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The Brave New World of Artificial Intelligence in Mental Health

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Mental health screening and surveillance of apps, social media and phones are being used to monitor all behavior and then through computer programming, predict mental disorder and the need for psychiatric or psychological intervention.

By Jan Eastgate
President CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
May 18, 2020

Psychiatry’s diagnostic methods have long been recognized as and criticized for being about as unscientific as reading tea leaves or a crystal ball. There is not a single physical or medical test to confirm any mental disorder listed in the American Psychiatric Associations’ Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders. Psychiatrists literally vote diagnoses into existence based largely upon arbitrarily determined behaviors. The diagnostic system takes huge license with people’s lives and their vulnerabilities.

Statistics are bandied around about the financial cost of “untreated” mental illness, but no one questions the veracity of such statistics and why, despite multi-billions of dollars spent on research and treatment of mental health issues, things are only getting worse. With this comes a multi-billion-dollar psychiatric drug market, worth over $35 billion a year in the U.S. alone—and potentially sentencing consumers to a lifetime of side effects and harm, not long-term help.

Now this farce—at the expense of people’s lives—is forming the foundation of “artificial intelligence in mental health” screening and diagnosing—taking Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World about a futuristic conditioned society, to a whole new level. Artificial Intelligence (AI) is now marketed as a means to “prevent” or quickly identify the “growing” numbers of people, including children and youths, said to be mentally ill. And when they say, “prevent,” that can include labeling someone “at risk of becoming mentally ill” and drugging them to prevent the onset of the disorder.

A team of researchers from the University of Colorado Boulder are working to apply machine learning AI in psychiatry, with a speech-based mobile app that can categorize a patient’s mental health status. Peter Foltz, a research professor at the Institute of Cognitive Science and co-author of the paper, believe they “can create tools that will allow them to better monitor their patients.” [Emphasis added]

“Language is a critical pathway to detecting patient mental states,” says Foltz. “Using mobile devices and AI, we are able to track patients daily and monitor these subtle changes.”[1]

To further this Brave New World scenario, if the app detects a worrisome change, it could notify the patient’s doctor to check in.  As Foltz stated, as patients “often need to be monitored with frequent clinical interviews by trained professionals,” there are not enough clinicians and the App can assist.[2]

“It’s a recipe for disaster. I say that as a psychologist. The feeling of constantly being watched or monitored is the last thing you want.” – Ann Cavoukian, distinguished expert-in-residence leading the Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence at Ryerson University in Toronto

“It’s a recipe for disaster,” said Ann Cavoukian, who spent three terms as Ontario’s privacy commissioner and is now the distinguished expert-in-residence leading the Privacy by Design Centre of Excellence at Ryerson University in Toronto. “I say that as a psychologist,” she explained in an interview. “The feeling of constantly being watched or monitored is the last thing you want.”[3]

Foltz and his colleagues designed the mobile app that takes patients through a series of repeatable verbal exercises, like telling a story and answering questions about their emotional state. An AI system then assesses those soundbites for signs of mental distress, both by analyzing how they compare to the individual’s previous responses, and by measuring the clips against responses from a larger patient population.[4]

The team asked human clinicians to listen to and assess speech samples of 225 participants – half with severe psychiatric issues; half healthy volunteers – in rural Louisiana and Northern Norway. They then compared those results to those of the machine learning system.  Foltz said: “We found that the computer’s AI models can be at least as accurate as clinicians.”[5]

  • Foltz claims the following example—sentences that don’t follow a logical pattern can be a critical symptom in schizophrenia. Shifts in tone or pace can hint at mania or depression, and memory loss can be a sign of both cognitive and mental health problems.
  • Henry Nasrallah, a psychiatrist at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center who has also written about AI’s place in the field claims that talking in a monotone can be a sign of depression; fast speech can point to mania; and disjointed word choice can be connected to schizophrenia. When these traits are pronounced enough, a human clinician might pick up on them—but AI algorithms, Nasrallah says, could be trained to flag signals and patterns too subtle for humans to detect.[6]
  • In a study with Columbia University psychiatrists, a neuroscientist working with IBM said they were able to predict, with 100 percent accuracy, who among a population of at-risk adolescents would develop their first episode of psychosis within two years. IBM is building an automated speech analysis application that runs off a mobile device. By taking approximately one minute of speech input, the system uses text-to-speech, advanced analytics, machine learning, natural language processing technologies and computational biology to provide a real-time, overview of the patient’s mental health.[7]

A 2017 report from the National Council for Behavioral Health claimed that within five years, the U.S.’s already “overburdened” mental health system may be short as many as 15,600 psychiatrists. Some mental-health apps and programs already incorporate AI—like Woebot—an app-based mood tracker and chatbot that combines AI and principles from cognitive behavioral therapy—but said it would probably be some five to 10 years before algorithms are routinely used in clinics, according to psychiatrists interviewed by TIME in 2019.[8]

  • Woebot is a Facebook-integrated bot [device/software that executes commands] whose AI is “versed in cognitive behavioral therapy.” Clinical research psychologist Dr. Alison Darcy developed the AI-powered chatbot with a team of psychologists and AI experts. With Woebot, the user and chatbot exchange messages. This reportedly allows the AI to “learn about the human” and to tailor conversations accordingly. Because this technology is integrated with Facebook Messenger—a platform with 1.3 billion monthly users and not bound by medical privacy rules—Darcy’s bot opens the door to mental health treatment for hundreds of millions of people who might not otherwise gain access.[9] Darcy’s history includes spending several years in the Psychiatry Department at the Stanford School of Medicine and the researchers at the Stanford University School of Medicine studied the efficacy of Woebot.[10]
  • Companion and mind.me, are apps that can be installed on a phone or smartwatch. Left to work in the background, their AI collects data from its user 24 hours a day and without direct input. Companion was developed in conjunction with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. Its design “listens” to the user’s speech, noting the number of words spoken and the energy and affect in the voice. The app also “watches” for behavioral indicators, including the time, rate, and duration of a person’s engagement with their device. [11]

At IBM, scientists are already using transcripts and audio inputs from psychiatric interviews, coupled with machine learning techniques, to find patterns in speech to help clinicians accurately predict and monitor psychosis, schizophrenia, mania and depression. It is asserted that it only takes about 300 words to help clinicians predict the probability of psychosis in a user, IBM reports.[12]  This is a frightening prospect and something previously exposed by CCHR—psychiatrists guessing at whether a person may become mentally disordered, which can lead to powerful antipsychotics being prescribed to prevent the onset of psychosis.[13]

Dr. John Torous, chair of the American Psychiatric Association’s Committee on Mental Health Information Technology, concurred that mental health diagnostics have not been quantified well enough to program an algorithm.[14]

A review was conducted of 28 studies of AI and mental health that used electronic health records, mood rating scales, brain imaging data, novel monitoring systems (e.g., smartphone, video), and social media platforms to predict, classify, or subgroup mental health illnesses including depression, schizophrenia or other psychiatric illnesses, and suicide ideation and attempts. While the study predicted it could be possible to help mental health practitioners re-define mental illnesses more objectively than currently done in the DSM-5, identify these illnesses at an earlier or prodromal [before the appearance of initial symptoms] stage when interventions may be more effective, and personalize treatments based on an individual’s unique characteristics. However, caution is necessary in order to avoid over-interpreting preliminary results, and more work is required to bridge the gap between AI in mental health research and clinical care.[15]

Even an article in Psychiatry Online points out that “Discussions about artificial intelligence in health care have raised concerns about the dehumanization of healing relationships.” But the main argument was that “Computer-generated recommendations may carry a false authority that would override expert human judgment” and “raises false hopes that machines will explain the mysteries of mental health and mental illness.”[16]  However, the real point is that the DSM 5 and psychiatry’s ability to diagnose any mental disorder is not based on science; it’s based on arbitrary whims and AI will only exacerbate this.

A “machine learning algorithm” is already created. As one article states, “In the future, patients might go to the hospital with a broken arm and leave the facility with a cast and a note with a compulsory psychiatry session due to flagged suicide risk.

According to preliminary studies, changes in typing speed, voice tone, word choice and how often kids stay home could signal trouble. There might be as many as 1,000 smartphone-based ‘biomarkers’ for depression….”[17]

There is now a rapid growth in the “Artificial Intelligence in Mental Health Care” market. Top key players are IBM Watson AI XPRIZE, Acadia Healthcare Co., Inc., Universal Health Services, Inc. (UHS), Magellan Health Inc., National Mentor Holdings Inc., Behavioral Health Services Inc., Behavioral Health Network Inc., North Range Behavioral Health, and Strategic Behavioral Health, LLC. Most companies in the Global Artificial Intelligence in Mental Health Care Market are currently adopting new technological trends in the market, according to a market report.[18]

The Artificial Intelligence in Global Health report, published on April 1, 2019, was funded by the USAID’s Center for Innovation and Impact and the Rockefeller Foundation, in close coordination with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.[19]

In a March 2020 article by Peter Simons, he reported that in 2018, California’s state government began rolling out a new “mental health” initiative. The tech companies of Silicon Valley were creating smartphone apps that could prompt users to seek mental health care, and the state wanted to provide support. Of the thousands of mental health apps in existence today, the state selected two. The first app is called 7 Cups, by a company called 7 Cups of Tea. They’re focused on connecting mental health service users, in text-based chat sessions, with what they call “listeners”—volunteers who are trained in “active listening.” But, according to The New York Times, the company has been plagued with issues, including listeners having inappropriate conversations with their clients and investigations of its alleged financial misconduct.[20]

“As we use our smartphone and computers, our typing rhythms, swiping habits, typing errors and so forth are all data points that can be a compiled into a mental health portrait of the user, one that the creators of Mindstrong claim can successfully diagnose ‘depression, anxiety, and other psychiatric disorders.’” – Peter Simons, writer and academic researcher in psychology

The other company partnering with California is Mindstrong Health. Their app, branded Mindstrong on March 17, 2020, previously known as Health, is available on the Google Play Store and the Apple App Store. According to Simons, “It is the Mindstrong app that most raises the specter of Brave New World, Aldous Huxley’s classic dystopian novel of eugenics and psychiatric surveillance….As we use our smartphone and computers, our typing rhythms, swiping habits, typing errors and so forth are all data points that can be a compiled into a mental health portrait of the user, one that the creators of Mindstrong claim can successfully diagnose ‘depression, anxiety, and other psychiatric disorders.’”[21]

The app installs a special keyboard on your phone. That way, the app can record information about the way you type at all times (whether you have the app open or not). The Mindstrong website states that its app connects users with psychiatrists and “credible therapists.” Users can video chat with psychiatrists about their prescription drugs, although it’s unclear how often that happens, says Simons.[22]

As reported in Stat News in 2018, “Does the app live up to its promise? There’s no way to tell. Almost no one outside the company has any idea whether it works.”[23]

Mindstrong Health began with Paul Dagum, a Stanford doctor and researcher who also holds advanced degrees in theoretical physics and theoretical computer science. He’s also the owner of numerous patents for artificial intelligence technology—algorithms designed to assess large amounts of data to provide predictions.[24] Another co-founder, Richard D. Klausner M.D. who served as the Executive Director for Global Health of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.[25]

Former U.S. National Institute for Mental Health director, psychiatrist Thomas Insel is another co-founder of Mindstrong Health.[26]

In 2013, as outgoing NIMH director, Insel pointed out the lack of effectiveness of the DSM5. He stated: “While DSM has been described as a ‘Bible’ for the field, it is, at best, a dictionary, creating a set of labels and defining each…The weakness is its lack of validity. Unlike our definitions of ischemic heart disease, lymphoma, or AIDS, the DSM diagnoses are based on a consensus about clusters of clinical symptoms, not any objective laboratory measure.”[27]  Two years later he predicted that technology would change mental health. “In the future, when we think of the private sector and health research, we may be thinking of Apple and IBM more than Lilly and Pfizer. Here are two fascinating previews of this new world I noted during my travels last week. One was the publication of results from a collaboration between Columbia University and IBM,” he wrote.

Further, “The biomarkers for depression and psychosis and post-traumatic stress disorder are likely to be objective measures of cognition and behavior, which can be collected by smartphones.”[28]

In 2015, Insel began working with Verily, a life sciences tech company owned by Google’s parent company Alphabet, Inc. After a short stint there, he left to co-found Mindstrong Health with Dagum. In 2020, California Governor Gavin Newsom, appointed Insel to be a “special adviser” on the state’s mental health system, despite the fact that Insel remains president of Mindstrong, which California has contracted with.[29]

For general healthcare, the market is already lucrative—valued at $2.10 billion with an anticipated market $36.15 billion in 2025 and $54.10 billion by 2026.[30] In February 2020, Mobi Health News reported that global investment in mental health technology reached $769 million in 2019, according to a study by early stage investor Octopus Ventures.  There’s been an almost five-fold increase in mental health tech investment in the last six years, rising from $159 million in 2014.[31]

In the case of AI in the mental health industry (psychiatry and psychology), this is but another lucrative but ultimately damaging tool that spells only millions more people being arbitrarily labeled, drugged, electroshocked and worse.

References:

[1] “AI in psychiatry: detecting mental illness with artificial intelligence,” Health Europa, 19 Nov. 2019, https://www.healtheuropa.eu/ai-in-psychiatry-detecting-mental-illness-with-artificial-intelligence/95028/

[2] Ibid.

[3] “The Brave New World of Mental Health,” The Washington Spectator, 8 Mar. 2019, https://washingtonspectator.org/the-brave-new-world-of-mental-health/

[4] “Artificial Intelligence Could Help Solve America’s Impending Mental Health Crisis,” TIME, 20 Nov. 2019, https://time.com/5727535/artificial-intelligence-psychiatry/

[5] Op. cit., Health Europa

[6] Op. cit., TIME

[7] https://www.ibm.com/blogs/research/2017/1/ibm-5-in-5-our-words-will-be-the-windows-to-our-mental-health/

[8] Op. cit., TIME

[9] Op. cit., The Washington Spectator

[10] “Entrepreneur of the Week: Dr. Alison Darcy, Woebot Labs, Inc.,” The Longevity Network, 18 Jul. 2017, https://www.longevitynetwork.org/spotlight/entrepreneur-of-the-week/alison-darcy-woebot-labs-inc

[11] Op. cit., The Washington Spectator

[12] https://www.research.ibm.com/5-in-5/mental-health/

[13] https://www.cchrint.org/2019/12/19/cchr-warns-of-psychiatrist-patrick-mcgorry-others-brave-new-world/

[14] Op. cit., TIME

[15] S. Graham, et al., “Artificial Intelligence for Mental Health and Mental Illnesses: an Overview,” Current Psychiatry Reports, 2019 Nov 7;21(11):116. doi: 10.1007/s11920-019-1094-0, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31701320

[16] https://ps.psychiatryonline.org/doi/10.1176/appi.ps.201900464

[17] https://medicalfuturist.com/artificial-intelligence-in-mental-health-care/

[18] https://coleofduty.com/market-reports/2020/05/14/rapid-growth-of-artificial-intelligence-in-mental-health-care-market-positioning-of-vendors-growth-insights-and-competitive-scenario-ibm-watson-ai-xprize-acadia-healthcare-co/

[19] https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(19)30814-1/fulltext

[20] “Mental Health Apps: AI Surveillance Enters Our World,” Mad in America, 21 Mar. 2020, https://www.madinamerica.com/2020/03/mental-health-apps-ai-surveillance/

[21] Ibid.

[22] Ibid.

[23] https://www.statnews.com/2018/10/04/mindstrong-questions-over-evidence/

[24] Op. cit., Mad in America

[25] https://mindstrong.com/team/rick-klausner-md/

[26] https://mindstrong.com/team/tom-insel-md/

[27] https://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/directors/thomas-insel/blog/2013/transforming-diagnosis.shtml

[28] Thomas Insel, “Post by Former NIMH Director Thomas Insel: Look who is getting into mental health research,” NIMH, 31 Aug. 2015, https://www.nimh.nih.gov/about/directors/thomas-insel/blog/2015/look-who-is-getting-into-mental-health-research.shtml

[29] Op. cit., Mad in America

[30] https://www.marketsandmarkets.com/Market-Reports/artificial-intelligence-healthcare-market-54679303.html; https://www.openpr.com/news/1909058/global-artificial-intelligence-in-healthcare-market-2020

[31] “Global investment in mental health technology surges above half a billion pounds,” Mobile Health News, 3 Feb. 2020, https://www.mobihealthnews.com/news/europe/global-investment-mental-health-technology-surges-above-half-billion-pounds


CCHR Honors the Fallen on Memorial Day: Questions Mental Health-Treatment Deaths

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In honoring the nation’s veterans and service members, mental health watchdog, CCHR, questions potential roll of psychotropic drugs & electroshock in 20-per-day vet suicides and service member suicides.

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
May 22, 2020

Memorial Day honors the men and women who died while serving in the U.S. military. It also recognizes the shocking number of veterans and service members that have taken their own lives. Despite highly touted efforts to curb the suicide rate among these dedicated groups, suicides remain high and the mental health industry watchdog group Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) is calling on Congress to increase efforts to investigate this.

It wants the military and Veteran Affairs (VA) to disclose whether psychiatric drugs were tested for and present in suicide autopsies.

In 2013, $107 million was set aside for mental-health treatment for veterans; in 2018, the VA committed more than $186 million to prevent suicide. The total VA mental health budget soared more than 65% between 2011 and 2019, from $5.2 billion to more than $8.6 billion.[1] Yet, 6,139 U.S. veterans committed suicide in 2017, or 17 per day compared to 16 per day in 2005.[2] The number of suicides by active duty service members jumped from 285 to 325 between 2017 and 2018.[3] There were also 919 suicides among never federally activated former National Guard and Reserve members in 2017, an average 2.5 suicide deaths per day—or a combined total of 20 every day.[4]

Suicide—not combat—is the leading killer of U.S. troops deployed to the Middle East to fight Islamic State militants, Pentagon statistics show.[5] While an average of 4,200 veterans die by firearm suicide every year[6], it’s unknown how many of them were taking a psychiatric drug or withdrawing from one or cocktails of them—a vital correlation for families and governments to know.

Potentially, psychotropic drugs induce the “mental trigger” that drives service members and vets to take their own lives.

International drug regulatory agency reports warn these drugs can cause suicide, violence, mania, psychosis, aggression, hallucinations, death and much more.[7]

Current public data on military and VA use of and expenditure on psychotropic drugs is sparse. What is known is that in 2010, 1.85 million veterans filled at least one psychiatric drug prescription.[8] Approximately 37% of war veterans have been labeled with PTSD, of which 80% were prescribed a psychiatric drug. Reported in 2011, of the veterans receiving psychiatric drugs for PTSD, 89% are prescribed antidepressants and 34% prescribed antipsychotics—both classes of drugs are linked to suicide or death.[9]

Between 2005 and 2011, the military increased its prescriptions of psychoactive drugs (antipsychotics, sedatives, stimulants and mood stabilizers) by almost 700%.[10]

The 2019 National Veteran Suicide Prevention Annual Report reported that over 800,000 veterans received “medication” for mental health disorders in Veterans Health Administration (VHA) compared to over 500,000 comparable individuals in the private sector—or 30% higher.[11] Information on how many recipients of the drugs attempted or committed suicide is not discussed in the report.

The age breakdown of those receiving antidepressants is important, CCHR says. Antidepressants carry an FDA “black-box” warning of “suicidality” for those younger than 25, yet these drugs are prescribed to this age group in the military. The VA reported that the suicide rate of veterans aged 18 to 34 jumped more than 10% between 2015 and 2016.[12] 41% of deployed American soldiers are aged 18-24.[13]

Psychotropic drug use is also linked to America’s failed community mental health program that started in the 1960s. People were discharged from hospitals on powerful, debilitating antipsychotics, which California investigators determined rather than speeding people’s return to the community, hindered recovery.[14] The drugs helped spawn the massive homeless situation the U.S. now faces.

In 2017, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development Point-in-Time Count estimated that 40,000 veterans were homeless and just over 15,300 were living on the street or unsheltered on any given night.[15] Again, the lack of information on how many have been placed on a psychotropic drug treadmill is unknown.

Hundreds of veterans are also given brain-damaging electroshock and this does not include those given it in private or non-contracting VA institutions. In 2015, 140 of the VA’s healthcare facilities—approximately 49%—delivered electroshock.[16] The VA has spent more than $1 million on electroshock devices and related parts, despite the device manufacturers having never provided clinical trials proving safety and efficacy.[17] CCHR’s online petition to ban ECT shows more than 120,000 people who would agree ECT should not be used on our vets and service members.

Memorial Day is this nation’s opportunity to remember those who have courageously served on the front lines and made profound sacrifices to ensure the freedoms we continue to enjoy. They deserve the very best services, which doesn’t include treatment that harms or kills in the name of mental health care.

References:

[1] “The Veterans Health Administration’s Fiscal Year 2011 Budget,” U.S. Government Publishing Office, 23 Feb. 2010, p.19, https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-111hhrg55229/html/CHRG-111hhrg55229.htm; Department of Veterans Affairs – Budget in Brief (2019), 2019 Congressional Submission, https://www.va.gov/budget/products.asp.

