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Headlines of Today's Posts

Man with hands against glass, out of focus, looking distressed

Are “Trauma/Addiction Experts” and Psychiatrists Misleading Us?

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“Experts” refer to an ill-defined concept of “trauma,” but unique traumatic experiences should not be generalized.
Photo of an open hand on a deep red background with scattered white pills

Much of U.S. Healthcare Is Broken: How to Fix It (Chapter 2, Part 6)

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Les Ruthven addresses the research showing that psychiatric hospitalization increases suicidality.
Climber snaps the safety carabiner on the rope. A climber on a cliff ties a safety knot

RADAR and the Dignity of Risk-Taking

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The goal may not be to eliminate risk, but to respect the risk that people are willing to take, and to help make tapering as safe as possible.
Unhappy Woman In Converstion With Friend Or Counsellor

“Get Over It”? A Response to Empower Parents to Repair Instead of Victim Blame

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An epidemic of children blaming their parents in therapy? In my 20 years as a psychologist, I've seen the opposite.
3D illustration of a matrix with tablets and the words risks and benefits. Concept of clinical trials results

Two Out of Three Find Antidepressant Effects Not Worth Burdens

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New study reveals: 2 in 3 people need more than the current antidepressant benefits to consider them worthwhile.

The Dangers of Precision Medicine: Mental Health Is Not a Battlefield

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Rather than a war to be fought within individuals, we should envision mental health as a garden to be carefully nurtured.
Pattern of blue and yellow pills or tablets on a pink background. concept of medicine, pharmacy and coronavirus. copy space

SSRI Withdrawal has Social, Cognitive, and Emotional Consequences

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New research finds that the non-physical aspects of withdrawal from SSRIs are often overlooked.
A male doctor looks slightly angry at a woman who looks sad in profile

“Impairment: Says Who?”: The Fundamental Question of Mental Health Treatment

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The criterion of "impairment" is defined not by the person seeking treatment, but by other people: parents, clinicians, courts, employers, and so on.
Miniature hazmat team inspects hazardous pills

Much of U.S. Healthcare Is Broken: How to Fix It (Chapter 2, Part 5)

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Les Ruthven addresses increases in suicide and homicide caused by antidepressant drugs.
AI-generated image of a snowy yeti and an ice-crusted double-helix

Searching for the “Psychiatric Yeti”: Schizophrenia Is Not Genetic

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After decades of study, billions of dollars spent, and thousands of studies conducted, the failure to identify any genes for schizophrenia should definitively put to rest the notion that schizophrenia is a genetic disorder, according to E. Fuller Torrey.
3d illustration of pawns over black background with red, orange and green circles

Toxic Interactions: Social Circumstances and Well-Being

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Social circumstances are indisputably connected to psychological well-being, but this has gained no traction in policy and service provision.

The Psychological Humanities Manifesto: An Interview with Mark Freeman

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Justin Karter interviews narrative and philosophical psychologist Mark Freeman about his vision for the future of psychology.
Lonely, suffering man in a crowd of people who do not notice him.

Accounting for Mental Disorder: Time for a Paradigm Shift

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Many people continue to be victimized by psychiatry’s adherence to a model that exists to satisfy guild interests, not science.
pills and money

Much of U.S. Healthcare Is Broken: How to Fix It (Chapter 2, Part 4)

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Les Ruthven addresses a ghostwritten study claiming effectiveness of antidepressants for children and adolescents.

Arrested Development: Britney Spears’ Memoir Is a Survivor’s Tale of Generational Trauma, Psychiatric Abuse,...

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Miranda Spencer discusses Britney Spears' new memoir and the harms of conservatorship.

Giving Caregivers a Platform: Sherita, Mother of Tony

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This is the story of Sherita and her son Tony, and her efforts to help him following years of psychiatric drugs and hospitalizations.
Suffering young man on couch and compassionate woman.

What Helped—and What Didn’t Help—My Recovery

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In order to recover, it was necessary to give up the psychiatric treatment system, and the idea that I need something from that system, that I belong there.
Illustration depicting a face with hypnotized eyes, strings like a puppet

It’s Health’s Illusions I Recall, I Really Don’t Know Health at All

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There is a core concept shaping the ‘market’ in health, the concept of an assay, that few doctors or patients understand.
3D render of placebo pills in row

Much of U.S. Healthcare Is Broken: How to Fix It (Chapter 2, Part 3)

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Les Ruthven addresses the lack of evidence for antidepressants being better than placebo, as well as a note about ECT.
Woman holding a smartphone and touching the screen, she is using mobile apps, vintage style collage

Therapy by App: A Clinical Psychologist Tries BetterHelp

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Revealing concerns about BetterHelp’s ability to provide quality, secure treatment—and the unresolved tensions in the science of psychotherapy that services like BetterHelp exploit.
Vector illustration of a person looking upset, a dark ghost appears to torment them with red hands

A Psychotic Experience can Help to Process Difficult Memories

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The patient is talking, if sometimes more or less metaphorically, about real experiences. Hallucinations and delusions are not meaningless.

Winding Back the Clock: What If the STAR*D Investigators Had Told the Truth?

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The STAR*D Study has been cited as real-world evidence of the efficacy of antidepressants. In truth, it told of a failed paradigm of care.
A black couple holds hands out of focus in background. In foreground, a therapist's hands on a clipboard taking notes.

De-privatizing Our Relationships

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I’m glad we’re chipping away at the cracks in psychiatry and psychology and de-privatizing our lives.
Miniature people - The worker at work with medicine pills

Much of U.S. Healthcare Is Broken: How to Fix It (Chapter 2, Part 2)

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Les Ruthven addresses the scientific literature on antidepressant efficacy and FDA approval.

Mad in America’s 10 Most Popular Articles in 2023

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A roundup of Mad in America's most read blogs and personal stories of 2023 as chosen by our readers.