Events in May 2022

MonMonday TueTuesday WedWednesday ThuThursday FriFriday SatSaturday SunSunday
April 25, 2022(1 event)

Free Webinar: The Power of Peer Respites

Free Webinar: The Power of Peer Respites


April 25, 2022

In this webinar, Oryx Cohen will present on the power of peer-run respites. During his talk he will share his personal story about how a peer respite helped him in his healing journey, share a clip from the award-winning documentary he co-produced called Healing Voices, and present on the basics of what a peer respite is and the research behind them. The presentation will be interactive and there will be time for participants to share their experiences as well.

The webinar is free; 1.5 CEU hours are available for $15 granted through Louisiana Office of Behavioral Health

Free Webinar: The Power of Peer Respites

April 26, 2022
April 27, 2022
April 28, 2022
April 29, 2022
April 30, 2022
May 1, 2022
May 2, 2022
May 3, 2022
May 4, 2022
May 5, 2022
May 6, 2022(1 event)

Withdrawal from Psychiatric Drugs, Online International Conference

Withdrawal from Psychiatric Drugs, Online International Conference


May 6, 2022 May 7, 2022

This is the first large-scale annual conference hosted by the International Institute for Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal. It brings together experts from across the world to discuss the practical details of withdrawal, alternatives to medication, and how to change the narratives surrounding psychiatric drugs.

Who is this conference for?

Anyone with a personal or professional interest is welcome at this conference, including those who are on or coming off psychiatric drugs, friends and family members, psychological therapists and other professional supporters, clinicians and prescribers. Although the conference talks will cover topics like research and clinical practice, all the talks will be accessible to a general audience.

At the end of the conference, there will be an opportunity for those who wish to connect with a small group of other attendees in a Zoom-based conversation. We support connections and conversations across these diverse groups.

Programme:

Please note this conference is over two days - Friday 6th May & Saturday 7th May.

7am-10.30am PDT

10am-1.30pm EDT

3pm-6.30pm BST

4pm-7.30pm CEST

5pm-8.30pm EEST

For this programme, times are advertised in BST (British Summer Time) - to calculate your local time, here's a useful link.

 

Friday 6th May

John Read - Introduction (3pm)

Carina Håkansson - Experiences from the Front Line (3.15pm)

Break (4pm)

Bob Whitaker - What's Wrong with Psychiatric Drugs? (4.30pm)

Break (5.15pm)

Laura Delano - The Reality of Withdrawal (5.45pm)

 

Saturday 7th May

Joanna Moncrieff - The Myth of the Chemical Cure (3pm)

Break (3.45pm)

Magnus Hald - Drug-Free Treatment in Norway (4.15pm)

Break (5pm, 30 mins)

Optional Discussion Groups (5.30pm)

Closing Remarks (6.25pm)

Speakers - each speaker will talk for 30 mins, followed by 15 minutes to answer questions from the audience.

Optional Discussion Groups - an opportunity for those who wish to connect with other attendees and reflect on the conference in a Zoom meeting. This Zoom link will be shared throughout both days of the conference.

Speakers:

 Withdrawal from Psychiatric Drugs image

Carina Häkansson is the founder and leader of Family Care Foundation for more than 25 years. With a PhD in psychology she is a licensed psychotherapist, lecturer and writer. Carina is a co-founder of IIPDW.

Robert Whitaker is the author of four books, and co-author of a fifth, three of which tell of the history of psychiatry. In 2010, his Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness won the U.S. Investigative Reporters and Editors book award for best investigative journalism. Prior to writing books, he worked as a science reporter at the Albany Times Union newspaper in New York. He is the founder of madinamerica.com, a website that features research news and blogs by an international group of writers interested in “rethinking psychiatry.”

Laura Delano met the mental health system when she was thirteen, spent fourteen years as its patient, and left it behind in 2010, when she realized that psychiatric diagnoses and drugs were not her answer. In 2018 she founded the Inner Compass Initiative and The Withdrawal Project, and is at work on her memoir Unshrunk.

Joanna Moncrieff is a Professor of Critical and Social Psychiatry at University College London, and works as a consultant psychiatrist in the NHS in London. She researchers and writes about the over-use and misrepresentation of psychiatric drugs and about the history, politics and philosophy of psychiatry more generally. She is currently leading UK government-funded research on reducing and discontinuing antipsychotic drug treatment (the RADAR study), and collaborating on a study to support antidepressant discontinuation. In the 1990s she co-founded the Critical Psychiatry Network to link up with other, like-minded psychiatrists. She is author of numerous papers and her books include A Straight Talking Introduction to Psychiatric Drugs Second edition (PCCS Books), published in September 2020, as well as The Bitterest Pills: The Troubling Story of Antipsychotic Drugs (2013) and The Myth of the Chemical Cure (2009) (Palgrave Macmillan). Her website is https://joannamoncrieff.com/ and her Twitter handle is @joannamoncrieff

Magnus Hald is a psychiatrist, and for over a decade the Director of the Division of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, University Hospital of North Norway. He has long been interested in the development of a network-oriented perspective on mental health, based on ideas that have come from his working with “reflecting teams” and “reflective processes.” For the past few years, he has been engaged in developing a medication-free unit within the University Hospital, which opened in January 2017.