[2] https://www.mentalhealth.va.gov/docs/data-sheets/2019/2019_National_Veteran_Suicide_Prevention_Annual_Report_508.pdf

[3] https://www.militarytimes.com/news/your-military/2019/09/26/active-duty-suicides-are-on-the-rise-as-the-pentagon-works-on-new-messaging-and-strategy/

[4] https://www.mentalhealth.va.gov/docs/data-sheets/2019/2019_National_Veteran_Suicide_Prevention_Annual_Report_508.pdf

[5] https://www.wbir.com/amp/article/news/nation-now/suicide-kills-more-us-troops-than-isil-in-middle-east/51-380295957

[6] https://everytownresearch.org/those-who-serve-addressing-firearm-suicide-among-military-veterans/

[7] https://www.cchrint.org/2013/01/23/cchr-exposes-psychiatrys-military-spending-to-create-drugged-out-super-soldiers-by-kelly-omeara/

[8] Ilse R. Wiechers, MD, MPP, et al., “Increased Risk Among Older Veterans of Prescribing Psychotropic Medication in the Absence of Psychiatric Diagnoses,” Am J Geriatr Psychiatry, Jun 2014, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24211029.

[9] Susan Donaldson James, “Marines Battalion Mentally Upbeat, Despite Record Deaths,” ABC News, April 15, 2011, http://www.abcnews.go.com/Health/camp-pendleton-marine-battalion-mentally-fit-deadliest-war/story?id=13377215; Mohamed S, Rosenheck RA, “Pharmacotherapy of PTSD in the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs: diagnostic- and symptom-guided drug selection,” Journal of Clinical Psychiatry, 2008, June Vol. 69, No. 6, pp. 959-65, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18588361.

[10] Richard Friedman, “Wars on Drugs,” The New York Times, 6 Apr. 2013, https://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/07/opinion/sunday/wars-on-drugs.html

[11] https://www.mentalhealth.va.gov/docs/data-sheets/2019/2019_National_Veteran_Suicide_Prevention_Annual_Report_508.pdf, p. 26

[12] https://www.militarytimes.com/news/pentagon-congress/2018/09/26/suicide-rate-spikes-among-younger-veterans/

[13] “Cardin Calls For Scientific Study to Determine Extent of Link Between Antidepressant Use By Combat Troops And Military Suicide Rate,” U.S. Senator Ben Cardin of Maryland Press Release, 24 Mar. 2010, https://www.cardin.senate.gov/newsroom/press/release/cardin-calls-for-scientific-study-to-determine-extent-of-link-between-antidepressant-use-by-combat-troops-and-military-suicide-rate.

[14] Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill,  (Perseus Publishing, 2002), p. 157.

[15] https://www.mentalhealth.va.gov/docs/data-, p. 3, sheets/2019/2019_National_Veteran_Suicide_Prevention_Annual_Report_508.pdf, p. 6

[16] https://www.cchrint.org/2019/06/26/cchr-warns-about-antidepressant-nasal-spray-esketamine-spravato-use-on-veterans/

[17] https://www.cchrint.org/2018/10/12/veterans-get-damaging-mental-health-deal/

Some Media are Starting to Report How Resilience (Not Mind-Altering Psychotropic Drugs) is Better at Facing COVID-19 Restrictions

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CCHR wants people better informed about the psychiatric-pharmaceutical agenda to use normal reactions to virus restrictions to push harmful psychiatric labels and drugs. The sources of predictions about “mental health epidemics” often have conflicts of interests with manufacturers of psychotropic drugs

By Jan Eastgate
President CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
May 29, 2020

Throughout April-May 2020, Citizens Commission on Human Rights International has researched and provided information about the psychiatric-pharmaceutical industry using COVID-19 to scare people into believing that their mental health may be irreparably damaged. Antidepressant and anti-anxiety drugs, that carry a heinous list of side effects, have been promoted, taking advantage of people’s understandable vulnerabilities—their normal reactions to abnormal times. Psychiatric drugs are already being tested to be repurposed to treat COVID-19, despite their own potential life-threatening risks.

However, CCHR’s research has also found that people’s resilience in times of disasters, including wars and terrorism, has often been the people’s best “treatment.” It was, therefore, a nice change to see mainstream media report and further substantiate this.

For example, on May 25, 2020, The Australian reported that rather than a “mental health epidemic” as a result of COVID, “history suggests we often rebound from mass trauma events.” In the late 1930s, “as Britain braced itself for a looming war and predicted mass civilian casualties from German bombing,” a committee of psychiatrists predicted that the bombs would cause three times more mental injuries than physical. Several large psychiatric hospitals were built outside London to deal with the mass trauma.

But despite 57 sequential nights of bombings, 41,000 Londoners killed and two million homes destroyed, every one of the predictions about how Londoners would react turned out to be wrong. In fact, the psychiatric hospitals remained empty and were repurposed for the physically wounded.

Something similar occurred following the 9/11 attacks in New York in 2001. It was predicted that one in four New Yorkers would suffer PTSD and 9,000 counselors were dispatched across the U.S. to be prepared to deliver. But the tents established to deliver such services remained largely empty, and only half of the $200 million set aside for mental health help was spent.[1]

Richard Bryant, a professor of psychology at the University of New South Wales, who studied the impact of Australia’s devasting Black Saturday bushfires in 2009 said that 82% of people remained resilient.[2] Approximately 400 fires were recorded across Victoria; 173 people tragically lost their lives from the series of fires in 2009 and 414 were injured.[3] But as one study Bryant was involved in found, “Several years following the Black Saturday bushfires the majority of affected people demonstrated resilience without indications of psychological distress.” Only a minority required services for persistent problems.

Responding to recent mental health experts expecting a “tsunami of mental health disorders” from COVID, Bryant stated: “We know that time and time again over every disaster, including previous pandemics, most people will end up being resilient.” [4]

One of those doomsday mental health “experts” was Dr. Ian Hickie who, writing in The Guardian in the UK, claimed “the potential mental health and suicide impacts resulting from the massive economic and social dislocation caused by Covid-19 are front and center internationally.” He further reported a “predicted 25-50% increase in suicides over the next five years” according to his Brain and Mind Centre at the University of Sydney, of which he is co-director of health and policy. Hickie reported that the Australian health minister, Greg Hunt, made “Covid-19-precipitated mental ill health the same status as physical ill health.” The government has announced AUS $48.1m (U.S.$32 million) in additional funding for mental health.

Hickie, along with his cohort, psychiatrist Patrick McGorry, are the co-founders of Australia’s national headspace: Youth Mental Health Centers in Australia which treat 12-25-year olds. Researchers have criticized the centers for being used as “’clinical laboratories’ for applied research.”[5] McGorry and Hickie were part of a joint statement on COVID-19 issued on May 7, that predicted “increases in youth suicide and a surge in demand for specialist mental health services,” and the telltale “calling for long-term modelling and investment in mental health to guide critical decision making in social, economic, and health policy to help Australia transition out of the coronavirus pandemic.” That “modeling” is based on one developed by the Brain and Mind Centre, and Australia’s The National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Centre for Research Excellence on prevention of youth suicide (YOUTHe), in which McGorry’s research group Orygen and the University of Melbourne are partnering. McGorry is the Professor of Youth Mental Health at the university.

It’s easy to “predict” that from such demands that this could lead to increased antidepressant and other psychotropic drug prescriptions, with individuals uninformed that the drugs can actually induce suicide prescribed to “prevent”—and that those suicides will be attributed not to the drugs but to “COVID-19 related” issues.

Hickie has served on the professional advisory boards convened by the drug industry in relation to specific antidepressants made by Bristol-Myers Squibb (BMS) and Eli Lilly and has led projects funded in part by BMS, Pfizer, Eli Lilly, Wyeth and Servier.[6] He has served on advisory boards convened by the pharmaceutical industry in relation to three specific antidepressants.[7]

McGorry is renowned for his debunked dangerous theory that pre-drugging adolescents with antipsychotics can prevent psychosis.[8] Mental health specialists told Australia’s Sunday Age that the focus on early intervention for adolescents and young adults had been “massively oversold” by the “McGorry lobbying machine.” “It’s extremely worrying that the government is listening to professional lobbyists who have a massive personal investment in the programs they’re recommending – and they are undoubtedly overstating the evidence. There’s a massive conflict of interest there,” said Professor David Castle from Melbourne’s St. Vincent’s Hospitals, referring to both Hickie and McGorry.[9]

McGorry has had financial ties to the drug companies, Janssen-Cilag, Eli Lilly, Bristol-Myers Squibb, AstraZeneca, Pfizer and Novartis. He has also received honoraria for consulting and teaching from Roche, Lundbeck, and Astra Zeneca. His Orygen Centre operates four of the 27 headspace centers in Victoria.   Orygen has also been funded by drug companies Eli Lilly, AstraZeneca, Janssen-Cilag and Bristol-Myers Squibb.[10]

In the U.S., the American Psychiatric Association (APA) has purported that those put in isolation are “more likely to develop PTSD or increase substance use;” that the required excessive cleaning of hands could lead to compulsions;[11] and that almost 60% feel that the virus is having a serious impact on their day-to-day lives.[12] APA posted on its website that an “anxiety pandemic” is following fast on COVID’s heels.[13]

Perpetuating this, on May 21, the American Psychological Association released the results of a 10-point subjective survey of parents with children under 18, asserting that 46% rated their average stress level regarding the pandemic as 8, 9 or 10 on a 10-point scale. An article quoted Charles B. Nemeroff, professor and chair of the department of psychiatry at Dell Medical School at the University of Texas at Austin and president-elect of the Anxiety and Depression Association of America (ADAA). He stated: “This kind of chronic stress brings about, for all those people who have never had anxiety before, it sort of overwhelms them.” Pharmaceutical companies, including AstraZeneca, Eli Lilly, Forest Laboratories, GlaxoSmithKline, Pfizer, Solvay Pharmaceuticals, and Wyeth fund ADAA.[14]

Nemeroff came under federal investigation for his failure to declare $1 million he took from pharmaceutical companies. He’d taken the money while conducting supposedly unbiased research for the National Institutes of Health on drugs made by the companies he was receiving money from. A front-page report by The New York Times in October 2008 said that congressional investigators found Nemeroff had received $2.8 million in consulting deals with drug makers over seven years and failed to report at least $1.2 million of that to Emery University.[15]

The Wall Street Journal reported at least some of the warnings about the drugs: “Because benzodiazepines can reduce the body’s drive to breathe, overdoses can be deadly” and the drugs “can be difficult to stop, too. Withdrawal symptoms can include a surge in anxiety, tremors and, in some cases, seizures. The medications can be particularly dangerous for older adults: In seniors, their use is associated with falls and cognitive problems.” Overdose deaths involving benzodiazepines more than quadrupled between 1999 and 2013, according to a study published in 2016 in the American Journal of Public Health.[16]

CCHR’s online psychiatric drugs side effects searchable database is an excellent resource for finding free information about adverse effects of psychotropic drugs and the many drug regulatory agency warnings about them.

CCHR is fully aware of how the country’s challenging times (with its own staff part of the stay-at-home restrictions) and how, generally at a societal level, it can impact mental and physical health. But APA and other mental disorder groups making claims that high percentages of people will be anxious, depressed or have PTSD (based largely on surveys of a small number of people, and often with a Public Relations firm spin) is self-serving to rake in future profits. CCHR is researching more articles that convey how individuals’ innate resilience, including that which comes with a recovered economy and job safety, is most likely to be a winning “medicine.”

References:

[1] “Blitz Spirit: Fortunately for the COVID-19 generation, history suggests we often rebound from mass trauma events,” The Australian, 25 May 2020,  https://www.theaustralian.com.au/inquirer/covid-health-crisis-trauma-could-be-overstated/news-story/a6146f9449f3748d1e21c2d1f11ad310

[2] Ibid.

[3] https://www.nma.gov.au/defining-moments/resources/black-saturday-bushfires; https://knowledge.aidr.org.au/resources/bushfire-black-saturday-victoria-2009/

[4] Op. cit., The Australian, 25 May 2020

[5] https://www.cchrint.org/2015/04/27/drugging-kids-patrick-mcgorry/

[6] https://www.cchrint.org/2017/03/15/patrick-mcgorry-plans-to-dope-12yearolds-with-cannabis/

[7] https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1751-7893.2012.00366.x

[8] https://www.cchrint.org/2017/03/15/patrick-mcgorry-plans-to-dope-12yearolds-with-cannabis/

[9] https://www.smh.com.au/national/mcgorry-accused-of-conflict-of-interest-20110806-1igxd.html

[10] https://www.pc.gov.au/__data/assets/pdf_file/0019/240814/sub290-mental-health.pdf

[11] https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/sites/default/files/legacy/mm/digital/media/03Mar_
PTMorganstein_Coronavirus_PDF_V2.pdf; https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/psychiatrists-beware-impact-coronavirus-pandemics-mental-health

[12] https://www.jnj.com/personal-stories/covid-19-taught-doctor-resilience-and-hope

[13] https://www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/anxiety-disorders

[14] https://www.cchrint.org/issues/psycho-pharmaceutical-front-groups/adaa/

[15] https://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/04/health/policy/04drug.html

[16] “More People Are Taking Drugs for Anxiety and Insomnia, and Doctors Are Worried,” Wall Street Journal, 25 May 2020, https://www.wsj.com/articles/more-people-are-taking-drugs-for-anxiety-and-insomnia-and-doctors-are-worried-11590411600

Drug-Induced Acts of Senseless Violence Need Investigation

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CCHR is updating its report on Psychiatric Drugs Cause Violence and Suicide in light of recent killings and study linking antidepressants to commission of violent crimes. Increase in current psychotropic drug use raises concerns about violence.

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
June 1, 2020

Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) announced it has started a research project to update its report “Psychiatric Drugs Create Violence and Suicide” in light of recent violent killings. Psychiatrists wrote 86% more prescriptions for psychotropic drugs during the March-April lockdown months compared to January and February this year.[1] This prompts concerns because drug regulatory agencies across the globe indicate that drug adverse effect reports show that a percent of people taking these drugs will experience violent and aggressive reactions.

Of nearly 410 agency warnings against psychotropic drugs, 27 warn of violence, aggression, hostility, mania, psychosis or homicidal ideation and 49 warn of self-harm or suicide/suicidal.[2]

A Swedish study just published in the peer-reviewed journal European Neuropsychopharmacology found that some people being treated with selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) antidepressants have a greater tendency to commit violent crime. More importantly, the study, confirms how such violent effects can continue during sudden withdrawal, continuing for up to 12 weeks after stopping antidepressants.[3]

While the authors caution that it is an “association,” rather than cause and effect, the study joins numerous others and expert reports that do suggest a causal relationship. Professor David Healy, an international expert in psychopharmacology, says that the main causal factor behind suicide and violence while taking antidepressants is increased mental and/or physical agitation. This lead to about five percent of subjects taking the drugs to drop out of clinical trials, compared to only 0.5 percent of people on placebos.[4]

There can be a number of reasons for mass murder, school shootings and violence, but the introduction and increases in psychotropic drug use in the U.S. in recent decades has questioned a reliable link between the drugs and violent behavior. “Violence and other potentially criminal behavior caused by prescription drugs are medicine’s best kept secret,” Prof. Healy said.[5]

The Swedish researchers examined the records of 785,337 people aged 15 to 60 years who were prescribed an SSRI in Sweden in 2006 through 2013. These patients were followed up for an average of around seven years, which included periods when individuals took SSRIs and when they did not. Individuals in the study committed 6,306 violent crimes while taking SSRIs, and 25,897 when not taking them—on average 26% higher during the antidepressant-taking period.[6] They were quoted as saying: “This work shows that SSRI treatment appears to be associated with an increased risk for violent criminality in adults as well as adolescents,” according to the study authors.[7]

The increased risk persisted for up to 12 weeks after the estimated end of SSRI treatment and violent crime existed in young adults as well as in adults aged up to 60 years. [8] Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics Journal also published a study in October 2012 about persistent antidepressant withdrawal effects finding they could last six weeks.[9]

It’s not limited to antidepressants but also benzodiazepines and antipsychotics.

CCHR’s report documents 17 drug regulatory agency warnings about psychotropic drug addiction or withdrawal effects.[10] Withdrawal effects for benzodiazepines or anti-anxiety drugs can last weeks and sometimes months or years and include increased anxiety, perceptual distortions, depersonalization, paranoid thoughts, rage, aggression and irritability to name but a few.[11]

Finnish researchers published the findings in their 2015 study that determined benzodiazepines could increase the risk of a consumer committing a homicide by 45% and antidepressant by 31%. A study published in the European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology also found that “…benzodiazepines and [SSRI antidepressants] are the main pharmacological classes able to induce aggressive behavior.”[12]

Researchers took the FDA’s Adverse Event Reporting System data and extracted all “serious adverse event” reports for drugs. Of the 484 drugs identified, 31 drugs were disproportionately associated with violence, of which 25 were psychotropics. They accounted for 79% of all the violence cases reported. The specific cases of violence included: homicide, physical assaults, physical abuse, homicidal ideation, and cases described as violence-related symptoms.[13]

Recent killings have included a 23-year-old university student accused of inexplicably killing two men with a machete or sword and injuring another. The man had undergone years of psychiatric treatment, seeing a number of “therapists.”[14] A man who allegedly attacked the Cuban Embassy, firing at it 32 times in April, was previously evaluated at a psychiatric hospital and prescribed an antipsychotic in March 2020.[15] Although he may not have been compliant in taking it daily, antipsychotic withdrawal effects also include hostility. The drug remains in the system, potentially impacting upon mental faculties and emotional behavior.

Psychotropic drugs and other invasive treatments such as brain-intervention methods like electroshock may explain what drives a person to commit mass murder. This needs to be properly examined before pouring more funds into mental health and the lessening of any restrictions on psychiatric treatment protections and safeguards.

References:

[1] “Psychiatrists Wrote 86% More Prescriptions For Psychotropic Drugs During Lockdown Months,” Info Wars, 26 May 2020, https://www.infowars.com/psychiatrists-wrote-86-more-prescriptions-for-psychotropic-drugs-during-lockdown-months/

[2] Page 3, https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/violence-report.pdf

[3] “SSRI antidepressants associated with increase in violent crime in some patients,” Eureka Alert!, 28 May 2020, https://eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-05/econ-saa052720.php

[4] https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/violence-report.pdf

[5] https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/violence-report.pdf

[6] “SSRI antidepressants associated with increase in violent crime in some patients,” European College of Neuropsychopharmacology, 28 May 2020, https://m.cchrint.org/service/home/~/?auth=co&loc=en_US&id=288585&part=2

[7] “SSRI antidepressants associated with increase in violent crime in some patients,” European College of Neuropsychopharmacology, 28 May 2020, https://m.cchrint.org/service/home/~/?auth=co&loc=en_US&id=288585&part=2

[8] “SSRI antidepressants associated with increase in violent crime in some patients,” Eureka Alert!, 28 May 2020, https://eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2020-05/econ-saa052720.php

[9] https://www.cchrint.org/psychiatric-drugs/side-effects-can-persist/

[10] Page 3, https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/violence-report.pdf

[11] Page 8, https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/violence-report.pdf

[12] https://www.cchrint.org/2019/09/03/another-psychiatric-drug-another-act-of-senseless-violence/, citing: David DiSalvo, “Common Painkillers And Sedatives Linked To Increased Risk Of Homicide, According To Study,” Forbes, 4 June 2015, https://www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2015/06/04/common-pain-killers-and-sedatives-linked-to-increased-risk-of-homicide-according-to-study/#1083a9581aef and Nadege Rouve, Haleh Bagheri, et al., “Prescribed drugs and violence: a case/noncase study in the French PharmacoVigilance Database,” European Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, 7 June, 2011, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21655992

[13] Page 34, https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/violence-report.pdf

[14] https://www.yc.news/2020/05/25/family-begs-killer-peter-manfredonia-it-is-time-to-let-the-healing-process-begin-its-time-to-surrender/; https://www.mcall.com/news/breaking/hc-br-uconn-willington-derby-homicide-manhunt-peter-manfredonia-20200526-ywd5rpt6b5ekre6xprcwj75pw4-story.html

[15] http://cubamoneyproject.com/2020/05/03/shooter-trump/

Another For-Profit Scandalized Psychiatric Hospital—Montevista in Las Vegas—Closes

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A CCHR International investigation continues to find allegations of neglect, abuse and potential fraud in the for-profit behavioral hospital industry and reiterates need for more tougher penalties and more closures. 

By Jan Eastgate
President CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
June 1, 2020

Another for-profit psychiatric hospital plagued by allegations of abuse has closed. Strategic Behavioral Health, a for-profit company in Memphis, Tennessee, notified Nevada’s Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation that it was permanently closing Montevista Hospital in Clark County, NV. The letter does not identify a reason for the closure but The Nevada Current’s headline is telltale: “Beleaguered psychiatric hospital quietly shutters permanently.”[1]

For three decades, CCHR has investigated widespread patient abuse and fraudulent billing scams in the for-profit behavioral industry. CCHR’s online report on the issue addresses numerous chains of psychiatric facilities that CCHR has sent to thousands of legislators asking for increased oversight of to protect patients.

