boost sales by hyping the benefits of new drugs while downplaying their risks. A couple of years ago the European Medicines Agency (equivalent of the FDA) set up a program to grant public access to all clinical trial results used in the approval of new drugs. The program was hailed by activists and researchers around the world as a big step forward for patient safety. Now AbbVie, along with another U.S. drug firm called Intermune, has filed a lawsuit to stop the release of clinical trials on their drugs, effectively shutting the whole program down.
A Milestone in the Battle for Truth in Drug Safety: Study 329’s Final Chapter...
Arguably the most controversial drug study ever, Study 329, concluded that paroxetine was a safe and effective medication for treating major depression in adolescents. It concluded that paroxetine was a safe and effective medication for treating major depression in adolescents, and it is still widely cited in the medical literature. Though GlaxoSmithKlineâs promotion based on Study 329 resulted in the biggest fine in corporate history, the study remains unretracted.
DSM Led Us Far Astray. Life Story Is the Path to Truth.
When the DSM-5 came out six years after the study was published, it ignored the evidence that psychological injuries caused 88% of âdepressionâ in adulthood. It wasn't just this study that was sidelined. All the research that linked childhood trauma to later episodes of âdepressionâ was ignored as well.
Rx Resilience: Cultivating the Ability to Bounce Back
In many respects, resilience is the most important sign of health. This is true in physical health, and even more so in mental health. Resilience is what I spend my working hours trying to help others achieve. Resilience is what I have spent my own life discovering, harnessing, and finally thriving with. Quite simply stated, resilience is the ability to bounce back or recover from the trials and tribulations that living as a human being inevitably comes with.
Part V: The Michelle Carter Texting Trial Becomes a Witch Hunt
In Parts I-IV, I discuss how the DA succeeded in gaining the conviction by means of highly emotional and at times misleading and untruthful manipulations in public and in the courtroom. Here I want to look more closely at the DAâs motivation and other activities. Was it a personal vendetta?
The Mystic of Ireland: An Homage to Ivor Browne
Ivor Browne fearlessly challenged what he saw as a dehumanizing system, liberating many from institutional care and pioneering new experimental therapies. He developed innovative community models and most of his groundbreaking work took place outside of, and in spite of, orthodox thinking.
Greed Disguised as Science: How a Multitude of Factors Led to the Opioid Crisis
Opioids are now the leading cause of mortality from overdose, accounting for 91 deaths every day. The context and key players that created and contributed to the opioid epidemic must be brought into sharp focus if we are to have any hope of stemming the tide of this public health crisis.
Duration of Untreated Psychosis Revisited: Response to the Goff Paper
Based on the studies cited, it seems hard to support the assertion that âearly initiation of antipsychotics may improve long-term course of the illness.â This raises an urgent question about initial treatment. Doesnât it make sense to try to capture all of those individuals who might get through a psychosis without drugs?
I Set Up a Suicide Crisis Centre to Provide the Opposite of What I...
Our approach is to openly care about our clients and empower them as much as possible. It's vital that clients know we care about their survival.
Former NIMH Directorâs New Book: Why, With More Treatment, Have Suicides and Mental Distress...
Psychiatryâs worsening outcomes despite increased treatment should provoke the consideration that a paradigm shift is necessary.
Funder Fragility and Forced Collaboration
Dear Funder, You say you want to work on health equity but can you walk the talk? Do you care about hearing the actual community? Do you REALLY want data-driven, accurate info to balance harm vs benefit? Or do you just want to keep your status quo? Dear Funder, Don't be fragile. Move beyond your blind spots. Our people matter.
âDepression Among the Elderly Must be Prioritizedâ
Older people are the group that gets the most antidepressants in Sweden. 17 % of those over 65 used antidepressants in 2019, and in the group over 75 the medication comprised 26 % of women and 16 % of men, according to the statistics from National Board of Medicines statistics.
Away From Psychiatrization: Towards Socio-Ecological Wellbeing in the Community
The modern notion of poor mental health and how to respond to it is an escalating series of biomedical interventions that donât actually solve the underlying problem.
Conferring Legitimacy on the Counterhegemonic
Those of us who are radicals are commonly struggling to find ways to confer legitimacy on positions which substantially challenge an oppressive status quo. In this article, I will be exploring how to accomplish such feats successfully.
Pilgrim’s Progress: From Young Madman to Old Therapist
I'll begin this chapter of my personal odyssey through madness and the vocation it created of my life as a therapist specializing in madness, with...