Booking & Access Info:

We are able to support those with lived experience of psychiatric drugs who are unable to afford a conference ticket. If you'd like to be considered for a pre-paid ticket please get in touch. We're grateful to Open Excellence for their support for these tickets.

If you'll be attending the conference with a group, get in touch about our group discount.

If there's anything we can do to support you to attend the conference or if you have questions about accessibility, don't hesitate to contact us.

To get in touch, email us at [email protected]

Refund policy: you can refund your ticket up to 24 hours before the event. However, Eventbrite reserves the right to keep their booking fee.

Withdrawal from Psychiatric Drugs, Online International Conference

May 7, 2022(1 event)

Withdrawal from Psychiatric Drugs, Online International Conference

Withdrawal from Psychiatric Drugs, Online International Conference


May 6, 2022 May 7, 2022

This is the first large-scale annual conference hosted by the International Institute for Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal. It brings together experts from across the world to discuss the practical details of withdrawal, alternatives to medication, and how to change the narratives surrounding psychiatric drugs.

Who is this conference for?

Anyone with a personal or professional interest is welcome at this conference, including those who are on or coming off psychiatric drugs, friends and family members, psychological therapists and other professional supporters, clinicians and prescribers. Although the conference talks will cover topics like research and clinical practice, all the talks will be accessible to a general audience.

At the end of the conference, there will be an opportunity for those who wish to connect with a small group of other attendees in a Zoom-based conversation. We support connections and conversations across these diverse groups.

Programme:

Please note this conference is over two days - Friday 6th May & Saturday 7th May.

7am-10.30am PDT

10am-1.30pm EDT

3pm-6.30pm BST

4pm-7.30pm CEST

5pm-8.30pm EEST

For this programme, times are advertised in BST (British Summer Time) - to calculate your local time, here's a useful link.

 

Friday 6th May

John Read - Introduction (3pm)

Carina Håkansson - Experiences from the Front Line (3.15pm)

Break (4pm)

Bob Whitaker - What's Wrong with Psychiatric Drugs? (4.30pm)

Break (5.15pm)

Laura Delano - The Reality of Withdrawal (5.45pm)

 

Saturday 7th May

Joanna Moncrieff - The Myth of the Chemical Cure (3pm)

Break (3.45pm)

Magnus Hald - Drug-Free Treatment in Norway (4.15pm)

Break (5pm, 30 mins)

Optional Discussion Groups (5.30pm)

Closing Remarks (6.25pm)

Speakers - each speaker will talk for 30 mins, followed by 15 minutes to answer questions from the audience.

Optional Discussion Groups - an opportunity for those who wish to connect with other attendees and reflect on the conference in a Zoom meeting. This Zoom link will be shared throughout both days of the conference.

Speakers:

 Withdrawal from Psychiatric Drugs image

Carina Häkansson is the founder and leader of Family Care Foundation for more than 25 years. With a PhD in psychology she is a licensed psychotherapist, lecturer and writer. Carina is a co-founder of IIPDW.

Robert Whitaker is the author of four books, and co-author of a fifth, three of which tell of the history of psychiatry. In 2010, his Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness won the U.S. Investigative Reporters and Editors book award for best investigative journalism. Prior to writing books, he worked as a science reporter at the Albany Times Union newspaper in New York. He is the founder of madinamerica.com, a website that features research news and blogs by an international group of writers interested in “rethinking psychiatry.”

Laura Delano met the mental health system when she was thirteen, spent fourteen years as its patient, and left it behind in 2010, when she realized that psychiatric diagnoses and drugs were not her answer. In 2018 she founded the Inner Compass Initiative and The Withdrawal Project, and is at work on her memoir Unshrunk.

Joanna Moncrieff is a Professor of Critical and Social Psychiatry at University College London, and works as a consultant psychiatrist in the NHS in London. She researchers and writes about the over-use and misrepresentation of psychiatric drugs and about the history, politics and philosophy of psychiatry more generally. She is currently leading UK government-funded research on reducing and discontinuing antipsychotic drug treatment (the RADAR study), and collaborating on a study to support antidepressant discontinuation. In the 1990s she co-founded the Critical Psychiatry Network to link up with other, like-minded psychiatrists. She is author of numerous papers and her books include A Straight Talking Introduction to Psychiatric Drugs Second edition (PCCS Books), published in September 2020, as well as The Bitterest Pills: The Troubling Story of Antipsychotic Drugs (2013) and The Myth of the Chemical Cure (2009) (Palgrave Macmillan). Her website is https://joannamoncrieff.com/ and her Twitter handle is @joannamoncrieff

Magnus Hald is a psychiatrist, and for over a decade the Director of the Division of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, University Hospital of North Norway. He has long been interested in the development of a network-oriented perspective on mental health, based on ideas that have come from his working with “reflecting teams” and “reflective processes.” For the past few years, he has been engaged in developing a medication-free unit within the University Hospital, which opened in January 2017.