Montevista Hospital had claimed to be the leader in behavioral health care for the greater Las Vegas area for almost 30 years.[2]

But now, signs are taped to the doors announcing the facility is closed.  As The Nevada Current reported, “Montevista’s unceremonious ending comes roughly six months after the behavioral health hospital entered into an agreement with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services to correct serious issues that resulted in the hospital’s Medicare and Medicaid funding being pulled in August 2019.” Further, “The June 2019 “Statement of Deficiencies” report that led CMS to rescind Medicare and Medicaid payments to Montevista details several instances of patients being in “immediate jeopardy,” in addition to a slew of other compliance issues related to staff requirements, patient assessments, medical records, patient’s rights and the facility’s governing body.”[3]

In January 2017, Montevista got two level three citations. In one citation, the state said staff failed to prevent or properly investigate: alleged sexual contact between two girls, ages 6 and 8; sex involving two teenage male-female pairs; and physical abuse by staff, including a worker hitting a patient.[4]

Then in August 2019, media reported that Strategic Behavioral Health faced serious regulatory violations in other states.  And almost a year earlier, the State Journal reported on nine immediate jeopardy citations and other serious actions taken since 2014 against four of the company’s psychiatric hospitals in North Carolina, Texas and Colorado Springs, Colorado. [5]

Strategic Behavioral Health has a “demonstrably poor record,” said Chuck Callendar, business director for Connections Counseling, a mental health services provider in Madison, Wisconsin, that is also for-profit but has a nonprofit arm. “There is a need in this town that (Strategic Behavioral Health) is trying to address, but they are doing it for a reason, which appears to be strictly profit,” Callendar said.[6]  That poor record is not unusual in the for-profit behavioral health industry, a health market estimated at over $220 billion a year.[7]

Other allegations against Strategic Behavioral Health facilities include the following:

  • Clear View Behavioral Health in Johnstown Colorado faced “immediate jeopardy” violations — the most serious kind given—after it failed to maintain a sanitary environment in patient care areas didn’t properly investigate patient falls and suicide attempts, and may have contributed to a patient’s death, according to a state of Colorado report.[8]
  • January 2020: A Boulder, Colorado woman sued Clear View. According to reporterherald.com, the suit, filed late January 2020, alleges that the facility committed negligence, false imprisonment and organized crime violations during its treatment of Lisa Sun who alleges she was kept against her will for eight days. Clear View has 21 days from when Sun’s complaint was filed to respond. The suit is seeking financial compensation for Sun and is requesting a jury trial in the 20th Judicial District.[9]

A Denver-based attorney, Jerome “J” Reinan, accuses the facility of racketeering, fraud, negligence, false imprisonment and outrageous conduct. Reinan represents Angelo Scolari, who claims hospital administrators kept him at the facility longer than needed in January 2018 and believes their motivation was to maximize income from his insurance provider. “I received zero help,” Scolari told the Contact7 Investigates team. “It was basically being locked away and told you couldn’t leave.” He described seeing a doctor for just two minutes a day and living in unsanitary and squalid conditions – with toilets clogged for days, dirty trays and plates on which to eat, and his feet sticking to the un-mopped floors. “It’s abusive,” said the attorney. “Never seen anything like this.” He said the action followed not only the Contact 7 investigations into serious accusations against Clear View but reports followed by five state and federal investigations and a criminal investigation by the Colorado Attorney General’s office. Reinen said he had heard concerns raised by more than 60 other former patients, family members and both current and former Clear View employees that have created the foundation of the lawsuit against Clear View’s owner, Strategic Behavioral Health. Last June, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment (CDPHE), announced it was moving to revoke the hospital’s license. An administrative law judge was scheduled to rule on CDPHE’s request in May.[10]

  • January 2018: Strategic Behavioral Center, Charlotte, North Carolina got an immediate jeopardy violation for failing to keep the facility secure. Ten patients, ages 12 to 17, escaped through a broken window Jan. 1 after some used wooden boards from furniture they destroyed to attack a worker. The ordeal amounted to a “riot,” a nurse told inspectors. But staff delayed calling police, even though they said there weren’t enough employees to control the situation. In December 2016, another North Carolina Strategic Behavioral Health hospital, got an immediate jeopardy violation for failing to have enough nursing staff to monitor a patient who was possibly sexually assaulted by another patient. Each unit was supposed to have at least one registered nurse. But inspectors said only one registered nurse was scheduled for three units, and that person left in the middle of night, leaving no registered nurse on any unit.[11]
  • February 2016: Peak View Behavioral Health, Colorado Springs, Colorado was cited after inspectors said nursing staff failed to properly assess patients’ risk for falls and take steps to prevent falls. [12] 
  • December 2015: Peak Behavioral Health, Santa Teresa, New Mexico. Disability Rights New Mexico, a state-designated protection and advocacy agency, said in a report that the facility had 80 incidents of “resident-on-resident violence or aggression,” with “numerous injuries,” between September 2014 and September 2015. Police were called to the facility 21 times and patients escaped 23 times, and the facility provided an “unsafe environment,” the report said. [13]
  • October 2015: Strategic Behavioral Health’s Rock Prairie Behavioral Health in Texas received five immediate jeopardy citations that included nurses failing to properly assess patients for medical issues before and after using physical or chemical restraints. Two patients were restrained or put in seclusion without proper explanation. Another patient injured her finger in a seclusion room, requiring six stitches.[14]

CCHR wants far tougher penalties for fraudulent billing practices, including cancellation of CMS funding and hospital closures for repeated abuse and/or fraud. Dozens of behavioral facilities have already closed since CCHR began its most recent investigations. Read CCHR’s Report here.[15] But penalties are insufficient. CCHR’s original investigation started with reports of restraint deaths and subsequent lawsuits. Only this month—May 2020—The Charlotte Observer reported a $1.95 million settlement of a lawsuit against South Carolina’s mental health agency and other defendants. Although against a state facility, similar suits have been filed against privately owned psychiatric facilities. The lawsuit was over the January 2019 death of patient William Avant, 35, who died by suffocation at the State’s G. Werber Bryan Psychiatric Hospital in the hands of staff who placed him facedown and then dogpiled on top of him as a means of restraint. Richland County Coroner Gary Watts ruled the death a homicide but no one was charged. One employee was terminated and several were disciplined, a State newspaper investigation showed.[16]

Far greater penalties, both civil and criminal, should exist for both state and private psychiatric sectors.

References:

[1] “Beleaguered psychiatric hospital quietly shutters permanently,” Nevada Current, 22 May 2020, https://www.nevadacurrent.com/2020/05/22/beleaguered-psychiatric-hospital-quietly-shutters-permanently/

[2] https://web.vegaschamber.com/Health-Care-and-Medical/Montevista-Hospital-(Strategic-Behavioral-Health)-13388

[3] Op. cit., Nevada Current

[4] “Strategic Behavioral Health’s sanctions in five states,” Wisconsin State Journal, 8 Apr. 2018, https://madison.com/wsj/news/local/health-med-fit/strategic-behavioral-healths-sanctions-in-five-states/article_7fcf1fd8-9f0c-546b-be0a-4d353623cd52.html

[5] “Company behind psychiatric hospital in Middleton has more problems in other states,” WiscNews, 19 Aug. 2020, https://www.wiscnews.com/news/state-and-regional/company-behind-psychiatric-hospital-in-middleton-has-more-problems-in/article_28ce804b-9b0f-5a45-852e-307b1175100d.html

[6] Ibid.

[7] https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/healthcare-fraud-by-the-for-profit-behavioral-industry.pdf

[8] Op. cit, WiscNews

[9] http://www.1310kfka.com/news/02/johnstown-psychiatric-hospital-facing-false-imprisonment-allegations/;

[10] “Denver attorney accuses northern Colorado mental health hospital of ‘racketeering’ in lawsuit,” The Denver Channel, ABC 7 news, 20 Jan. 2020, https://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/investigations/clear-view-investigation/denver-attorney-accuses-northern-colorado-mental-health-hospital-of-racketeering-in-lawsuit

[11] Op. cit., Wisconsin State Journal

[12] Ibid.

[13] Ibid.

[14] “Strategic Behavioral Health’s sanctions in five states,” State Journal, Wisconsin, 8 Apr. 2018, https://madison.com/wsj/news/local/health-med-fit/strategic-behavioral-health-s-sanctions-in-five-states/article_7fcf1fd8-9f0c-546b-be0a-4d353623cd52.html

[15] https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/healthcare-fraud-by-the-for-profit-behavioral-industry.pdf

[16] “$1.95 million settlement reached in violent death of SC DMH patient,” Charlotte Observer, 26 May 2020, https://www.charlotteobserver.com/news/state/south-carolina/article243000086.html

NAACP Inglewood-South Bay Executive and CCHR Call for Restraints Ban in Psychiatric Hospitals

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Psychiatric restraints are socially invisible and should be prohibited. Funds should be redirected to effective, not racist “mental health” programs for Black communities.

Rev. Frederick Shaw is a long-term civil rights campaigner, Executive Director of the NAACP Inglewood-South Bay branch and a spokesperson for the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR). He helped obtained three national NAACP resolutions against drugging and electroshocking of children.

Ms. Jan Eastgate, President CCHR International, has worked investigating and exposing abuses in the mental health industry for more than 40 years, and has written reports on psychiatric and psychological racism in the U.S., Australia and South Africa. Ms. Eastgate and Rev. Shaw both attended and presented evidence of this to South Africa’s Truth & Reconciliation Commission investigating apartheid crimes in 1997.

By Rev. Frederick Shaw and Jan Eastgate
Mental Health Industry Watchdog
June 9, 2020

Like millions of others, we join in the calls for justice and a stop to racism, following the recent tragic death during a police restraint hold. We are encouraged by such a united voice and, as an extension of that, draw attention to “legal” restraint abuse that is not socially visible—behind psychiatric “hospital” walls.

16-year-old Cornelius Frederick died after he was physically restrained at Sequel Youth & Family Services’ Lakeside Academy in Kalamazoo, Michigan

The tragic deaths of African Americans in psychiatric facilities is rarely discussed. On April 30, 2020, 16-year-old Cornelius Frederick, an African American boy, was physically restrained at Sequel Youth & Family Services’ Lakeside Academy in Kalamazoo, Michigan, a residential psychiatric facility that treats foster care and other kids with behavioral issues. According to the family’s attorney, Frederick started yelling, “I can’t breathe!” before passing out. Thirty hours later, he was dead.[1]

Frederick was described by family members as “a boy’s boy,” with a penchant for playing jokes and pranks. He was sweet, too. Frederick had been a ward of the state since 2014, after his mother passed away and his father’s parental rights were revoked, according to Jon Marko, the Detroit-based civil rights attorney representing Frederick’s family. A witness said, “[T]his kid threw a sandwich. He was being unruly and they couldn’t control him. So, four guys…the size of rugby players, tackled him.’”[2]

On May 29, the National Juvenile Justice Network announced that the Michigan Center for Youth Justice is seeking justice for Cornelius Fredrick and campaigning to shut down Sequel Youth and Family Services from operating in Michigan as well as around the country. The group started a petition to get Justice for Cornelius and Shut Sequel Down, which CCHR supports. Please sign.[3]

The fact is that restraint use should be banned across the boards. CCHR has been documenting restraint deaths in psychiatric facilities, especially those in for-profit behavioral hospitals, for decades. Consider the following alarming statistics from research:

  • African Americans are over-represented in restraint-related deaths of children and adults with disabilities, accounting for 22% of the deaths studied while representing only 13% of the U.S. population.[4]
  • In one state, as an example, African Americans are disproportionately subjected to coercive and restrictive measures, including 72-hour involuntary commitment, seclusion, restraints and forcibly drugged.[5]
  • According to the 2015-2016 Civil Rights Data Collection of School Climate and Safety (2018) for the nation, African American students also receive disproportionate discipline in schools. Representing about 15% of the total enrollment, African American students accounted for 27% of restraints and 23% of seclusion in schools.[6]

Roshelle Clayborne, 16, died after being restrained.

In 2000, federal regulations were passed to make psychiatric restraint deaths more accountable but with little impact. It followed The Hartford Courant series that found up to 150 restraint deaths occurring each year in the U.S. One of those deaths was a 16-year-old African American girl, Roshelle Clayborne, a ward of the state, who while at the Laurel Ridge psychiatric treatment center in Texas, was slammed face-down on the floor in a restraint hold. “I can’t breathe,” she pleaded. She became suddenly still, blood trickled from the corner of her mouth as she lost control of her bodily functions. Her limp body was rolled into a blanket and dumped in a seclusion room. No one watched her die, the Hartford Courant reported.[7]

Andrew McLain, 11, was pronounced dead after being restrained

In another case, 11-year-old foster child, Andrew McClain refused to obey a psychiatric aide’s order to move to another dining table at Elmcrest psychiatric hospital in Texas and was escorted to a “time out” room where he was restrained. Little more than an hour later, Andrew was pronounced dead, suffocated in a restraint hold administered him.[8]

CCHR has continued to document restraint deaths, especially in for-profit psychiatric facilities and the stereotyping of African Americans, Blacks, Latinos, Native Americans and minorities in the mental health system.

  • 16-year-old Alexis Evette Richie’s (right) death was ruled a homicide.

    In 2010, 16-year-old Alexis Evette Richie lay motionless and sprawled face down on a bean bag chair at the adolescent psychiatric ward at SSM DePaul Health Center in Missouri. The foster child had been unruly, trying to hit, scratch and bite staff members. Two aides grabbed her arms and took her down a hall and into a small room called the “quiet room.” They held her face down, while a nurse injected a sedative into her hip. Alexis continued to struggle and then went limp. The nurse and the two aides left without checking her pulse or making sure she was breathing. It was 12 minutes after she stopped moving before anyone tried to revive Alexis. By then it was too late. The medical examiner agreed, concluding that Alexis had suffocated on the bean bag chair. Her death was ruled a homicide.[9] No criminal charges were filed.[10]

  • As the Louis Post-Despatch reported, Alexis had been abused and abandoned in her short life. Her medical and foster-care records indicated that Missouri child-welfare officials removed her from her home at age 7, after she’d been sexually abused by a family friend. She bounced around foster homes and institutions. Around age 11, she tried to kill herself by running into traffic. She was admitted to DePaul on Oct. 16, 2009, after stabbing a teacher at Evangelical Children’s Home with a pencil. Yet she was cheerful and attentive—but was often angry or tearful. She got shots of two drugs, Ativan and the Geodon. [11] (Both psychotropic drugs could have induced violent behavior.)
  • On November 19, 2017, Jeremiah Flemming, a 15-year-old African American, died after a mental health technician physically restrained him at North Spring Behavioral Healthcare in Leesburg, North Virginia. His mother, Kinnisha Flemming, told The Washington Post, her son “didn’t deserve the way he died.” The state medical examiner concluded the teen died of asphyxiation. Jeremiah had been bullied and had become agitated and started punching the walls before he was restrained during the incident.  About two minutes into the hold, a nurse observed that Jeremiah dropped his head down and sounded like he was snoring.[12] The boy was later found unresponsive and not breathing. He was taken to a local hospital where he died.[13] In 2018, an employee who had been charged with involuntary manslaughter over Jeremiah’s death, was acquitted, raising concerns about psychiatric restraint deaths being excused as “accidental killings.”[14]
  • In case of Cornelius Frederick, the Kalamazoo police department is investigating the incident, but as of the date of writing, no arrests have been laid over the death.[15] The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services also launched an investigation into the facility and is reviewing its license. The investigation indicates a staff member was suspended after reports of slapping, choking and scratching a student in January. That same staff member had been disciplined months earlier for improper supervision of a resident, according to the report.[16]
  • Nationwide, Sequel Youth & Family services treats about 10,000 children and adolescents.[17] It has come under government scrutiny over its treatment of foster care and other youth. Only last August Sequel’s Red Rock Canyon School in Utah closed after “numerous accounts of mistreatment, abuse, acts of violence and overall disrespect toward residents.” Sequel Pomegranate reached a settlement with the Ohio Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services after facing a license revocation due to use of improper restraints and sexual abuse of patients and violence in the facility. One teen was kicked, punched and improperly restrained by a nurse and mental health aide. [18]

Beware Mental Health Funds Offered to “Treat” Racism Effects

African Americans, Latinos and minorities should be warned about current government offers to increase mental health funding to “treat” them. Some Congresspersons have already proposed redirecting some funding toward addressing mental health.[19]

Beware the American Psychiatric Association (APA) that would benefit from such funding and are offering “treatment.” It brings with it a false science that offers help, but harms.

The road to incarceration can occur when a child is labeled a troublemaker or is diagnosed with a mental illness, which can “put them into the pipeline for prison,” speakers told a Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health audience in 2015.[20]

According to one study, African Americans who experience the most racism are more likely to be labeled with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).[21] But to oppress a race, and then label its normal but frightening reactions to this as a ‘mental illness,’ and drug it, is morally wrong, dangerous and a betrayal.  It’s not that the painful responses are not real—they are.  But they are not a “disease.” Consider the usual “treatment” for PTSD: antidepressants, which include Prozac, Zoloft, Effexor and Paxil.[22] The drugs can cause nervousness, agitation, restlessness, hallucinations, suicidal behavior and sexual problems.[23]

Patrick D. Hahn, Affiliate Professor of Biology, Loyola University Maryland, also warns, “The link between antidepressants and violence, including suicide and homicide, is well established.”[24] Post-withdrawal symptoms from antidepressants “may last several months to years” and include disturbed mood, emotional lability [excessive emotional reactions and frequent mood changes], and irritability. [25]

That the APA now speaks out opposing racism is hypocritical.

Psychiatrists Invent “Protest Psychosis”

During the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s, psychiatrists invented the term “protest psychosis” to describe Blacks participating in the movement.[26] It was used to stereotype them as aggressive with claims that joining in Black protests was a symptom of “schizophrenia.” Psychiatrists writing in the International Journal of Social Psychiatry said that Blacks developed delusions, grandiosity, magical thinking, and “dangerous aggressive dealings” when they joined civil rights sit-ins.[27]

Advertisements for powerful antipsychotic drugs in psychiatric journals showed angry Black men or African tribal symbols to influence the prescriptions of these physically damaging drugs, to African Americans.[28]

  • Following the civil rights movement, stereotyping or profiling Blacks as criminals became so pervasive throughout society that “criminal predator” was used as a euphemism for “young Black male,” a report in the Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice[29]
  • In 2017, The American Journal of Psychiatry, “Addressing the Legacy of Racism in Psychiatric Training,” covered this era and today: “The Abolitionist and Civil Rights movements were met with mistrust and prejudice by mental health practitioners. African Americans, angry about their oppression, were labeled ‘schizophrenic,’ due to their supposed ‘pathological’ reaction of emotional disharmony, hostility, and aggression. The over-diagnosis of schizophrenia among African Americans persists today, along with myriad other racial inequities in mental health practice.”[30]
  • A New York Law School Journal report in 2017 reported continued psychological profiling: “Behavior by African-Americans is more often interpreted as ‘dangerous’ than identical behavior by whites. African Americans are also more often diagnosed with a psychiatric ‘conduct disorder’ than whites.”[31]
  • Research shows that within the population of people admitted to state psychiatric hospitals, African Americans are almost five times more likely to be diagnosed with schizophrenia as compared with Euro-Americans.[32]
  • Today, there is still an over-representation of antipsychotic drug use among African Americans and harmful psychotropic drugs are prescribed to African American children as young as 18 months.[33]
  • Antipsychotics cause long-term severe side effects such as tardive dyskinesia (tardive meaning “late” and dyskinesia meaning, “abnormal movement of muscles”), which is marked by abnormal muscular movements and gestures. Tardive dyskinesia causes permanent damage to the nervous system. Several studies show it to be significantly more prevalent among African Americans than among whites.[34] A second effect is akathisia [a, without; kathisia, sitting; an inability to keep still] or extreme restlessness, which can lead to violent behavior.[35] Sexual dysfunction is common in those taking antipsychotics.[36] Atypical (new) antipsychotic drugs can induce diabetes, as well as obesity.[37] African American men in particular are most likely to receive excessive doses of these drugs.[38]

“Medical Model” Creates Racism

In 1792, Benjamin Rush, the “father of American psychiatry” and still the icon of the APA today, declared that Blacks suffered from a disease called Negritude, which he theorized derived from leprosy. The “cure” was when the skin turned “white.” Like lepers, he said, they needed to be segregated for their own good and to prevent their “infecting” others.[39]

While Rush is promoted as anti-slavery and was a signatory of the Declaration of Independence, he was a slave owner, purchasing a child slave that he later freed for compensation. Until 2015, the trademarked seal of the APA featured Rush, a racist and slave owner; APA still uses it for ceremonial purposes and internal documents.[40] There’s also an APA annual award given in his name.[41]

Rush provided a “medical model”—still evident today—to justify post-slavery, “modern” racism, rationalizing, for example, that Blacks were able to endure surgical operations and pain with ease compared to whites. He wrote of cases where “Negroes” had held the upper part of a limb during amputation, calling this “pathological insensibility.”[42]

Runaway slaves were diagnosed with Drapetomania (drapetes, runaway slave, and mania, meaning crazy) and Dyasethesia Aethiopis (laziness and impaired sensation). According to Dr. Samuel A Cartwright, Drapetomania caused Blacks to have the “uncontrollable urge” to escape from their “masters.” The “treatment” was “whipping the devil out of them” and was justified in “medical” terms that whipping made idle Blacks “take active exercise” that vitalized blood to their brain “to give liberty to the mind.”[43] It was further asserted that Blacks were more durable to pain because they had evolved physiologically under the conditions of slavery.[44] Another term for it, as discussed in a 2019 article, is “Black hardiness.”[45]

In 1997, we presented CCHR’s submission on the racist history of psychiatry and psychology in South Africa to the country’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) investigating apartheid crimes. Dozens of studies were provided showing how psychiatric-psychological racism had permeated and remained entrenched in educational, medical, government and judicial fields since the early 1900s. The theory that Blacks feel less pain was evidenced by one study on electroshock treatment—up to 460 volts of electricity sent through the brain—given to Blacks without anesthetic because it was claimed they were more “susceptible to the effects of anesthetics.”[46] And unlikely to feel the pain of violent shock treatment.

Astoundingly, in a January 2020 article, Janice A. Sabin, Ph.D., MSW, research associate professor in the Department of Biomedical Informatics and Medical Education at the University of Washington School of Medicine, showed this still stereotypical view in medicine. She wrote: “Half of white medical trainees believe such myths as black people have thicker skin or less sensitive nerve endings than white people.” Sabin concluded: “As a nation, we must continue to reckon with the lingering history of racism in medicine.”[47]

This is even more egregious in the mental health-psychopharmacology industry, where psychiatric disorders are based on opinion about behaviors and not on a medical or scientific test that can physically confirm any mental disorder. In fact, Professor Herb Kutchins, co-author of the renowned book Making Us Crazy: The Psychiatric Bible and the Creation of Mental Disorders warns about the APA’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSM), stating: “Defenders of slavery, proponents of racial segregation…have consistently attempted to justify oppression by inventing new mental illnesses and by reporting higher rates of abnormality among African-Americans or other minorities.”

In an October 2019 review of Kirk Johnson, Ph.D.’s book, Medical Stigmata: Race, Medicine, and the Pursuit of Theological Liberation, Audrey Farley wrote, “Despite lacking scientific basis, race-based medicine is gaining currency and even expanding to the pharmaceutical industry.” Johnson’s book, she says, “chronicles race-based medicine’s development from the eugenics era to the present day, where it is often applied for commercial purposes. Johnson argues that this form of medicine might seem to benefit minority communities by promising greater precision, but it actually does the opposite.”[48] “When the concept of race is used in medicine and pharmacology, it continues to assert that minorities are ‘other’ human beings,” says Johnson.[49] This has been used to “justify immigration restrictions, anti-miscegenation [mixed-race marriage] laws, involuntary sterilization, and other selective breeding practices.”[50]

Eugenics (meaning “good stock”) was developed by English psychologist Frances Galton in 1883.  Eugenics was used for selective breeding as a mechanism to increase desirable traits in a population while restricting and eliminating undesirable traits. Galton claimed, “The average intellectual standard of the Negro is some two grades below our own.” Eugenics has prevailed, heavily influencing medical, social, and academic systems.

Much needs to be done to undo the damage done by centuries of psychiatric/psychological racism and the social policies it has engendered.

As a start, NAACP Inglewood-South Bay office and CCHR International are working together to produce materials for African Americans to educate them about continuing racism in mental health field as well as the alternatives to what has become harm in the name of mental health care.

This will include what effective educational; art, music and sports education in schools, and holistic medical programs that funding would be better re-directed to, legal forms that can be signed to protect against enforced psychiatric treatment or mental health profiling (screening) of schoolchildren. “Know Your Rights” will be a tool kit for minorities to help identify and protect themselves against racism in the mental health industry.

Finally, tragically, “I can’t breathe,” which has become the uniting message in protests against police restraints is an all-too common cry during restraint use in psychiatric hospitals and why the practice should be banned.

References:

[1] “Foster care teen’s death draws scrutiny to group home outbreaks: Who is looking out for these children?” Journal Star, 15 May 2020, https://www.pjstar.com/zz/news/20200515/foster-care-teens-death-draws-scrutiny-to-group-home-outbreaks-who-is-looking-out-for-these-children

[2] “Father worried about son’s well-being after he witnessed student’s death: Son tells father ‘four guys the size of rugby players tackled [teen]’ at Lakeside Academy last week,” Fox 17 news online, 8 May 2020, https://www.fox17online.com/news/local-news/kzoo-bc/kalamazoo/father-worried-about-sons-well-being-after-he-witnessed-students-death

[3] https://njjn.org/article/michigan-center-for-youth-justice-seeks-justice-for-cornelius-fredrick

[4] https://www.equipforequality.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/National-Review-of-Restraint-Related-Deaths-of-Adults-and-Children-with-Disabilities-The-Lethal-Consequences-of-Restraint.pdf

[5] https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/Treaties/CERD/Shared%20Documents/USA/
INT_CERD_NGO_USA_17741_E.pdf

[6] Ruth Jones, “Eugenics in Education Policy and the Impact on African American Students, University of San Francisco, 16 May 2019, https://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2286&context=thes

[7] https://www.cchrint.org/2020/01/28/school-seclusion-restraint-ban/ citing, Eric M. Weiss, “A Nationwide Pattern of Death,” The Hartford Courant, 11-15 October, 1998, http://www.courant.com/news/special/restraint/day1.stm

[8] https://www.courant.com/news/connecticut/hc-xpm-1998-05-06-9805060231-story.html; https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CHRG-106shrg57118/html/CHRG-106shrg57118.htm

[9] “Hospital death: Girl, 16, dies during restraint at an already-troubled hospital,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 1 Aug. 2010,https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/girl-16-dies-during-restraint-at-an-already-troubled-hospital/article_4a10ccdd-5d08-52bd-bfc5-c435014aa09b.html

[10] https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/nurse-cited-in-depaul-death-had-been-fired-at-another-hospital/article_0d2e8797-8420-5ddd-a2c1-95b437097fce.html

[11] “Hospital death: Girl, 16, dies during restraint at an already-troubled hospital,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, 1 Aug. 2010,https://www.stltoday.com/news/local/metro/girl-16-dies-during-restraint-at-an-already-troubled-hospital/article_4a10ccdd-5d08-52bd-bfc5-c435014aa09b.html

[12] https://www.richmond.com/news/virginia/second-worker-charged-in-teen-patients-death-at-health-care-center-in-northern-virginia/article_c2cd859e-7525-5939-8d0a-90a95e01a85f.html

[13] “Employee charged in teen’s death at behavioral health center in Loudoun,” Inside, 17 Jan 2018, https://www.insidenova.com/news/crime_police/employee-charged-in-teens-death-at-behavioral-health-center-in-loudoun/article_19985634-fb93-11e7-a8be-03488a6271ce.html

[14] “Employee acquitted in death of 15-year-old patient,” https://www.localdvm.com/news/virginia/employee-acquitted-in-death-of-15-year-old-patient/

[15] “Foster care teen’s death draws scrutiny to group home outbreaks: Who is looking out for these children?” Journal Star, 15 May 2020, https://www.pjstar.com/zz/news/20200515/foster-care-teens-death-draws-scrutiny-to-group-home-outbreaks-who-is-looking-out-for-these-children

[16] “Lakeside Academy was ‘out of control’ prior to student death, police say,” Mlive, 14 May 2020, https://www.mlive.com/news/kalamazoo/2020/05/lakeside-academy-was-out-of-control-prior-to-student-death-police-say.html

[17] “Foster care teen’s death draws scrutiny to group home outbreaks: Who is looking out for these children?” Journal Star, 15 May 2020, https://www.pjstar.com/zz/news/20200515/foster-care-teens-death-draws-scrutiny-to-group-home-outbreaks-who-is-looking-out-for-these-children

[18] https://www.cchrint.org/2020/02/11/the-risky-business-of-foster-youth-drugged-in-for-profit-behavioral-hospitals/

[19] https://www.politico.com/news/2020/06/08/defund-police-democrats-307766

[20] https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/news/features/pathway-to-prison-often-paved-with-unfair-labels-misdiagnosis/

[21] https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/culturally-speaking/201509/the-link-between-racism-and-ptsd

[22] https://www.ptsd.va.gov/understand_tx/meds_for_ptsd.asp

[23] https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/depression/in-depth/ssris/art-20044825

[24] https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/violence-report.pdf

[25] https://www.cchrint.org/pdfs/violence-report.pdf

[26] Jonathan M. Metzl, The Protest Psychosis, How Schizophrenia became a Black Disease, (Beacon Press, Boston, 2009), p. xiv.

[27] Ibid. The Protest Psychosis,  p. 101.

[28] “The Protest Psychosis: How Schizophrenia Became a Black Disease,” Amer. Journ. Of Psychiatry (online), Apr. 2010.

[29] https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1043986207306870?journalCode=ccja

[30] Morgan Medlock, M.D., “Addressing the Legacy of Racism in Psychiatric Training,” The Amer. Journ of Psychiatry, 9 May 2017, https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/full/10.1176/appi.ajp-rj.2016.110206

[31] Michael L. Perlin,  et al, “Tolling For the Aching Ones Whose Wounds Cannot Be Nursed’: The Marginalization of Racial Minorities and Women in Institutional Mental Disability Law,” New York Law School, Journal of Gender, Race, and Justice, Vol. 20, Issue 3 (Summer 2017), pp. 431-45, https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1947&context=fac_articles_chapters

[32] Michael L. Perlin  et al, “Tolling For the Aching Ones Whose Wounds Cannot Be Nursed’: The Marginalization of Racial Minorities and Women in Institutional Mental Disability Law,” New York Law School, Journal of Gender, Race, and Justice, Vol. 20, Issue 3 (Summer 2017), pp. 431-45, https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1947&context=fac_articles_chapters

[33] http://www.wicz.com/story/41599042/african-american-minister-fights-for-protections-against-mental-health-abuse

[34] “Mental Health Care for African Americans,” Chapter 3, U.S. Surgeon General report, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/bookshelf/br.fcgi?book=hssurggen&part=A1412

[35] Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill, (Perseus Publishing, Massachusetts, 2002), pp. 182, 186

[36] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3623530/

[37] Maize“New Data Published In Medical Journal Suggest Certain Atypical Antipsychotics Increase Diabetes Risk; Risperdal(R) (Risperidone) Found To Be An Exception,” Global News Wire, October 24, 2002, https://johnsonandjohnson.gcs-web.com/news-releases/news-release-details/new-data-published-medical-journal-suggest-certain-atypical; Constadina Panagiotopoulos, MD, FRCPC, et al, “Increased Prevalence of Obesity and Glucose Intolerance in Youth Treated With Second-Generation Antipsychotic Medications,” Canadian Journal of Psychiatry, Vol. 54, No. 11, Nov. 2009, https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19961662/

[38] Lesley M. Arnold, et al., “Sex, ethnicity, and antipsychotic medication use in patients with psychosis,” Schizophrenia Research, Volume 66, Issue 3, 2004, Pages 169-175, http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0920996403001026

[39] https://www.cchrint.org/2019/07/17/minority-mental-health-month-may-spell-mental-health-slavery/

[40] http://www.psychnews.org/update/update_AM_15_2_d.html; https://trademark.trademarkia.com/american-psychiatric-association-benjamin-rush-md-1844-74412257.html

[41] https://psychnews.psychiatryonline.org/toc/pn/54/4

[42] Prof. Thomas Szasz, M.D. The Manufacture of Madness: A Comparative Study of the Inquisition and the Mental Health Movement, Jan. 1970, p.155.

[43] Samuel A. Cartwright, M.D., “Report on the Diseases and Physical Peculiarities of the Negro Race,” New Orleans & Surgical Journal, 1851; Thomas Szasz, Insanity, The Idea and Its Consequences, (John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 1990), p. 306, 307; https://www.cchrint.org/2019/07/17/minority-mental-health-month-may-spell-mental-health-slavery/

[44] “The Revival of Raced-Based Medicine: Eugenics, Religion, and the Black Experience,” Marginalia, 18 Oct. 2019, https://marginalia.lareviewofbooks.org/revival-of-raced-based-medicine-eugenics-religion-and-the-black-experience/

[45] https://marginalia.lareviewofbooks.org/revival-of-raced-based-medicine-eugenics-religion-and-the-black-experience/

[46] The Post (South Africa) May 17, 1979; https://www.cchr-dallas.org/documents/racism.pdf

[47] Janice A. Sabin, Ph.D., MSW, “How we fail black patients in pain,” Association of American Medical Colleges, 6 Jan. 2020, https://www.aamc.org/news-insights/how-we-fail-black-patients-pain

[48] https://marginalia.lareviewofbooks.org/revival-of-raced-based-medicine-eugenics-religion-and-the-black-experience/

[49] https://www.shu.edu/arts-sciences/news/adjunct-professor-explores-race-based-medicine.cfm

[50] https://marginalia.lareviewofbooks.org/revival-of-raced-based-medicine-eugenics-religion-and-the-black-experience/

NAACP Inglewood Executive Educates About Psychiatric Racism

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Civil rights campaigner joins CCHR mental health watchdog to educate his community about the eugenics & racist history of psychiatric abuse—from whipping to brain surgery, electroshock and mind-altering drugs, African Americans have been targeted.

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
June 16, 2020

Rev. Frederick Shaw, Executive Director of NAACP’s Inglewood-South Bay branch, announced a campaign to educate African Americans about the long history of their betrayal and other minorities in the psychiatric system. He warns that mental health care today comes from an industry that is steeped in eugenics and once defined Blacks as suffering from a form of leprosy causing the color of their skin and requiring segregation. Shaw stated, “We must fight for protections against damaging psychiatric treatment offered for the very real pain that racism and injustice brings and abolish the stereotypical labeling of this as a mental ‘disease.’”

From using a “medical model” to justify whipping slaves as therapeutic, to delivering electroshock to Blacks without anesthetic and the psychotropic drugging of African Americans today, race-based mental health still exists, he adds.

Rev. Shaw is also a spokesperson for the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), a 51-year mental health watchdog, whose documentary on psychiatric racism is an important commentary. Shaw and CCHR’s international president, Jan Eastgate, attended South Africa’s Truth & Reconciliation Commission inquiry into apartheid crimes in 1997 to present evidence of psychiatry and psychology’s use of ‘scientific’ racism and eugenics to maintain apartheid. CCHR had discovered hidden psychiatric camps, where 10,000 Blacks were drugged, electroshocked, used for slave labor and often allowed to die from easily treatable medical illness.

The World Health Organization confirmed the abuse, condemning the camps in 1983, stating, “in no other medical field in South Africa is the contempt of the person, cultivated by racism, more concisely portrayed than in psychiatry.”[1]

“This cultivation is not limited to South Africa but is systemic throughout America, even today,” Shaw stated. A 2017 article in The American Journal of Psychiatry admitted: “In America, the Abolitionist and Civil Rights movements were met with mistrust and prejudice by mental health practitioners. African Americans, angry about their oppression, were labeled ‘schizophrenic,’ due to their supposed ‘pathological’ reaction of emotional disharmony, hostility, and aggression. The over-diagnosis of schizophrenia among African Americans persists today….”[2]

Shaw advises: “We have had centuries of psychiatric racism. We don’t want equal access to psychiatrists’ ‘standard’ of care, because the treatments offered are often mind-altering and harmful, can cause sexual dysfunction, birth defects, suicide and violence. It’s selling us into modern-day eugenics and mental slavery,” Shaw says.

He cites several historical examples of racial-mental health “care”:

  • “Whipping the devil out” of slaves was considered a medical cure for idle Blacks to force them to “take active exercise” that vitalized blood to their brain “to give liberty to the mind.”[3]
  • In the 1950s, U.S. psychiatrist Walter Freeman lobotomized Black patients at West Virginia state hospital. He considered these successful when “a week or so after operating upon 20 very dangerous” African Americans, he “found 15 of them sitting under the trees with only one guard in sight,” he wrote.[4]
  • Psychosurgery was performed on Black children as young as five to control “hyperactive” and “aggressive” behavior. Their brains were implanted with electrodes that were heated up to melt areas of the brain that regulate emotion and intellect.[5]
  • In New Orleans, Black prisoners were used for psychosurgery experiments because they were considered “cheap experimental animals,” as stated by one of the psychiatrists involved, Dr. Harry Bailey.[6]
  • At the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) Addiction Research Center in Kentucky, drug-addicted African Americans were given LSD, keeping some hallucinating for 77 consecutive days.[7] Healthy African American men were also used as guinea pigs for the chemical, BZ, which was 100 times more powerful than LSD.[8]
  • In the 1970s, NIMH Director, psychiatrist Frederick Goodwin, compared Black youth to “hyperaggressive” and “hypersexual” monkeys in a jungle.[9] NIMH developed a “Violence Initiative” program to look for a “violent” gene in African Americans and Hispanics that could be controlled by psychiatric drugs, including the antidepressant Prozac—known to cause violent and suicidal behavior.[10]
  • A New York Law School Journal report in 2017 highlighted continued psychological profiling: “Behavior by African-Americans is more often interpreted as ‘dangerous’ than identical behavior by whites.”[11]
  • Today, there is an over-representation of antipsychotic drugs prescribed African Americans.[12] Antipsychotics cause severe adverse effects such as tardive dyskinesia (uncontrollable movement disorder) and akathisia, an inability to keep still, causing extreme restlessness, leading to violent behavior.[13] African American men are most likely to receive excessive doses of these drugs.[14]

Says Shaw, “People need proper and effective healthcare, not damaging drugs and electroshock that passes for mental health treatment today. Martin Luther King told us that ‘Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter.’ I will never remain silent about the psychiatric abuse that African Americans have been and are still subjected to. Funds should be redirected from psychiatry into safe, accountable non-psychiatric medical care and social programs.”

References:

[1] https://www.cchr-dallas.org/documents/racism.pdf citing, “Apartheid and Health,” Part II, World Health Organization (Geneva), 1983, p. 230

[2] Morgan Medlock, M.D., “Addressing the Legacy of Racism in Psychiatric Training,” The Amer. Journ of Psychiatry, 9 May 2017, https://psychiatryonline.org/doi/full/10.1176/appi.ajp-rj.2016.110206

[3] Samuel A. Cartwright, M.D., “Report on the Diseases and Physical Peculiarities of the Negro Race,” New Orleans & Surgical Journal, 1851; Thomas Szasz, Insanity, The Idea and Its Consequences, (John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 1990), p. 306, 307; https://www.cchrint.org/2019/07/17/minority-mental-health-month-may-spell-mental-health-slavery/

[4] http://www.wondersandmarvels.com/2016/12/race-gender-selection-patients-lobotomy.html

[5] https://breggin.com/fenfluramine-damage-to-the-brain-and-mind/

[6] “Report of the NSW Royal Commission into Deep Sleep Treatment,” New South Wales, Government Printing Service, Dec. 1990

[7] http://ahrp.org/dr-harris-isbells-experiments/

[8] https://pages.uoregon.edu/munno/OregonCourses/REL253F12/REL253Notes/BZStory.htm

[9] Gerald Horne, “Race Backwards: Genes, Violence, Race, and Genocide,” Covert Action, Winter 1992-93, p. 29

[10] https://www.nytimes.com/1992/09/18/opinion/l-us-hasn-t-given-up-linking-genes-to-crime-153192.html

[11] Michael L. Perlin, et al, “Tolling For the Aching Ones Whose Wounds Cannot Be Nursed’: The Marginalization of Racial Minorities and Women in Institutional Mental Disability Law,” New York Law School, Journal of Gender, Race, and Justice, Vol. 20, Issue 3 (Summer 2017), pp. 431-45, https://digitalcommons.nyls.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1947&context=fac_articles_chapters

[12] http://www.wicz.com/story/41599042/african-american-minister-fights-for-protections-against-mental-health-abuse

[13] Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill, (Perseus Publishing, Massachusetts, 2002), pp. 182, 186

[14] Lesley M. Arnold, et al., “Sex, ethnicity, and antipsychotic medication use in patients with psychosis,” Schizophrenia Research, Volume 66, Issue 3, 2004, Pages 169-175, http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0920996403001026

Task Force Launched to Combat Institutional Racism in Psychiatric Industry

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Rev. Fred Shaw, NAACP branch and CCHR executive, leads campaign to educate about modern eugenics in “mental health” care; applauds govt. stopping restraint use in behavioral hospitals following African American teen death after pleading, “I can’t breathe.”

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
June 23,2 020

Rev. Fred Shaw, Executive Director of the NAACP Inglewood-South Bay branch and spokesperson for the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), applauded the recent Michigan Department of Health and Human Services decision to terminate its contract with Sequel Youth & Family Services’ Lakeside behavioral facility in Michigan following the restraint death of a 16-year-old African American boy.[1] Shaw said the tragic death of Cornelius Frederick has sparked calls for a national ban on physical and chemical restraints in all psychiatric facilities. Michigan’s HHS said it “will change its policies to forbid the use of physical restraints in all its licensed and contracted facilities.”[2]

As in other psychiatric hospital restraint deaths that CCHR has documented, Frederick yelled, “I can’t breathe!” before passing out from the pressure of the restraint. Shaw says it is an example of systemic abuse and institutional racism that pervades the psychiatric-behavioral industry. African Americans are over-represented in restraint-related deaths of children and adults with disabilities[3] and are racially stereotyped as violent—a throw-back to eugenics—which can predispose them to restraint use.

Shaw has now launched a Task Force to combat institutional racism and empower the African American and minority communities with facts about modern eugenics masked today as “mental health care.” The Task Force comprises African American leaders, including ministers, attorneys, doctors, psychologists and civil rights advocates.

“Institutional racism,” Shaw said, is pervasive and less perceptible because of its less overt, far more subtle nature, stating: “It insidiously brings about ignorance, prejudice and racist stereotyping that seeps into the culture as ‘benign’ or ‘normal.’ Restraint use on African Americans is an example of this.”