Booking & Access Info:

We are able to support those with lived experience of psychiatric drugs who are unable to afford a conference ticket. If you'd like to be considered for a pre-paid ticket please get in touch. We're grateful to Open Excellence for their support for these tickets.

If you'll be attending the conference with a group, get in touch about our group discount.

If there's anything we can do to support you to attend the conference or if you have questions about accessibility, don't hesitate to contact us.

To get in touch, email us at [email protected]

Refund policy: you can refund your ticket up to 24 hours before the event. However, Eventbrite reserves the right to keep their booking fee.

Withdrawal from Psychiatric Drugs, Online International Conference

May 8, 2022
May 9, 2022
May 10, 2022
May 11, 2022
May 12, 2022
May 13, 2022
May 14, 2022
May 15, 2022
May 16, 2022
May 17, 2022
May 18, 2022
May 19, 2022
May 20, 2022
May 21, 2022
May 22, 2022
May 23, 2022
May 24, 2022(1 event)

Rehumanize Meeting

Rehumanize Meeting


May 24, 2022

Rehumanize is a monthly gathering for survivors of involuntary treatment.  We meet on the 4th Tuesday of every month over Zoom at 7pm EST.  At each meeting, we affirm for one another that what happened to you was not "care." We discuss how we have healed from the trauma and dehumanization, how we have found safety in our bodies again, and where we have found peer support offerings and alternatives to the carceral mental health system.
Registration is anonymous and the signup list is not reviewed or used for any purpose. Individuals may join the meeting anonymously and can keep their cameras off or just listen. We encourage everyone to curate the level of comfort and privacy that feels best.
Peer supporters with lived experience of psychiatric incarceration are welcome to attend.  Licensed clinicians and mental health care workers employed in coercive environments, regardless of lived experience, are not welcome.

Rehumanize Meeting

May 25, 2022
May 26, 2022
May 27, 2022
May 28, 2022
May 29, 2022(1 event)

Webinar on Invisible Disability: Diving Deeper

Webinar on Invisible Disability: Diving Deeper


May 29, 2022

Join Rev. Suzanne Fast for a discussion on “Invisible Disabilities,” and how understanding the concept is important to accessibility & inclusion. Moderated by David Oaks.

3:45 Eastern Daylight Time.

Webinar on Invisible Disability: Diving Deeper

May 30, 2022
May 31, 2022
June 1, 2022(1 event)

Judi's Room: Viewing the Suicide Prevention Industry Through a Critical Lens

Judi's Room: Viewing the Suicide Prevention Industry Through a Critical Lens


June 1, 2022

                    Topic: "Viewing the Suicide Prevention Industry Through a Critical Lens" To Register Click HERE

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Two social activist authors will present on the topic of the suicide prevention industry next week, Wednesday, June 1st at 3:00 pm pacific/6:00 pm Eastern. Each panelist will have thirty minutes to present. The following hour will be allotted for discussion arising from audience questions.

Author Robert Whitaker, in 2001 published Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill. With that book, he began more than two decades of challenges and critiques of the Mental Health System. Whitaker has continued to write other books challenging mental health services and provide through www.madinamerica.com a platform for others to write and be heard.

Rob Wipond, investigative journalist and author of the soon to be published book, Our Consent is Not Required: The Rise in Psychiatric Detentions, Forced Treatment, and Abusive Guardianships will, along with fellow panelist Whitaker, critique crisis lines, suicide prevention strategies and specifically the U.S government’s roll out of 988 and it’s challenges to privacy and the potential increased use of forced interventions.

The meeting is a part of MFI’s regularly scheduled  educational series called ‘Judi’s Room,’ a collaboration between MFI and " I Love You, Lead On" (a favored quote by ADA champion, Justin Dart)

Judi's Room is named after the famed human rights leader, Judi Chamberlin. It is free and open to the public but pre-registration is required.

To register click HERE

If you wish to be included on the list to receive future announcements in relation to ‘Judi’s Room’ email [email protected] with ‘Add me to Judi’s Room’ in the subject heading.

If you wish to suggest topics of interest to you or expert presenters for a future Judi’s Room, please send them to [email protected]

To register click HERE

Judi's Room: Viewing the Suicide Prevention Industry Through a Critical Lens

June 2, 2022
June 3, 2022
June 4, 2022
June 5, 2022

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