He points to a 2019 Nature article that reported: “Racists don’t care if their data are weak and theories shoddy. They need only the thinnest veneer of scientific respectability to convince the unwitting.”[4]

“This includes claims that restraint deaths can be excused as a mishap,” Shaw says. Of 10 restraint-related deaths of black and Latino children in psychiatric facilities that CCHR documented, three were ruled homicides but charges were either not filed or were dropped.

According to the Associated Press, Frederick went into cardiac arrest while being restrained on April 29 by Lakeside Academy staff. He died May 1. At the time, authorities said the teen was being restrained by staff after he threw a sandwich. A County Prosecuting Attorney is determining if criminal charges will be filed over the death.[5]

Shaw says there is a need to educate his community of seemingly benevolent offers that mask hidden eugenics principles. These still impact many social sectors, especially in education, medicine and mental health. A 2019 thesis, “Eugenics in Education Policy and the Impact on African American Students,” said: “Eugenic ideas continued to prevail as they heavily influenced medical, social, and academic systems in the U.S.”[6] Further, “The country’s education system still carries the legacy of eugenicists who helped to build it.”[7]

  • “To be African American was to lack intelligence and have a propensity for violence,” according to the thesis. The author, Ruth Jones, poignantly concluded: “These arguments perpetuate false stereotypes that African American students as a group are not only violent and prone to misbehavior, but also that they deserve to bear the brunt of punitive discipline practices in the name of school safety.”[8] Shaw argues this also occurs in psychiatric and behavioral institutions.
  • “Race science” or “scientific racism” continues with many, including psychologists, that argue black people fare worse than whites because they tend to be less naturally intelligent.[9] 
  • 33% foster care children are African-American, but comprise only 15% of the child Yet federal studies indicate that child abuse and neglect—reasons for children being removed from their homes—is actually lower for black families than it is for whites.[10] According to a law group report, foster children, some younger than five, generally are prescribed psychotropic drug at rates nine times higher than other children. These are mind–altering and have serious side effects and long-term consequences that suppress and disrupt normal brain development and function.[11]
  • Half of white medical trainees believe myths that black people have thicker skin or less sensitive nerve endings than whites.[12]

Shaw is ideal to lead the new Task Force, CCHR says. A native of Compton, CA, he is a former LA County Sheriff’s Deputy of 13 years and a recipient of the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation award for his NAACP leadership and dedication to protect children from psychotropic drugs. The LA County Board of Supervisors also recognized Shaw’s group home for foster care children and youth on probation that ensured a safe, drug-free environment. He obtained three NAACP national resolutions to protect against psychiatric child abuse and electroshock.

Shaw encourages people to sign an online petition that the Michigan Center for Youth Justice started seeking justice for Cornelius Fredrick and campaigning to shut down the offending facility—petition to get Justice for Cornelius and Shut Sequel Down, which CCHR supports.

References:

[1] https://www.clickondetroit.com/news/local/2020/06/21/michigan-ends-ties-with-company-after-teens-restraint-death-in-kalamazoo-facility/

[2] https://www.michigan.gov/mdhhs/0,5885,7-339–532443–,00.html

[3] https://www.equipforequality.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/National-Review-of-Restraint-Related-Deaths-of-Adults-and-Children-with-Disabilities-The-Lethal-Consequences-of-Restraint.pdf

[4] https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-02244-w

[5] “Teen’s death prompts facility’s loss of contract, license,” Associated Press, 19 June 2020, https://apnews.com/7462d992064a5db3115d394372f681dd#:~:text=LANSING
%2C%20Mich.,and%20its%20license%20to%20operate.&text=He%20died%20May%201.

[6] Ruth Jones, “Eugenics in Education Policy and the Impact on African American Students,” The University of San Francisco USF Scholarship: a digital repository @ Gleeson Library |Geschke Center, Spring 5-16-2019, https://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2286&context=thes

[7] Ibid.

[8] Ibid.

[9] “The unwelcome revival of ‘race science,’” The Guardian, 2 Mar. 2018, https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/mar/02/the-unwelcome-revival-of-race-science

[10] https://www.ncsl.org/research/human-services/disproportionality-and-disparity-in-child-welfare.aspx

[11] https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/Treaties/CAT/Shared%20Documents/USA/INT_CAT_NHS_USA_18527_E.pdf

[12] Janice A. Sabin, Ph.D., MSW, “How we fail black patients in pain,” Association of American Medical Colleges, 6 Jan. 2020, https://www.aamc.org/news-insights/how-we-fail-black-patients-pain


CCHR Applauds State Acting on African American Teen Psychiatric Restraint Death

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Mental Health Watchdog and Task Force Against Institutional Racism Leader say Michigan could potentially lead the way for national restraint death reform, saying psychiatric restraints should be banned to save lives.

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
June 30, 2020

The Kalamazoo County, Michigan Medical Examiner’s office has ruled that 16-year-old African American Cornelius Frederick’s death following a restraint procedure at Lakeside Academy, a psychiatric facility, was a homicide. Three staff have been charged with involuntary manslaughter and second-degree child abuse. Two were also accused of restraining Frederick in a “grossly negligent manner,” Kalamazoo County Prosecutor Jeff Getting announced.[1]

Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), a 51-year mental health industry watchdog group and Rev. Frederick Shaw, head of the NAACP Inglewood-South Bay Branch, commended authorities and Michigan state agencies for quickly acting on the death. On April 29, 2020, Frederick, a ward of the state since age 14, was physically restrained at the Sequel Youth & Family Services-owned residential psychiatric facility that treats foster care and other children with behavioral issues. Frederick went into cardiac arrest while being restrained by staff, allegedly after throwing a sandwich on the floor and becoming unruly. According to the family’s attorney, Frederick started yelling, “I can’t breathe!” before passing out. Thirty hours later, he was dead.[2]

The Michigan Department of Health and Human Services (MDHHS) has terminated its contract with Lakeside and started the process to revoke its license.[3] MDHHS Director Robert Gordon issued a statement on June 22 that “we will not rest until we have changed the system that allowed his death,” and MI Governor Gretchen Whitmer has directed actions be taken to correct the system.[4] MDHHS said it “will change its policies to forbid the use of physical restraints in all its licensed and contracted facilities.”

Shaw, who recently started a Task Force against racism in the mental health system, comprising African American doctors, psychologists, ministers, attorneys and advocates, said he will present evidence to members of the Michigan Black Caucus to support a ban on restraint use in all state and private psychiatric hospitals.[5] He cited a Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice article that said following the civil rights movement, stereotyping or falsely profiling Blacks as criminals became so pervasive that any “young Black male,” could be seen as potentially violent or disruptive.[6]

“This indoctrinated mind-set has to change. The tragedy of Cornelius Frederick raises concerns about institutional racism in the mental health and foster care/juvenile detention systems. African Americans are over-represented in restraint-related deaths of children and adults with disabilities and are racially stereotyped as violent—a throw-back to eugenics—which can predispose them to being drugged and restrained more,” Rev. Shaw said.

CCHR worked with others to obtain reforms to federal regulations regarding restraint use in mental health facilities following a Hartford Courant series on restraint deaths in 1998 that led to a Congressional Hearing on the issue. Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International, said it’s time for a complete overhaul of the potentially deadly practice, not just in Michigan but nationwide.

She said patients can often be affected by psychotropic drugs that can induce violent behavior leading to them being restrained and this should be investigated in any restraint death. The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) regulations say that “a patient may experience a severe medication reaction that causes him or her to become violent.”[7]

Shaw adds that an investigation should also determine if Michigan psychiatric facilities are excessively prone to using restraints against African Americans and minorities and also on foster care children entrusted to these facilities’ care.

CCHR cites cases such as the U.S. Supreme Court which held that patients, even those who are involuntarily committed, have constitutionally protected liberty interests.[8] Testimony in another case suggested that Restraint and Seclusion (R&S) are often used “reactively and inappropriately” by staff.[9]

The Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law addressed restraint deaths saying patients’ basic constitutional rights, such as life and liberty interests and freedom from cruel and unusual punishment or unnecessary bodily restraints, are protected. “Violation of any of these rights may be grounds for damages in a case involving R&S,” the journal reported. Further, “because risks to patients can be severe, some scholars advocate the complete elimination of R&S.”[10]

CCHR agrees with the elimination, saying that too many psychiatric restraint deaths are excused as an unfortunate but acceptable outcome in behavioral hospitals, and therefore, immune to prosecution. There’s an inequity in the law, it says. Shaw says, “Frederick’s death is an example of systemic abuse and institutional racism that pervades the psychiatric-behavioral industry nationwide and should be held accountable—judicially and legislatively. Right now, Michigan could lead the way to potential effective reform.”

CCHR also calls on people to support the Michigan Center for Youth Justice online petition to get Justice for Cornelius Frederick.[11]

References:

[1] “Cornelius Fredericks: 3 charged after medical examiner rules Black teen’s death was homicide,” Associated Press, 25 Jun. 2020,  https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2020/06/25/cornelius-fredericks-death-3-charged/3256015001/?fbclid=IwAR0BBtH9pDQHpXzD3c7LAku-AzTl4Q_9Ku_UR6ueITpGUStd4qRHadv7w6w

[2] “Foster care teen’s death draws scrutiny to group home outbreaks: Who is looking out for these children?” Journal Star, 15 May 2020, https://www.pjstar.com/zz/news/20200515/foster-care-teens-death-draws-scrutiny-to-group-home-outbreaks-who-is-looking-out-for-these-children; Corey Williams, “Lawsuit: Michigan Teen Screamed ‘I Can’t Breathe’ During Restraint,” WPVE, 22 June 2020, https://www.wvpe.org/post/lawsuit-michigan-teen-screamed-i-cant-breathe-during-restraint

[3] https://www.michigan.gov/mdhhs/0,5885,7-339–532443–,00.html

[4] https://www.michigan.gov/mdhhs/0,5885,7-339–532626–,00.html

[5] http://www.wicz.com/story/42281098/task-force-launched-to-combat-institutional-racism-in-psychiatric-industry; https://www.ktvn.com/story/42226984/naacp-inglewood-and-cchr-rep-calls-for-restraints-ban-in-psychiatric-hospitals

[6] https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1043986207306870?journalCode=ccja

[7] https://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Legislation/CFCsAndCoPs/downloads/finalpatientrightsrule.pdf

[8] Patricia R. Recupero, et al., “Restraint and Seclusion in Psychiatric Treatment Settings: Regulation, Case Law, and Risk Management,” Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online, Dec.  2011, 39 (4) 465-476; http://jaapl.org/content/39/4/465

[9] Ibid.

[10] Ibid.

[11] https://njjn.org/article/michigan-center-for-youth-justice-seeks-justice-for-cornelius-fredrick

Colorado Restraint & Drug Death Should Be Investigated for Racism Link CCHR Says

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Watchdog wants the use of “date rape” drug, ketamine, that can cause aggression and unconsciousness, banned in restraint use, following death of 23-year-old African American

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
July 7, 2020

In a series of calls for government reforms to prevent institutional racism, the mental health industry watchdog Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR) called for a ban on enforced psychotropic drugging by paramedics or other medical personnel during police arrests. Rev. Fred Shaw, a spokesperson for CCHR, Executive Director of the NAACP Inglewood-South Bay branch, and former LAPD Deputy Sheriff, has written to the Colorado Governor Jared Polis and state attorney general Phil Weiser detailing concerns over the use of the controversial and powerful drug, ketamine, that was injected into African American, Elijah McClain, 23, during a police restraint in Aurora, Colorado in August 2019. Governor Polis recently issued an Executive Order reopening an investigation into the case.

During the restraint, Elijah struggled and cried, “I just can’t breathe correctly.” He had a heart attack on the way to the hospital and was declared brain dead.[1] Six days later, his family took him off life support and he died.[2] While a coroner could not determine the cause of death at the time, he noted that “an idiosyncratic drug reaction (unexpected reaction to a drug even at a therapeutic level) cannot be ruled out” in reference to the ketamine dosage.[3]

Ketamine is Food and Drug Administration-approved as an anesthetic agent for surgical procedures. Abused on the streets, it is known as a “date rape” drug because it causes disassociation; rape victims injected with it enter a state in which they feel as if their mind and body aren’t connected.[4]  Because it also causes amnesia, you may not remember an assault the next day.[5]

While ketamine is used to sedate aggressive patients in emergency hospital room settings, this is prescribed off-label (not FDA approved).[6] Medical News Today reports that victims of ketamine “may lose consciousness or be confused and compliant.”[7]

In some cases, the drug has caused heart or breathing failure and required those injected to be revived or intubated. It was given to Elijah despite “the immediate effects on breathing and heart function that the drug induces.”[8]

Other health hazards and side effects of ketamine, even in low doses, include agitation and in higher doses, “violent behavior,” “severe anxiety, fear, panic, anxiety, exaggerated strength, and aggression, muscle rigidity, respiratory depression,” and more.[9]

Despite these aggression-causing adverse effects, according to an Aurora Fire Department press release, ketamine is “routinely utilized to reduce agitation” during arrests. One comment allegedly heard in the police body camera footage of Elijah’s restraint suggested the dose of ketamine given him may have been 500 milligrams. That approaches the dose of 700 milligrams that would produce up to 25 minutes of full surgical anesthesia for someone of McClain’s reported weight of 140 pounds.[10]

Elijah had not committed any crime when he was approached by police, nor was he armed. He was on the way home from a convenience store. The police had responded to a 911 caller who had reported a “suspicious person” in a ski mask—a mask his sister later said he wore because he “had anemia and would sometimes get cold.”

Rev. Shaw said, “The combination of the restraint and then being forcibly injected with a ‘date-rape’ psychotropic drug must have been terrifying for this young man. Such ‘medical’ drugs, given involuntarily in a street setting against a person’s will, should surely be investigated as a violation of a person’s constitutional rights and the practice stopped. It is cruel and unusual punishment that the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is supposed to protect us from.”

Neuroscientist Carl Hart, chair of Columbia University’s psychology department, was quoted by ABC News, stating: “Why anyone would be giving ketamine in that circumstance is beyond me. The major problem here is we should never be ordering any medication, and no one should be taking or given it against their will.”[11]

Rev. Shaw said institutional racism may have contributed to the arrest and also merits investigation. He said a eugenics mind-set has been created where African Americans are perceived as “violent” or “criminal.” As Duke Law Journal reported, “Over time, attitudes about eugenics, class, and disability combined to create the policies that led to our current nationwide system of punitive detention.”[12]

Yahoo! News exemplified this thinking, CCHR says, because while Elijah was crying for help, “many others who arrived later“ chatted casually as McClain struggled for his final breaths.”[13] That Elijah’s pleas were dismissed as him “just messing around,” appears symptomatic of institutional racism, CCHR says.  It has been embedded in the culture since eugenics started.

Rev. Shaw hopes that the effect of stereotyping African Americans will be addressed in any review of the circumstances that lead up to, during and following the death of Elijah, along with the use of a mind-altering drug on him or in any restraint.

References:

[1] https://www.thecut.com/2020/06/the-killing-of-elijah-mcclain-everything-we-know.html

[2] https://theweek.com/articles/921867/glaring-question-about-police-killing-elijah-mcclain

[3] https://www.thecut.com/2020/06/the-killing-of-elijah-mcclain-everything-we-know.html

[4] https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/320409.php; https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-02-05/ketamine-could-soon-be-used-to-treat-suicidal-ideation

[5] https://www.efficientgov.com/public-safety/articles/what-to-know-about-ketamine-a-common-date-rape-drug-8DxnS7OteEhx7UmX/

[6] https://www.lonestarinfusion.com/blog/ketamine-fda-approval

[7] https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/320409.php

[8] “At urging of Minneapolis police, Hennepin EMS workers subdued dozens with a powerful sedative: EMS workers used date rape drug ketamine, stopping some suspects’ hearts or breathing,” The Star Tribune, 15 June 2018, https://www.startribune.com/at-urging-of-police-hennepin-emts-subdued-dozens-with-powerful-sedative/485607381/; https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/16/us/ketamine-minneapolis-police.html

[9] https://www.drugs.com/illicit/ketamine.html

[10] “One glaring question about the police killing of Elijah McClain,” The Week, 26 June 2020,

https://theweek.com/articles/921867/glaring-question-about-police-killing-elijah-mcclain

[11] “Elijah McClain was injected with ketamine while handcuffed. Some medical experts worry about its use during police calls,” ABC News, 1 July 2020, https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/elijah-mcclain-was-injected-ketamine-while-handcuffed-some-medical-experts-n1232697

[12] Laura Iappleman, “Deviancy, Dependency, and Disability: The Forgotten History of Eugenics and Mass Incarceration,” Duke Law Journal, Vol. 68, No. 3, Dec. 2018, https://scholarship.law.duke.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=&httpsredir=1&article=3958&context=dlj

[13] “’I’m just different’: The family of Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old Black man killed by Colorado cops almost a year ago, is still waiting for justice,” Yahoo! News, 27 June 2020, https://news.yahoo.com/im-just-different-the-family-of-elijah-mc-clain-a-23-yearold-black-man-killed-by-colorado-cops-090048258.html

Psychiatric Sexual Assault & Other Crimes Cause Harm in Australia

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When a Psychiatrist, Psychologist or Psychotherapist is a Sexual Predator, Criminal Sanctions are Necessary

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
June 13, 2020

Australia has an inequity in its laws when it comes to psychiatrist and psychologist sexual offenses against patients, thereby putting potentially hundreds of patients at risk. Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) International’s therapist abuse database documents that since 2010, at least 54 Australian psychologists and psychiatrists had their licenses suspended or revoked—primarily for patient sexual abuse. While some are criminally prosecuted, the abuse is largely treated as a disciplinary issue, which must change, CCHR says. While compassion, common sense and decency declare that sexual abuse of patients is a serious and criminal act, psychiatrists and psychologists sanitize it as mere “professional misconduct.”

In other countries, such as the United States, Germany, Israel and Sweden, there are laws specifying it a criminal offense for therapists to have sexual contact with a mental healthcare patient. In fact, CCHR has successfully worked to obtain laws that ensure psychiatrists, psychologists, psychotherapists and behavioral counselors are not above the law, with 32 criminal statutes in the U.S. alone that now protect patients from therapist sexual assault.[1]

The abuse is prevalent in Australia. 

  • The Medical Journal of Australia reported that “an anonymous mail survey of psychiatrists found that 7.6%, almost all male, reported erotic contact with patients during or after termination of treatment.”[2]
  • In 2007, Australian psychiatrist Prof. Carolyn Quadrio’s research found that one in every ten male therapists will have sex with or develop an intimate link with a female patient.[3]
  • The rates of abuse are similar to that in the U.S. where a survey of U.S. psychiatrists, published in 2006, found 7.1% of the male and 3.1% of the female responding psychiatrists acknowledged sexual contact with their own patients.[4]
  • An estimated 3,369 psychiatrists were working in Australia in 2017, of which 60.8% (2,048) were male and 39.2% female (1,321).[5] That equates to an estimated 156 male and 41 female Australian psychiatrists sexually exploiting patients (the female statistic estimated from using the U.S. 3.1%)
  • Just as concerning, 33% of U.S. psychiatrists who responded to one survey admitted to sexual relationships with multiple patients.[6]
  • In another study, 80% of psychologists who had intimate relationships with patients reported encounters with multiple patients.[7]
  • Quadrio’s published 1996 analysis of data derived from assessments of 40 women who experienced sexual abuse in therapy also determined 68% had a history of childhood abuse, and one half were themselves helping professionals.[8] Further, like a child depends upon a parent, a patient often depends upon a therapist.[9]

The sexual crimes committed by psychiatrists are estimated at 37 times greater than rapes occurring in the general community, one U.S. law firm stated.

In Australia, this potentially puts hundreds of patients at risk. While license revocations may prevent a psychiatrist or psychologist from practicing, this can be temporary and they can continue to practice as an unregistered therapist, albeit not likely able to bill insurance companies.  A Boston Globe article suggested psychiatry is a “hotbed of sexual misconduct.”[10]

  • A study published in February 2020 reinforces that “Sexual relationships between psychiatrists and patients are neither a new phenomenon nor particularly rare.”[11]
  • The sexual crimes committed by psychiatrists are estimated at 37 times greater than rapes occurring in the general community, one U.S. law firm stated, estimating that about 150,000 female patients in the U.S. have been assaulted.[12]
  • Based on NSW Health Care Complaints Commission information, about 4% of male psychiatrists in NSW alone have been reported for sexual abuse of patients. Cherrie A Galletly, writing in the MJA, referred to “predatory doctors” but she also uses a common minimizing term: that doctors who have sexual contact with patients are “boundary crossing” (so-called non-exploitative departures from usual practice).[13]
  • In 1992, Quadrio, who had found a 10% prevalence of sexual relationships arising in and following psychotherapy, described one half of offenders to be “ruthless” and “exploitative,” but the remaining 50% were said to be “often ‘lovesick.’”[14]

Herein lies the problem: Any lay person accused of sexual assault in a criminal court is highly unlikely to able to use “boundary crossing” or “love sickness” as a defense and get away it.

Galletly acknowledges this: “It has been suggested that sexual exploitation by psychotherapists (psychiatrists, psychologists, psychoanalysts and social workers) should be a criminal offence, with penalties including fines and imprisonment…Public pressure for more punitive responses is likely to increase if the profession’s response is seen as inadequate.”[15]

However, it’s not a matter of “professional response” (which usually mitigates the offense) but rather a matter or judicial recognition that it is a crime and even more egregious because the abuse is done in the name of “therapy.” The desperate victim has accepted help and is then betrayed by the “benefactor.” Such despicable treachery in the wake of an already serious personal crisis could only burden the victim with further emotional scars and instability.

Consider that a survey of 40 Australian women who had experienced sexual abuse in psychotherapy found that two-thirds had a history of childhood abuse. [16]

All this adds up to the need for Australian state laws to specify that therapist patient sexual contact is subject to criminal investigation and prosecution.

In an Atlanta Journal-Constitution investigation culminating in an article headlined, “Licensed to Betray,” journalists noted that while society condemns sexual misconduct when committed by citizens and demands punishment, when a physician is the perpetrator, the nation often looks the other way. It further stated that “layer upon layer of secrecy makes it nearly impossible for the public” to know the extent of the abuse.[17]

One U.S. patient said her psychotherapist had sexually assaulted her and billed her insurance $85 per hour.

The crime can also extend to fraud. Mental health therapists have billed insurance companies for their sexual assault as a consultation.  Representative of this, one U.S. patient said her psychotherapist had sexually assaulted her and billed her insurance $85 per hour. In another case, the patient said the psychiatrist had “control of my drugs and whether I could stay out of the hospital. I had to do sexual things to get my medication.”[18]  

But thankfully, some Australian criminal courts are recognizing the inequity and are lifting the veil of secrecy.  Since 2000, CCHR International has documented more than a dozen publicized convictions of psychiatrists and psychologists in Australia, not only for patient sexual abuse, but also possession of child pornography; videoing young boys urinating in public toilets; maliciously wounding and injuring a young, male prostitute and murder.

On 9 June, 2020, ABC News reported that the Australian Psychological Society (APS) was under fire for its “disturbing” response to Bob Montgomery, its former president, pleading guilty of child sexual abuse.[19] A celebrity psychologist, Montgomery appeared on the TV show Big Brother as a consultant and was used by the Family Court as an expert in custody disputes. He is being sentenced in the NSW District Court on two counts of buggery, five of indecent assault of a male and one of procuring an indecent act. He faces up to 14 years in prison.[20]

In 2014, the APS had made Montgomery a “new honorary fellow” to recognize his “extraordinary and distinguished contribution.”[21] But that “contribution” involved a hidden history of sexual assault of children.  Montgomery pleaded guilty to abusing 12-year-old boys while he was a scoutmaster in Sydney in the 1960s. The Daily Mail in the UK headlined their story on the conviction, “Big Brother TV doctor preyed on young boys by encouraging them to pleasure themselves in his living room before abusing them on Boy Scout camping trips—as his victims break their silence.”[22]

ABC news wrote: “A peak psychologist’s body, once led by pedophile Bob Montgomery, has come under fire for noting the ‘impact’ of criminal prosecution on him and urging he seek support from ‘long term friends’ in its ranks.”[23]

The case is not an exception to the rule. CCHR’s public database of criminal and disciplinary actions committed by mental health industry personnel, reveals nearly a third of criminal convictions are for sexual abuse committed by psychiatrists, psychologists, therapists and counselors including the sexual assault of children.   Fraud-related crimes is the next highest convictions.

Chelmsford Hospital Psychiatrist-Sexual Manipulation

Dr. Harry Bailey from Chelmsford private psychiatric hospital, sexually abused his patient, Sharon Hamilton in the late 1970s.

Awareness of Australian psychiatrists sexually abusing their patients was highlighted when the late Sydney psychiatrist, Dr. Harry Bailey from Chelmsford private psychiatric hospital, sexually abused his patient, Sharon Hamilton in the late 1970s. Bailey developed the now banned “deep sleep treatment” (DST) which induced patients into a coma with a cocktail of psychotropic drugs and subjected them to electroshock treatment. DST was linked to dozens of deaths. A 1990 New South Wales government inquiry accused Bailey of a disgraceful breach of all standards of medicine in his relations with female patients, some of whom were brought to his house in the middle of the night, according to New Scientist.[24]

Robert M. Kaplan, author of Medical Murder: Disturbing Cases of Doctors Who Kill wrote of Dr. Bailey setting up DST in 1963, finding doctors to assist. The treatment caused thrombosis, pneumonia, strokes, heart attacks and brain damage, according to Kaplan. “As casualties mounted and the body count rose, Bailey made no attempt to improve the procedure or provide a better care and supervision,” he wrote. Bailey’s undoing, Kaplan said, was his affair with Hamilton. She was a young dancer who was attacked by a prisoner during a performance at a local jail.[25]

Seeking compensation, she was referred to Bailey, who put her under DST and assured her this would assist in her lawsuit. But Bailey seduced her, beginning a torrid affair. Whenever Hamilton became disgruntled or threatened to expose him, she was subjected to more “treatment.” Within five months of Hamilton’s $100,000 award for the knife attack, she handed over control of her finances to Bailey’s accountant, who invested $30,000 in Bailey’s personal private hospital.[26]

A statement from a former Chelmsford nurse provided to CCHR, said she once entered Hamilton’s hospital room to find her cutting her pubic hair. When asked why she was doing this, Hamilton replied, “I’m doing it because Harry likes it cut short.”[27]

Hamilton became pregnant and had an abortion at Bailey’s suggestion. He denied that he was the father. Less than a year later, the young and talented dancer committed suicide.[28]

In 1978, CCHR wrote to the NSW attorney-general detailing the evidence of Bailey’s malpractice and misconduct with Hamilton, her suicide and that he was the beneficiary of her estate and successfully called for a reopening of her inquest, where all evidence was revealed. An Australian Dictionary Biography of Bailey said he “reveled in the trappings of professional power and exploited the vulnerabilities of those in his care, having sexual relationships with a number of female patients and some employees.” [29]

That vulnerability extends beyond sexual abuse. The following is a sample of Australian psychiatrists and psychologists convicted of crimes since 2000 alone.

Crime in the Mental Health Industry

August 2000: Roderick Doyle Motum, a Sydney psychiatrist, was convicted of maliciously wounding and injuring a young, male prostitute during an argument and of firing a firearm in a manner likely to injure a person. He also threatened a witness to the crime.[30]

October 2004: Jean Eric Gassy, a Sydney psychiatrist was sentenced to 34 years without parole for the murder of Australian health official, Dr. Margaret Tobin, who was involved in his removal from the medical register in 1997. The conviction was overturned due to instructions given the jury which were “not sufficiently balanced” but was reinstated on appeal.[31] In 2009, jail was reduced to 30 years with no parole.[32]

James Anton Provan, a Melbourne psychologist, was placed on the sexual offenders register for 8 years for possessing child pornography.

2004-2005: James Anton Provan, a Melbourne psychologist, was placed on the sexual offenders register for 8 years for possessing child pornography. Police searching his home seized a computer containing the images, notes detailing Provan’s sexual attraction to children and an article titled, “The Mind of a Pedophile.” They also found 114 sexually explicit photos of boys under 18 on his computer hard drive.[33] The Psychologists Registration Board of Victoria shows he pleaded guilty to the offense in Heidelberg Magistrates Court on 21 Jan 2005 and was placed on a community based order for 24 months.[34]

February 2008: Ian Anthony Martin, a Tasmanian psychiatrist, was jailed for 18 months (serving 11 months when he was paroled) for attempting to prevent a former patient, who said she’d had a three-year sexual relationship with the doctor, from pursuing a complaint against him. When she complained to the Medical Complaints Tribunal, Martin hired an ex-patient—a violent criminal—to intimidate her. In June 2020, The Hobart Mercury reported: “The lascivious 74-year-old started a new life in New South Wales after he was struck off as a practitioner in 2005 and jailed at Risdon Prison in 2008.”[35]

October 2008: Nicholas Didenkowski, psychologist from Ballarat, Victoria, was jailed for six months but suspended for two years on a charge of indecent assault and fined $1,000 for unlawful assault when he touched a 17-year-old female patient on her chest and pelvic area while treating her. Magistrate Peter Couzens stated that the girl had been vulnerable and struggling to cope. “Both she and her parents placed their trust in you and by your actions you have breached that trust,” he said. Didenkowski had specialized in working with children and adolescents. Magistrate Couzens said Didenkowski’s professional career was in tatters.[36] 

March 2009: Psychiatrist Alan John Stubley was sentenced to 10 years jail, eligible for parole in eight years, for six counts of rape, three counts of indecent assault, and one count of attempted rape involving patients dating back to the 1970s. One of the patients was an expectant mother whom he caused to hemorrhage after forcing sex on her. Stubley claimed his behavior was part of his approach to therapy and defended his actions by exaggerating the extent of the victim’s illness. “I consider…that this was partly an attempt to make her sound more psychiatrically troubled than she actually was, thereby raising a doubt about her hold on reality,” Justice Narelle Johnson said. “I can’t speak about other doctors who allegedly followed such a practice, but in your case I believe it was no more than a poor excuse for abusing your position by having sex with your patients.”[37] Stubley appealed, a re-trial was held because of inadmissible evidence at his first trial, the High Court quashed his convictions and Stubley was released from jail after serving two years in March 2011. However, the court had ordered that he face a new trial, but the Supreme Court accepted a psychiatrist’s report that found Stubley, then aged 83, was not fit to stand trial because he had health problems as well as dementia.[38]

Psychiatrist John Peter Domenic Rigano was sentenced to 3½ years in jail (suspended after nine months served) for six counts of indecent dealing—massaged and masturbated a teenage boy over a two-year-period.

April 2009: Psychiatrist John Peter Domenic Rigano was sentenced to 3½ years in jail (suspended after nine months served) for six counts of indecent dealing—massaged and masturbated a teenage boy over a two-year-period. “What he has done is the worst possible example of this type of offending and one could not imagine a more serious breach of trust,” Crown Prosecutor Gelma Meoli said. She quoted Rigano’s own words: “I just looked at it as us mucking around and having fun.”[39]

2010: Carlos Camacho, psychologist, was fined $10,000, ordered to perform 250 hours of community service and pay legal costs after billing workers compensation insurers for appointments for patients that he hadn’t seen. Camacho dishonestly invoiced WorkCover agents and defrauded $45,394. He pleaded guilty to 13 charges under the NSW Crimes Act. After WorkCover’s investigation, Camacho repaid the money he had obtained using the false invoices.[40]

March 2014: Sydney psychiatrist, Ong Ming Tan, 40, pleaded guilty to four counts of aggravated indecent assault against four patients who were under his care for serious mental illnesses, including anorexia. He was sentenced to at least two years jail, which he served. The abuse occurred at the Northside Clinic at Greenwich and the Metta Clinic at Pymble, New South Wales in 2010 and 2011. In the Sydney District Court, Justice James Bennett said Tan threatened to have each of the women put under guardianship if they disclosed what went on in their sessions, which often occurred in a dimly lit room at night.

  • He told one victim that he “loved her and loved the shape of her buttocks.” He placed his hand close to her genitals and kissed her on the neck and forehead.
  • He told another, aged in her late 20s: “I will bend you over my knee, I will spank you for being a naughty girl.”
  • A third victim, a teenager, was told that she didn’t show enough flesh and should wear push-up bras to be more attractive to men.[41]
  • Sixteen months after Tan was jailed, one victim told Fairfax Media that the Northside clinic knew what was happening with Ong but failed to act. Knowledge dated back to at least 2009.
  • As of 2015, seven of the abused women were suing the clinic for negligence in the NSW Supreme Court, claiming that it failed to respond to, address, or prevent the abuse from continuing despite multiple “red flags.”[42] In 2016, The Northside Group paid a settlement to nine former patients that sued.[43]

August 2015: Victorian “specialist” psychiatrist Pralay Mazumdar was fined $5,000 and given a six-month jail sentenced (suspended for nine months) after being convicted on six charges, including fraudulently obtaining payments and providing false information. Mazumdar defrauded the Victoria WorkCover Authority (worker’s compensation insurance) of $44,000, committing the offences at a psychiatric drug and alcohol hospital in Dandenong.

  • Mazumdar gave false information to keep an inpatient longer than necessary; provided false information 114 times to staff at another clinic to fraudulently obtain $21,735 for outpatient consultations; and provided false information in 35 representations to obtain $13,399 for claims for inpatients.
  • His defense asserted that he was “under extreme pressure at home” with family issues, but the judge stated, “We are dealing with fraud” and “greed.”[44]

“This court has to send a message loud and clear to other practitioners…. That trust not be and cannot be breached, and if it is, there is a substantial punishment awaiting those who take those criminal steps.”

As a message for others in the industry, “This court has to send a message loud and clear to other practitioners, be they psychiatrists or doctors, or even allied healthcare professionals working within these schemes that take the word of a practitioner. That trust not be and cannot be breached, and if it is, there is a substantial punishment awaiting those who take those criminal steps.”

  • Mazumdar unsuccessfully appealed the court decision, the fine remained but the suspended sentence was replaced by a two-year community corrections order and 350 hours of unpaid community service.
  • Mazumdar was allowed to resume practice but in March 2018, it was reported that the Victorian Civil Administrative Tribunal had reprimanded, suspended and imposed conditions on his registration. The tribunal stated: “In this case, it is especially grave having regard to the age, experience and reputation of Dr Mazumdar. He presented himself as someone of impeccable character; someone whom his peers might hold up as manifesting the highest ideals of the profession; someone whom his patients might be expected to trust implicitly. There is no question that these assumptions and expectations were utterly negated by the misconduct….”[45]

October 2015: Antonio Ferrero, a Victorian psychologist, pled guilty and was sentenced to an 18-month community corrections order for touching a woman’s breasts and rubbing himself against her on two separate occasions in October 2007. His registration was suspended in 2016 for three-and-a-half years after failing to tell the industry board about the charge. The board started disciplinary action in 2017, delayed by Ferrero’s “multiple health conditions,” before the Victorian and Administrative Tribunal in October 2019 found Ferrero had engaged in professional misconduct for taking part in an indecent act with a client and failing to tell the Psychology Board of Australia he’d been charged with an offence. Ferrero, then aged 79, claimed he was “looking for a wife” and “erred” in seeking a relationship with a patient. However, tribunal senior member Jonathan Smithers wrote “There was no acknowledgement of the power imbalance, or the abuse of trust which his conduct entailed.”[46]

December 2016: Perth child psychiatrist, Dr. Aaron Szen Yang Voon, 41, pled guilty to nine separate child pornography charges, including filming boys at urinals, and producing and possessing child pornography material in four countries: Canada, U.S., New Zealand and Australia. Voon operated his Successful Development and Therapy Centre in Cockburn in Perth’s south until his arrest in a Canada shopping mall. A video posted on news sites went viral showing Voon being confronted by an angry father demanding to see his phone and accusing him of filming his son’s genitals in the public toilet at the Edmonton shopping center.[47] In 2018, Voon narrowly escaped prison with a suspended jail sentence after a District Court of Western Australia judge heard that Voon had an “obsession with urination.” Psychological reports provided Voon with an excuse: finding Voon’s offending was also a manifestation of undiagnosed autism and an obsessive compulsive disorder. Searches of his home found eight videos featuring young boys urinating in public toilets and taken more than 400 still images of the videos—often zooming in, or cropping them to focus on the boys’ genitals.[48]

Child psychiatrist Ian Stuart McAlpine, 70, was sentenced to five years and two months in prison for sexually and indecently assaulting a female patient almost 30 years earlier.

April 2018: Child psychiatrist Ian Stuart McAlpine, 70, was sentenced to five years and two months in prison for sexually and indecently assaulting a female patient almost 30 years earlier. McAlpine had been the consultant child psychiatrist on the Child Sexual Abuse Task Force which reported to the West Australian Government in 1987. He stood trial for 17 offences allegedly committed between 1988 and 1990 against two young women. A jury found him guilty of seven of those offences against one of the women, including four counts of indecent assault and three counts of sexual penetration without consent.

  • The court heard one woman had believed McAlpine was in love with her, before later deciding he had brainwashed her. The assaults began when she was still aged 17 and included kissing, acts of oral sex and — on her 18th birthday — sexual penetration.
  • The court also learned that McAlpine had been charged with indecently assaulting a 15-year old patient in 1985. That matter went to trial and in 1997 he was fined $4,000.
  • During sentencing of the 2018 case in the District Court, Judge Hylton Quail said McAlpine had abused the trust of the young woman and her parents, engaging in sexual acts under the guise of therapy. “You played on her insecurities and seduced her. In your profession you are meant to do no harm but your actions did exactly the opposite. You abandoned your responsibilities as her psychiatrist,” Quail said.[49]

November 2018: Perth psychiatrist Peter David McCarthy was jailed for a year after starting a sexual relationship with a grieving patient and then pressuring her not to co-operate with subsequent disciplinary proceedings. When McCarthy ended the relationship, his patient reported him to the Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency. After a series of conversations in which McCarthy discussed her as yet unsigned witness statement, they arranged to meet at a café, where the patient recorded him pressuring her and laying out a strategy to avoid signing the key piece of evidence against him. “The manner in which you gave evidence at trial was, in my view, abrasive, confrontational and, frankly, arrogant,” Judge Troy said. “You used the phrase, in respect of (the victim), ‘that woman’ repeatedly and you seemed completely oblivious of the adverse effect that your choice of that term was having on the jury.[50]

March 2019: Melbourne psychiatrist, Prabakar Rajan Thomas, 69, was sentenced to two years in jail for sexually assaulting a female patient.  The county court was told he had put his hands in the victim’s bra, asked about her masturbation habits and showed her graphic pornography.[51] Thomas pleaded guilty to a charge of sexual assault, more than three years after his attack on patient Jodie Fischer. Thomas had (redundant) called her sexy when she complained of weight gain caused by medication. County Court Judge Liz Gaynor slammed the psychiatrist’s behavior, noting he was aware of her fragility. An immediate term of imprisonment was warranted because of the enormous breach of trust and the seriousness of the offending, she added.[52]

September 2019: Psychiatrist Anand Madhukarro Choudhary, 45, pleaded guilty to fraud, attempted fraud and stealing in the Maroochydore (Queensland, Australia) Magistrates Court. He claimed to have “problems in the bedroom” and was caught forging his colleague’s signature to prescribe himself erectile dysfunction tablets. When he was confronted about the stolen scripts he denied taking them and later falsified an email to the health ombudsman about this. His counsel told the court her client had been “too embarrassed” to visit a GP about his lack of libido. But Magistrate Graham Hillan responded: “What you have done is illegal…This could have been done by legal channels, you have bypassed that by creating fraudulent scripts and a misleading email to boot.” He was fined $1,200 but no conviction was recorded.[53]

Hong Lay, 41, a Victorian psychologist was sentenced to six months jail after pleading guilty to two charges of sexual assault of two young female patients.

October 2019: Hong Lay, 41, a Victorian psychologist was sentenced to six months jail after pleading guilty to two charges of sexual assault of two young female patients he was assessing for government disability benefits. Lay initially interviewed both girls in the presence of their mothers but then privately examined the girls in a room which did not have CCTV.[54]

May 2020: A former jail psychologist Sarah Florentin, who had had “engaged in a short tryst with one prisoner,” leaked details of a private conversation between an inmate and detective to a restaurant owner-turned-cocaine trafficker and joked about coming to waitress for him if she lost her job. She pleaded guilty in Southport Magistrates Court to two counts of abuse of office, confidential information and take or attempt to take a prohibited thing into a corrective services facility. She was sentenced to two years’ probation with no conviction recorded.[55]

In summary, taking the Prabakar Rajan Thomas case as an example, Independent Australia referred to the psychiatrist as “Dr. Predator” who had committed a “huge abuse of power.” It took “a brave survivor” with the courage to speak out that helped take him down.[56] Laws should respect that bravery.

The term “boundary crossing” should be abolished as an excuse or defense in any psychiatrist, psychologist or mental health therapist sexual contact with a patient. Therapist sexual abuse is sexual abuse. Therapist rape is rape. They will never constitute therapy. Until this is widely recognized, with prosecutors treating every incidence of this as criminal offenses, many psychiatrists, psychologists and psychotherapists will remain a threat to anyone, including children undergoing mental health therapy.

Anyone sexually abused by a mental health professional also has the right to seek recourse for damage incurred. If you or anyone you know has been sexually abused or knows of a patient who has been sexually assaulted by a psychiatric or psychological counselor are encouraged to report this to CCHR Australia.

References:

[1] https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2019/10/17/1931441/0/en/CCHR-Warns-Psychiatric-Sexual-Assault-of-Patients-is-all-too-Common-Occurrence.html

[2] Cherrie A Galletly, “Crossing professional boundaries in medicine: the slippery slope to patient sexual exploitation,” Med J Aust., 4 Oct. 2004; 181 (7): 380-383. https://www.mja.com.au/journal/2004/181/7/crossing-professional-boundaries-medicine-slippery-slope-patient-sexual

[3] A tenth of therapists crossing the sex lines,” Sydney Morning Herald, 29 Nov. 2007. https://www.smh.com.au/national/a-tenth-of-therapists-crossing-sex-lines-20071130-gdrpu9.html

[4] “Psychiatrist-patient sexual contact: results of a national survey. I: Prevalence,” The American Journal of Psychiatry, 1 Apr. 2006, https://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/doi/abs/10.1176/ajp.143.9.1126?journalCode=ajp

[5] https://www.aihw.gov.au/reports/mental-health-services/mental-health-services-in-australia/report-contents/mental-health-workforce/psychiatrists

[6] Michael R. MacIntyre and Jacob M. Appel, “Legal and Ethics Considerations in Reporting Sexual Exploitation by Previous Providers,” Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online February 2020, http://jaapl.org/content/early/2020/02/12/JAAPL.003911-20

[7] Michael R. MacIntyre and Jacob M. Appel, “Legal and Ethics Considerations in Reporting Sexual Exploitation by Previous Providers,” Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online February 2020, http://jaapl.org/content/early/2020/02/12/JAAPL.003911-20

[8] Carolyn Quadrio, “Sexual Abuse in Therapy: Gender Issues,” Aust. & NZ Journ. Of Psychiatry, 1 Feb. 1996, https://www.researchgate.net/publication/14478763_Sexual_Abuse_in_Therapy_Gender_Issues

[9] Linda Jorgenson, Rebecca Randles, and Larry Strasburger, “The Furor Over Psychotherapist-Patient Sexual Contact: New The Furor Over Psychotherapist-Patient Sexual Contact: New Solutions to an Old Problem,” William & Mary Law Review, Vol. 32, Issue 3, March 1991, URL:   https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1936&context=wmlr&sei-redir=1

[10] Gretchen Voss, “Head Games,” Boston Magazine, May 15, 2006, URL: https://www.bostonmagazine.com/2006/05/15/head-games/

[11] Michael R. MacIntyre and Jacob M. Appel, “Legal and Ethics Considerations in Reporting Sexual Exploitation by Previous Providers,” Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online February 2020, http://jaapl.org/content/early/2020/02/12/JAAPL.003911-20

[12] “Doctor Sexual Assault Cases: Capable Philadelphia Medical Malpractice Lawyers Fight for Justice,” https://www.beasleyfirm.com/medical-malpractice/doctor-sexual-assault/

[13] Cherrie A Galletly, “Crossing professional boundaries in medicine: the slippery slope to patient sexual exploitation,” Med J Aust., 4 Oct. 2004; 181 (7): 380-383. https://www.mja.com.au/journal/2004/181/7/crossing-professional-boundaries-medicine-slippery-slope-patient-sexual

[14] Carolyn Quadrio, “Sex and Gender and the Impaired Therapist,” Aust. & NZ Journ. Of Psychiatry, 1 Sept. 1991/2, https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.3109/00048679209072058

[15] Cherrie A Galletly, “Crossing professional boundaries in medicine: the slippery slope to patient sexual exploitation,” Med J Aust., 4 Oct. 2004; 181 (7): 380-383. https://www.mja.com.au/journal/2004/181/7/crossing-professional-boundaries-medicine-slippery-slope-patient-sexual

[16] Cherrie A Galletly, “Crossing professional boundaries in medicine: the slippery slope to patient sexual exploitation,” Med J Aust., 4 Oct. 2004; 181 (7): 380-383. https://www.mja.com.au/journal/2004/181/7/crossing-professional-boundaries-medicine-slippery-slope-patient-sexual

[17] “License to betray,” Atlanta Journal-Constitution, http://doctors.ajc.com/doctors_sex_abuse/

[18] https://www.cchrint.org/2018/02/07/when-your-psychiatrist-or-therapist-is-a-sexual-predator-metoo-in-the-mental-health-industry/

[19] https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-06-10/australian-psychological-society-bob-montgomery-child-sex-abuse/12334420

[20] “Big Brother psychologist, Bob Montgomery, pleads guilty to child sex abuse,” ABC News, 1 Jun. 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-06-02/bob-montgomery-family-court-report-writer-guilty-child-sex-abuse/12308246

[21] https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-06-10/australian-psychological-society-bob-montgomery-child-sex-abuse/12334420

[22] “Big Brother TV doctor preyed on young boys by encouraging them to pleasure themselves in his living room before abusing them on Boy Scout camping trips – as his victims break their silence,” Daily Mail, 18 June 2020, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8438115/Big-Brother-psychologist-Bob-Montgomery-abused-four-young-boys-scoutmaster.html

[23] “A peak psychologist’s body, once led by pedophile Bob Montgomery, has come under fire for noting the ‘impact’ of criminal prosecution,” ABC News, 9 June 2020, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-06-10/australian-psychological-society-bob-montgomery-child-sex-abuse/12334420

[24] https://www.newscientist.com/article/mg12917500-400-nightmare-on-chelmsford-sydney/#ixzz6R5Xevd1k

[25] https://books.google.com/books?id=-4DYxI65nAUC&pg=PA194&lpg=PA194&dq=Sharon+Hamilton+suicide
&source=bl&ots=1yjhphTybE&sig=ACfU3U1AREgWx4jHqa_
m8tL9fQEawubgeA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjWoKjj76_
qAhVGrZ4KHbCUDGcQ6AEwBHoECAoQAQ#v=onepage&q=Sharon
%20Hamilton%20suicide&f=false

[26] http://www.cchrstl.org/documents/rape_EN.pdf

[27] Statement on file with CCHR International

[28] http://www.cchrstl.org/documents/rape_EN.pdf

[29] http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/bailey-harry-richard-12162

[30] http://www.psychcrime.org/database/; http://zastavar.blogspot.com/2012/03/nsw-sydney-psychiatrist-struck-off.html

[31] “Jean Eric Gassy to serve at least 30 years,” The Advertiser, 5 June 2009, https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/jean-eric-gassy-to-serve-at-least-30-years/news-story/dfd67d13057deb1235b7d0ddd1f75e11; “Ex-psychiatrist gets 30 years for murder,” Sydney Morning Herald, 2 June 2009, https://www.smh.com.au/national/expsychiatrist-gets-30-years-for-murder-20090605-bxym.html

[32] “Jean Eric Gassy to serve at least 30 years,” The Advertiser, 5 June 2009, https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/jean-eric-gassy-to-serve-at-least-30-years/news-story/dfd67d13057deb1235b7d0ddd1f75e11

[33] “Psychologist pleads guilty over child porn,” The Age, 11 Dec., 2004, https://www.theage.com.au/national/psychologist-pleads-guilty-over-child-porn-20041211-gdz65t.html and “Provan avoids jail over porn possession,” Sydney Morning Herald, 16 Dec. 2004, https://www.smh.com.au/national/provan-avoids-jail-over-porn-possession-20041216-gdkbtw.html

[34] Psychologists Registration Board of Victoria, Dr. James Benedict Anton Provan, 2005.

[35] http://www.psychcrime.org/database/; https://www.psychsearch.net/ian-anthony-martin/

[36] “Psychologist avoids prison,” The Courier, 21 Oct., 2008, https://www.thecourier.com.au/story/530126/psychologist-avoids-prison/

[37] “Psychiatrist gets jail for client rape,” Sydney Morning Herald, 12 Mar. 2009, URL: https://www.smh.com.au/national/psychiatrist-gets-jail-for-client-rape-20090312-8wcb.html

[38] https://www.abc.net.au/news/2011-10-24/psychiatrist-trial-quashed/3597768, https://www.smh.com.au/national/convictions-quashed-for-rape-charge-shrink-20110330-1cg09.html

[39] “Shrink sent to slammer,” Cairns Post, 30 Apr.  2009, https://www.pressreader.com/australia/the-cairns-post/20090430/281582351575567

[40] http://workcovervictims.blogspot.com/2010/12/camachos-fraud-conviction-clouds-future.html

[41] “Ong Ming Tan jailed for abusing trust of psychiatric patients,” Sydney Morning Herald, 6 Mar. 2014, https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/ong-ming-tan-jailed-for-abusing-trust-of-psychiatric-patients-20140306-349vq.html

[42] Paul Bibby, “Former patient of psychiatrist Ong Ming Tan tells of ‘betrayal,’” Sydney Morning Herald, 12 July 2015, https://www.smh.com.au/national/nsw/former-patient-of-psychiatrist-ong-ming-tan-tells-of-betrayal-20150712-giak5o.html; https://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-05-18/northside-clinic-warned-about-psychiatrists-abuse/7425374

[43] https://www.abc.net.au/news/2016-05-18/northside-clinic-warned-about-psychiatrists-abuse/7425374

[44] “Psychiatrist faces professional ruin for defrauding Victorian WorkCover Authority of $44,000,” The Age, 28 Aug. 2015, https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/psychiatrist-faces-professional-ruin-for-defrauding-victorian-workcover-authority-of-44000-20150828-gja3f3.html

[45] “Medical practitioner convicted of fraud has registration suspended by tribunal,” Medical Board AHPRA, 9 Mar. 2018, https://www.medicalboard.gov.au/News/2018-03-09-practitioner-convicted.aspx

[46] “Psychologist who said he was ‘looking for a wife’ is barred after he groped and rubbed himself on a female patient with learning difficulties,” Daily Mail, 23 Oct. 2019, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7607249/Psychologist-barred-groped-rubbed-female-patient-learning-difficulties.html

[47] “Respected psychiatrist pleads guilty to nine child pornography charges – after his arrest in a Canadian shopping centre for ‘filming a boy’s genitals,” Daily Mail, 2 Dec. 2016, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3995962/Perth-psychiatrist-Aaron-Voon-guilty-possessing-child-pornography-images-arrested-Canada.html

[48] Heather McNeill “WA psychiatrist who filmed young boys urinating banned from practising for three years,” 8 Nov. 2018, WAToday, https://www.watoday.com.au/national/western-australia/wa-psychiatrist-who-filmed-young-boys-urinating-banned-from-practising-for-three-years-20181108-p50eui.html

[49] “Former child psychiatrist Ian Stuart McAlpine jailed over sexual assault of teenager,” ABC News, 18 Apr. 2018, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-04-18/ex-child-psychiatrist-ian-stuart-mcalpine-jailed-for-sex-assault/9672074

[50] “Jail for Perth sex doc Peter David McCarthy who pressured patient” PerthNow, November 24, 2018. https://www.perthnow.com.au/news/crime/jail-for-perth-sex-doc-peter-david-mccarthy-who-pressured-patient-ng-b881028313z

[51] https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2019/sep/03/psychiatrist-jailed-for-sexual-assault-faces-second-allegation

[52] Benjamin Ansell, “Psychiatrist jailed for assaulting vulnerable, long-term patient,” Channel 9 News, 29 Mar. 2019, https://www.theage.com.au/national/victoria/sleazy-psychiatrist-gets-14-months-for-sex-assault-on-female-patient-20190329-p518wc.html

[53] “Embarrassed doctor struggling with a lack of libido forged colleague’s signature to prescribe himself 96 erectile dysfunction tablets,” Daily Mail, 17 Sept. 2019. URL: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7475099/Medic-forged-colleagues-signature-prescribe-96-erectile-dysfunction-tablets.html

[54] “Centrelink psychologist sexually assaulted underage girls,” Central Telegraph, 8 Oct. 2019, https://www.centraltelegraph.com.au/news/centrelink-psychologist-sexually-assaulted-underag/3848774/

[55] Jacob Miley, “Psychologists Sarah Jane Florentin sentenced to two years probation for offences committed while working at prison,” Courier Mail, 21 May 2020, https://www.couriermail.com.au/news/national/psychologist-sarah-jane-florentin-sentenced-to-two-years-probation-for-offences-committed-while-working-at-prison/news-story/a1e2f2b6f7b958efa4afd7763f586f26, “No Jail for Prison Leak,” Press Reader, citing Courier Mail,  https://www.pressreader.com/australia/the-courier-mail/20200521/281848645798723

[56] https://independentaustralia.net/life/life-display/standing-up-dr-predator-and-a-huge-abuse-of-power,12521

Group Warns Parents that Eugenics is Being Repackaged as “Mental Health Care”

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Rev. Fred Shaw says Minority Mental Health Month may send African American parents a wrong message: that the effects of racial injustice require psychotropic drugs but recent studies link them to brain damage and suicide.

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
July 14, 2020

July is National Minority Mental Health Awareness Month and the Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), a mental health industry watchdog, warns parents to be wary of psychotropic drugs recommended for their children. Civil unrest in response to deadly restraints and brutality against African Americans disproportionately affects communities of color, according to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMSHA). But two recent studies reinforce the dangers of antidepressants and antipsychotics that may be prescribed to “treat” this impact.

CCHR says that early 1900s eugenics—the dehumanizing psychological theory that certain races of color were not as “well born” as whites, claimed to justify their sterilization, segregation or elimination. It was couched in seemingly benign terms while hiding a nefarious agenda.[1] CCHR argues that today, eugenics is repackaged as “mental health care” where African Americans, Latinos and other minorities’ normal reactions to oppression, tyranny and inflicted emotional pain through racism, is disingenuously diagnosed as a “mental illness.” Consequently, you see an over-representation of antipsychotic drug use among African Americans and harmful psychotropic drugs prescribed to African American children as young as 18 months.[2]

“Psychotropic drugging does not ‘cure’ or even change racism while proffered antipsychotics are just a prescription for brain damage,” Rev. Frederick Shaw, a CCHR spokesperson said. A study published in JAMA Psychiatry in July said the use of antipsychotics (in this case, olanzapine) was associated with damage to the brain in multiple areas. The researchers used a randomized, controlled trial design, which allows them to suggest that the drugs cause the observed effect on the brain. The researchers found “widespread” cortical [outer layer of brain] thinning in those who took the drug versus those who took a placebo.

  • The researchers also confirmed that antipsychotics carry dangerous side effects, not least of which is the risk of sudden death that is substantially higher in children.[3]
  • Brain atrophy (shrinkage) has been reported in children taking antipsychotics.[4]

Concerns about increasing suicide attempts among African American youth should include the “treatment” given them, which can include antidepressants that cause suicidal behavior.

A June 2020 Australian study published in Frontiers in Psychiatry refutes prominent U.S. and Australian mental health organizations claiming antidepressants reduce the risk of suicide. The researchers report: “From 2008 to 2018, Australian per-capita child, adolescent and young adult antidepressant dispensing (0–27 years old) and suicide (0–24 years) rates have increased approximately 66% and 49%, respectively.” Additionally, “there was a 98% increase in intentional poisonings among 5 to 19-year-olds in New South Wales and Victoria between 2006 and 2016, with substantial overlap between the most commonly dispensed psychotropics and the drugs most commonly used in self-poisoning. These results do not support claims that increased antidepressant use reduces youth suicide risk.”[5]

The researchers are also critical of an Australian youth mental health services programs, headspace, which also treats Aboriginal and Torres Strait children. Stanford Psychiatry’s Center for Youth Mental Health and Wellbeing sees headspace as a model for the U.S. and has been piloting it since 2017, writing: “Part of our proposed response to the mental health challenges facing American youth is to develop” a headspace model.[6]

But headspace is linked to an over-use of antidepressants. Targeting 12 to 25 year-olds, it was co-founded in Australia by two prominent psychiatrists Patrick McGorry and Ian Hickie.[7] Both have had substantial financial links to numerous pharmaceuticals companies.[8] An audit of prescribing practices at one clinic highlighted that “the majority of young people (74.5%) were prescribed an antidepressant before an adequate trial of psychotherapy was undertaken and that less than 50% were monitored for depression symptom improvement and antidepressant treatment emergent suicide related behaviors (35% and 30% respectively).[9]

ABC News spoke to young Australian Indigenous people who found headspace services did not meet their needs. “I went twice to headspace because I had issues with depression, but they didn’t really help at all,” Cody said.[10] “Really, to sum it all up, headspace was just a waste of time,” 14-year-old Jahnesta said. After years of government investment in headspace, doctors, social workers and former clients have urged the Australian Government to stop opening new clinics and consider the shortcomings of the model, according to ABC News.[11]

CCHR reinforces the need to ban physical and chemical restraints on those admitted to psychiatric facilities. Associated Press reported that Detroit-area attorney Geoffrey Fieger released a video of 16-year-old African American, Cornelius Frederick, being restrained by seven staff for about 12 minutes at Sequel facility Lakeside Academy in Michigan. The death was ruled a homicide after an autopsy found Frederick died of asphyxia.[12] Fieger stated: “The mechanism for dealing with children in this facility was abuse and fear. In fact, suffocation was regularly practiced upon children. They called it ‘fearing.’”[13]

Parents can find information to assist them in making more informed decisions about their children’s healthcare needs on FightforKids.

References:

[1] https://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/human-testing-the-eugenics-movement-and-irbs-724/

[2] https://www.theodysseyproject21.top/2014/12/21/black-academic-holocaust-psychotropic-drugs-black-students/

[3] Voineskos, A. N., Mulsant, B. H., Dickie, E. W., Neufeld, N. H., Rothschild, A. J., Whyte, E. M., Flint, A. J. (2020). Effects of antipsychotic medication on brain structure in patients with major depressive disorder and psychotic features: Neuroimaging findings in the context of a randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial. JAMA Psychiatry. Published online, 26 Feb. 2020, https://www.madinamerica.com/2020/07/randomized-controlled-trial-confirms-antipsychotics-damage-brain/

[4] Ibid.

[5] Martin Whitely, et al., “Antidepressant Prescribing and Suicide/Self-Harm by Young Australians: Regulatory Warnings, Contradictory Advice, and Long-Term Trends,” Frontiers in Psychiatry, 5 June 2020, https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00478/full

[6] https://med.stanford.edu/content/dam/sm/psychiatry/documents/initiatives/allcove/headspacepilotoverview.pdf

[7] Op. cit., Martin Whitely, et al., Frontiers in Psychiatry

[8] Ibid.

[9] Ibid.

[10] “Headspace is ‘easy for politicians’, but failing Australia’s youth, experts say,” ABC News, 27 Aug. 2019, https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-04-28/headspace-failing-australias-youth-experts-say/11039776

[11] Ibid.

[12] “Video shows 7 staffers restraining, sitting on teen before his death at Michigan youth facility,” AP, 8 Jul. 2020, https://www.chicagotribune.com/midwest/ct-nw-michigan-teen-cornelius-fredericks-death-20200708-khja2idbyzcnbhfpnys3gcipne-story.html

[13] Ibid.

UHS—For-Profit Psych Hospital’s $132 Million Payout Over DOJ & MA Fraud Investigations

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CCHR has filed thousands of complaints with state & federal agencies over alleged fraud and abuse in Universal Health Services behavioral facilities: Settlement is a good start but inadequate to protect patients

By Jan Eastgate
President CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
July 20, 2020

The United States Attorney William M. McSwain announced  on July 10, 2020 that Universal Health Services, Inc. and UHS of Delaware, Inc. (together, UHS) agreed to pay $117 million to resolve alleged violations of the False Claims Act—making false claims related to medically unnecessary inpatient behavioral health services and illegal kickbacks.[1] The Department also alleged UHS’ facilities billed for services not rendered, billed for improper and excessive lengths of stay, failed to provide adequate staffing, training and/or supervision of staff and improperly used physical and chemical restraints and seclusion.[2]

In a separate civil settlement, UHS’s Turning Point behavioral facility will pay the United States and the State of Georgia another $5 million to resolve allegations that it provided free or discounted transportation services to induce Medicare and Medicaid beneficiaries to seek treatment at Turning Point’s inpatient detoxification and rehabilitation program or intensive outpatient program.[3]

These are allegations the media over the years has reported and Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) has included in thousands of complaints filed with state and federal regulators and legislators since 2010 and, more substantially since 2015.[4]

Further, on July 13, 2020, Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey announced that it will receive $5 million of the federal settlement, but is also to be paid another $10 million in a separate matter over allegations that UHS improperly billed the state’s Medicaid Program (MassHealth)—for a combined total of $132 million. The AG’s Office, along with whistleblowers in this case, specifically alleged that the defendants caused the submission of claims for services provided by unlicensed and non-independently licensed staff who were not properly supervised; for drugs prescribed by psychiatric nurses who were also not properly supervised; for services performed by unlicensed, unsupervised, and unqualified psychologists; and for employing clinicians with inadequate educational credentials.[5]

The whistleblowers in this case, Julio Escobar and Carmen Correa, originally filed a qui tam suit in 2011 in the U.S. District Court of Massachusetts following the death of their daughter, Yarushka Rivera, a teenage Medicaid recipient who received treatment at a UHS facility in Massachusetts. From 2007 to 2009, Yarushka was treated by five unlicensed, unsupervised therapists and psychiatrists—in flagrant violation of Massachusetts health regulations. She suffered two seizures under the care of UHS employees, the second of which was fatal. A state investigation found that UHS’s facility employed 23 unlicensed therapists, none of whom were supervised. The parents alleged fraud.[6]

Arguably, the use of unlicensed therapists spells more profits for any mental healthcare company. Escobar remains the most recent, influential decision from the Supreme Court on False Claims Act cases, according to the MA AG.  As part of the resolution in the Escobar case, UHS’s Arbour Counseling Services, where Yarushka was treated, will institute a multiyear compliance program, overseen by an independent compliance monitor, at all of its Massachusetts outpatient clinics.[7] Despite the fraud, Arbour and UHS get to continue practicing and to reap more profit.

The overall Federal DOJ settlement is $5 million less than what was originally reported in 2019, then $127 million.[8]

Even in 2019 CCHR issued a statement that the settlement was insufficient to send an adequate warning to other for-profit behavioral facilities accused of patient abuse and healthcare fraud.[9]  UHS has nearly 200 psychiatric facilities in the U.S. or 328 behavioral health facilities when including its UK psychiatric hospitals, some of which have been subject to police investigations and government scrutiny.[10]

UHS’s net revenue in 2019, including its medical and acute (non-psychiatric) care sector, was nearly $11.4 billion and so $132 million is a proverbial drop in the ocean for UHS to pay out.[11]

According to the press release from the DOJ, “The claims resolved by these settlements are allegations only, and there has been no determination of liability.”[12] (Emphasis added) However, in their own announcement filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, UHS officials stated: “The Company denies the allegations raised in this matter and the settlement does not constitute a finding of improper conduct or failure to provide appropriate care and treatment in accordance with governing rules and regulations or an admission of facts or liability by the Company or any of its subsidiary behavioral health facilities.”[13]

In other words, it’s been given license to continue without liability and with a mere 1% of its net income paid in the settlement—a slap on the wrist.

Had there been a conviction, it likely may have resulted in an exclusion from Medicare and Medicaid programs for both UHS’s behavioral and non-psychiatric acute care divisions and, therefore, a crippling loss of government reimbursement for the company—possibly leading to its closure.[14]

UHS has entered into a Corporate Integrity Agreement for five years and includes maintaining an “independent monitor” of its behavioral practices.[15]

In its complaints to legislators about the for-profit psychiatric industry, CCHR has faulted the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) “Correction Plans” and/or Corporate Integrity Agreements (CIAs), which enable facilities to continue operating—only to repeat the offenses they’re supposed to have been corrected on. Patients can be continually kept at risk.

In August 2015, CMS said it would cut Medicare and Medicaid funding to UHS’s Timberlawn psychiatric hospital in Dallas, Texas. The hospital had flunked multiple safety inspections, including the monitoring of suicidal patients, and had failed to make promised improvements. CMS inspectors found Timberlawn workers had falsified records to avoid scrutiny in a patient-harm case. Timberlawn had already come under investigation in April 2013 for allegations of Medicare fraud and improper treatment of Medicaid patients.[16]  It took three years, before the psychiatric facility was closed, but not before a 13-year-old girl was raped there. Even then, UHS said it was “voluntarily closing its doors.”[17]

Is it a case that alleged defrauded funds reimbursed to the government takes precedence over patient protections? It seems so, despite strong statements from U.S. Attorney McSwain who said: “Quality mental health treatment is critical for the patients who place their trust in the hands of service providers” and “inappropriate billing and inadequate care…have no place in our health care system.”[18]

None of the paltry $117 million in the federal payout seems to be allocated to abused patients, although courageous whistleblowers will rightfully be compensated for speaking out. As part of the resolution with UHS, the whistleblowers will receive $15.8 million from the federal share of the settlement.[19] Out of $117 million to be paid, the federal government will receive $88,124,761.27 while a total of $28,875,238.73 will be returned to individual states, which jointly fund state Medicaid programs.[20]

Allegations now “resolved” without liability included:

  • Between January 2006 and December 2018, UHS’s hospitals and facilities knowingly submitted false claims for payment to the Medicare, Medicaid, TRICARE, Department of Veterans Affairs, and Federal Employee Health Benefit programs for inpatient behavioral health services that were not reasonable or medically necessary and/or failed to provide adequate and appropriate services for adults and children admitted to UHS facilities across the country.[21]
  • UHS facilities admitted patients to federal healthcare beneficiaries who were not eligible for inpatient or residential treatment because their conditions did not require that level of care.
  • They failed to properly discharge patients when they no longer required inpatient care.
  • They billed for services not rendered, billed for improper and excessive lengths of stay, failed to provide adequate staffing, training, and/or supervision of staff, and improperly used physical and chemical restraints and seclusion.[22]

The government’s investigation included 19 lawsuits filed under the whistleblower provision of the False Claims Act, which permits private citizens to file suit on behalf of the United States for false claims and share in a portion of the government’s recovery. The global settlement with UHS involved 18 cases that are currently pending in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Western District of Michigan, the Eastern District of Michigan, and Northern District of Georgia.[23]

The settlement with UHS was the result of a collaborative effort among numerous federal and state agencies, including The Commercial Litigation Branch of the Justice Department’s Civil Division and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania handled the cases, with substantial assistance from other states: Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Michigan, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wyoming, as well as the National Association of Medicaid Fraud Control Units (NAMFCU), the Office of Inspector General for the Department of Health and Human Services; the Department of Defense Criminal Investigative Service; the Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Inspector General; and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. [24]

In its 2019 annual report, UHS includes self-praise about its behavioral services that belies the reports of sexual assault, restraint and other abuses that have plagued its behavioral sector in the U.S. for years and more recently in the UK, where its owns a chain of  psychiatric facilities under the helm of its acquired company, Cygnet Health Care.[25]

In the annual report, UHS said of its UK interests, “we are proud to offer the safest therapeutic environments for behavioral health across the country….”[26] That safety is questionable.

  • Omitted in the report to investors was that in 2019, UK police arrested 10 workers from Cygnet’s Whorlton Hall psychiatric hospital following allegations of ‘physical and psychological’ abuse of patients at the facility, which has since closed.
  • This was triggered by a two-month undercover investigation by the BBC’s Panorama, which aired footage showing staff threatening and taunting patients and apparently boasting about deliberately hurting them.[27]
  • On December 28, 2019, The Daily Mail reported Cygnet had been accused of “disgraceful” behavior in handing huge pay rises to top executives despite safety failings in its hospitals, including the killing of one patient and the preventable suicide of another. “The disclosure of big pay rises for Cygnet’s senior management despite the firm’s track record on safety and staffing sparked fury recently from politicians, patients and their families,” The Mail After a year of scandals and unsafe care in their services, it is disgraceful that Cygnet bosses have been rewarded with a big pay rise,” said Barbara Keeley, UK’s Labor’s Shadow Care Minister.[28] 

The Daily Mail reported that “Serious problems have been found by the UK government Care Quality Commission (CQC) at other Cygnet hospitals.” Details in the article included:

  • Nine of the company’s hospitals in the UK were failed this year by the CQC, which monitors, inspects and regulates health and social care services.
  • Cygnet was condemned for ‘unbelievable’ failings by the parents of Claire Greaves, a 25-year-old with anorexia and mental health struggles, who took her own life at its purpose-built Coventry hospital. An inquest found long-term use of segregation had fueled her mental decline – then insufficient staffing, reduced observations and other care failures contributed to her death in 2018.
  • In December, 2019, CQC “placed the unit in special measures and shut down one dirty, ‘unhygienic’ ward after inspectors found unacceptable levels of self-harm, staff shortages and routine use of restraint….Another inquest in 2019 into the strangling of Linda Goswell by a fellow patient at a Cygnet hospital in Bradford highlighted staff failures. Both women were supposed to be checked every 15 minutes yet the killer slipped unnoticed into Goswell’s room for 42 minutes.” Further, “Had the correct observations and procedures taken place, there was a possibility that death may have been prevented,” concluded the jury. A nurse was dismissed after the killing for gross misconduct.
  • Inspectors condemned a Cygnet Hospital Ealing in West London, for “not delivering safe care” and another in Bradford was found to have ‘unsafe’ premises and facilities.
  • Claire Sherman, a former teacher whose 12-year-old autistic daughter, Jess, was sectioned in Cygnet’s hospital in Woking, Surrey, for eight months in 2017, claimed that Jess was abused by older patients, restrained face-down by teams of adult carers, dragged along the floor, forcibly injected with drugs and held in seclusion.[29]
  • A 34-year-old female patient alleged she was left shaking and terrified as two male “nurses” dragged her down the corridor by her arms and slammed her against a bedroom door on March 28, 2019. She complained to Cygnet bosses about the way she was treated. They looked at the CCTV, upheld her complaint that she was “inappropriately restrained” and cut ties with the two agency staff responsible.[30]

Already—and, apparently, in spite of the COVID-19 pandemic— the behavioral market is setting its sights on increased profits, with the global behavioral health market expecting to reach $240 billion by 2026. Companies like UHS, Acadia Healthcare, Strategic Behavioral Health and more are among those most likely to benefit.[31]

To truly protect patients from psychiatric abuse and fraud, much tougher policies and actions are needed to curb it. There must be a recognition that if the fraudulent practices perpetrated in the psychiatric hospital industry were found committed in other businesses or by lay people, our prisons would be burgeoning, far greater, than even now. Therefore, there must also be equality in the law. Then, the costs saved in terms of saved lives and a better health care system that is held to high standards, accountability and criminal liability, would be immeasurable.

References:

[1] “Universal Health Services, Inc. to Pay $117 Million to Settle False Claims Act Allegations,” Dept. of Justice Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 10 July 2020, https://www.justice.gov/usao-edpa/pr/universal-health-services-inc-pay-117-million-settle-false-claims-act-allegations; “Universal Health Services officially finalizes $122M settlement with DOJ,” Fierce Healthcare, 13 Jul, 2020, https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/hospitals/universal-health-services-officially-finalizes-122m-settlement-doj

[2] “Universal Health Services officially finalizes $122M settlement with DOJ,” Fierce Healthcare, 13 July 2020, https://www.fiercehealthcare.com/hospitals/universal-health-services-officially-finalizes-122m-settlement-doj

[3] http://www.hirstlawgroup.com/19.html

[4] https://www.cchrint.org/2015/11/18/allegations-against-psych-hospital-chain-continue/

[5] “Universal Health Services to Pay Massachusetts More than $15 Million to Resolve Whistleblower False Claims Cases,” Mass.gov, 13 July 2020, https://www.mass.gov/news/universal-health-services-to-pay-massachusetts-more-than-15-million-to-resolve-whistleblower

[6] https://www.aarp.org/aarp-foundation/our-work/legal-advocacy/info-2016/Universal-Health-v-U-S-Escobar-Correa.html

[7] Op. cit., Mass.gov, 13 July 2020 r

[8] “UHS agrees to $127M DOJ to settle behavioral health investigation,” MedCity News, 28 July 2019, https://medcitynews.com/2019/07/uhs-agrees-to-127m-doj-to-settle-behavioral-health-investigation/

[9] https://www.cchrint.org/2019/08/13/multi-million-dollar-fines-insufficient-to-curb-fraud-patient-sexual-other-abuses/

[10] http://ir.uhsinc.com/

[11] https://www.macrotrends.net/stocks/charts/UHS/universal-health-services/revenue

[12] Op. cit., Dept. of Justice Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 10 July 2020

[13] Op. cit., Fierce Healthcare, 13 July 2020

[14] The Exclusion Statute, 42 U.S.C. Section 1320a-7, Medicare Fraud & Abuse: Prevent, Detect, Report, page 9,             https://www.cms.gov/Outreach-and-Education/Medicare-Learning-Network-MLN/MLNProducts/Downloads/Fraud-Abuse-MLN4649244.pdf

[15] Op. cit., Dept. of Justice Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 10 July 2020

[16] Reese Dunklin, “Judge rules regulators can stop funding Timberlawn psychiatric hospital,” The Dallas Morning News, August 13, 2015, https://www.dallasnews.com/news/2015/08/14/judge-rules-regulators-can-stop-funding-timberlawn-psychiatric-hospital/; https://olis.leg.state.or.us/liz/2017R1/Downloads/CommitteeMeetingDocument/117795;

[17] Sue Ambrose, Sarah Mervosh, Miles Moffeit ,”Timberlawn psychiatric hospital to close Feb. 16 after safety violations,” 18 Jan. 2018, Dallas Morning News, https://www.dallasnews.com/news/investigations/2018/01/18/dmn-investigates-troubled-timberlawn-psychiatric-hospital-closing-before-state-can-shut; “Dallas police investigating sexual assault of 13-year-old girl at Timberlawn hospital,” Dallas Morning News, 13 Oct. 2017, https://www.dallasnews.com/news/crime/2017/10/12/13-year-old-girl-sexually-assaulted-timberlawn-psychiatric-hospital-dallas.

[18] “Universal Health Services, Inc. And Related Entities To Pay $122 Million To Settle False Claims Act Allegations Relating To Medically Unnecessary Inpatient Behavioral Health Services And Illegal Kickbacks,” U.S. Department of Justice, 10 July 2020, https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/universal-health-services-inc-and-related-entities-pay-122-million-settle-false-claims-act

[19] Ibid.

[20] Ibid.

[21] Ibid.

[22] Ibid.

[23] Op. cit., Dept. of Justice Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 10 July 2020

[24] Ibid.

[25] http://ir.uhsinc.com/index.php/static-files/01ddf114-1ea1-4bb8-8fb8-8791369e2f0f

[26] Ibid.

[27] https://www.independent.co.uk/news/health/whorlton-hall-investigation-arrests-abuse-learning-disability-latest-a8928811.html

[28] “Fat cat boss of private mental health firm receives £445,000 pay rise despite hospitals failing autistic patients,” The Daily Mail, 28 Dec. 2019, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-7832979/Boss-private-mental-health-firm-receives-445-000-pay-rise-despite-hospitals-failing.html

[29] Ibid.

[30] “Woman ‘thrown against door’ at same hospital where Derby man ‘badly beaten up,’” Derby Telegraph/Derbyshire Live, 23 Sept. 2019, https://www.derbytelegraph.co.uk/news/local-news/cygnet-hospital-kewstoke-3332605

[31] https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2019/07/26/1892319/0/en/Behavioural-Health-Market-Size-to-Hit-US-240-Bn-by-2026.html

New Study Finds Antipsychotics Don’t Prevent but Actually Cause Psychosis

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CCHR hopes study will put an end to the psychiatric practice of pre-drugging children with powerful psychotropic drugs to prevent the possible onset of a behavioral disorder. Experts condemn the practice as unscientific and harmful.

By Jan Eastgate
President CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
July 21, 2020

A new study has found prescribing antipsychotics to prevent psychosis is harmful and should put this practice to rest. For a decade CCHR has opposed “pre-drugging” youths and adults to theoretically prevent the onset of behavioral disorders that physically don’t exist. Researchers of the new study published in July in the Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, vindicates CCHR’s concerns. Researchers investigated whether antipsychotics might prevent “conversion to psychosis” in people who were identified as at “clinical high risk (CHR)” of it. However, they concluded: “Administration of antipsychotics to CHR patients is potentially harmful with no preventive benefits. We do not recommend antipsychotic treatment for CHR individuals….”[1]

The researchers found subjects consistently became psychotic in those taking antipsychotics, who had multiple prescriptions, and who took a higher dose of an antipsychotic. The study is even more damning because subjects were drug naive—they aren’t influenced by other psychotropics that may have been stopped to commence the study. None of the participants had ever received a previous psychiatric drug. Many different antipsychotics were used, including aripiprazole, olanzapine, risperidone, amisulpride, and quetiapine. The researchers wrote that their “results did not favor any specific type of antipsychotics.”[2]

The practice of drugging youths labeled as symptomatic of “Psychosis Risk Syndrome” (PRS), aka CHR[3], “Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome” (APS[4]) and “prodromal” (early symptom) came under international opposition when PRS was proposed for inclusion in the Diagnostic & Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 5 (DSM-5) published in 2013.[5]

Dr. Allen Francis, Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University and head of the DSM-IV Task Force, told The Australian that he feared early diagnosis could lead to people without psychosis being put on drugs that have serious side-effects and called it a “vast untried public-health experiment.”[6] He said the tool used to identify who might become psychotic had a “false positive rate” ranging from 60 to 90 percent,” which were “totally unacceptable odds.”[7]

This is not surprising, as the diagnosis couldn’t be more arbitrary and unscientific. A subjective checklist of symptoms includes “suspiciousness,” “mind tricks, unanticipated beliefs,” “fixed belief that cannot be reasoned about,” “awkward or anxious, socially
disinterested or reluctant,” “speech lacking in character, unengaging, [non-]spontaneous, constricted or flat affect,” “going off track while speaking,” and “odd beliefs or magical thinking.”[8]

Dr. Richard Warner, formerly a professor of psychiatry at the University of Colorado, countered the idea that science drives pre-disorder assessment, stating, “Given the expected number of false positives, the potential for harm is significant.”[9]

The debate surrounding the proposal of PRS or APS was “heated, full of conflicting values, and APS ended up not being coded as an official diagnosis in DSM-5,” according to a paper published in BMC Medical Ethics in 2016. The authors noted: “The review process of the fifth edition” of DSM-5 “received harsh criticism, and was even considered secretive by some authors.”[10]

DSM-5 dropped the proposal to make PRS an official category with a code of its own for reimbursement.[11] Frances stressed the unpredictable effects of its inclusion. For him, “the treatment most likely to be used would be antipsychotic medications” which “have no proven efficacy in preventing psychosis, but most definitely have terrible side effects.” Regarding stigma he considered that “having a label that suggests one is at risk to soon develop a psychosis would cause the mislabeled person much unnecessary worry, unnecessarily reduced ambitions, and create great risk of discrimination.[12]

However, as he later discovered, under its alternate name “Attenuated Psychosis Syndrome” (APS), the American Psychiatric Association, the publisher of DSM-5, included it in the section on Schizophrenia Spectrum and Other Psychotic Disorders as one type of “Other Specified Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorder”/”Other Psychotic Disorder.” It can be coded for insurance reimbursement.[13]

Some of the early studies to assess first episode or prodromal psychosis occurred in Australia (McGorry, Yung) in the early 90s, then in the U.S.[14] Despite the DSM findings, writing in World Psychiatry in 2018, Prof. Patrick McGorry et al., still advocated that “at risk mental state” should be regarded as a syndrome in its own right.[15] McGorry advocates replacing the idea that one must have a diagnosis before treatment can begin.[16]

In a 2018 paper he and colleagues admitted, “Psychiatric diagnosis is once again experiencing a crisis of confidence, which has been created by a range of forces” including, invalidity of the syndrome descriptions and “the polemics [attacks] of antipsychiatry.” “These forces have combined to fuel this crisis, which reached a peak during the launch period for DSM‐5,” McGorry and colleagues wrote.[17]

Francis commented on McGorry trying to shoot the messenger: “A review of Professor McGorry’s public statements shows his willingness to ignore any evidence contrary to his belief, to change stated views back and forth when he regards this to be necessary or convenient, and to unfairly attack those who point out the fallacies and inconsistencies in his comments,” wrote Francis.[18]

Calling at-risk psychosis a legitimate disorder is symptomatic of what is called “diagnosis creep”—broadening definitions to capture more patients.[19] It has also been defined as when “expert panels get together and decide that the definition of their disease is too narrow and needs to include many more people.”[20] Dr. Ray Moynihan, senior research fellow with a special interest in overdiagnosis, defines this further:Expanded disease definitions are often decided upon by panels muddied by conflicts of interest, and had the potential to be harmful.”[21]

U.S. psychiatrist Jerald J. Block wrote in Bioethics Forum that “preventive pharmacology” is “ethically questionable territory” because the treatments given “frequently have side effects and complications” and you are potentially harming people.[22]

Youth Overdose Deaths on ADHD Stimulants and BenzodiazepinesDavid Webb, board member of the World Network of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry and Melissa Raven, psychiatric epidemiologist and policy analyst, called the practice of pre-drugging for a disorder that’s never emerged, a “prescription for disaster.” They stated: “There are many hazards with pre-emptive medical interventions, especially with such potent drugs as antipsychotics (which have been described as possibly the second most toxic chemicals used in medicine after the drugs used in chemotherapy), which have serious side-effects including diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and sudden cardiovascular death.”[23]

More alarming is that the pre-psychosis period is considered the time ‎interval between the “first noticeable changes in behavior” to the appearance of overt psychotic symptoms (also named full-blown psychosis). Some studies even claim that the prodromal state period can on average last days up to five years.[24] As such, for five years a teen could be given powerful antipsychotics that list psychosis as a side effect, in the crystal ball theory that they may develop psychosis.[25]

Antipsychotics can cause a potentially life-threatening condition called neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Lab tests show elevated while blood cell counts and liver problems leading to renal failure and the need for dialysis to restore liver function, but may become permanent if irreversible renal dysfunction results.[26]

All this makes McGorry and cohorts’ push for “at risk” treatment all the more dubious. In an article published in Psychology Today, Francis appropriately stated: “…a dark cloud surrounds the silver lining of having one psychiatrist in a position of almost unopposed influence.” Further, “Professor McGorry has developed the messianic blind spot that is so common in visionary prophets. His zeal has made him an unreliable evaluator of scientific evidence, allowing him to defend absolutely indefensible positions with the convincing, but inaccurate, force of a true believer.”[27]

McGorry’s reach is international. In 1997, he established the International Early Psychosis Association (IEPA). From 2002 to 2010, Vice President for North America was U.S. psychiatrist Jeffrey Lieberman, Director, New York State Psychiatric Institute.[28] Today’s VP for North America is Chi Cheng, a Child & Adolescent, Youth Psychiatrist & Assistant Professor in Psychiatry Section, Clinical Sciences at the Northern Ontario School of Medicine.[29] IEPA’s conferences have received funding from Janssen, AstraZenecca, Eli Lilly, Pfizer, Bristol-Myers Squibb and the U.S. psycho-pharma front group National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI).[30]

There is already a dark history of children and teens being drugged in the U.S. According to IQVia’s Total Patient Tracker Database for Year 2019, extracted February 2020, over 6.7 million children in the U.S. were prescribed psychotropic drugs, of which 1,022,918 were prescribed antipsychotics and 2,148,871, given antidepressants. Over 1.3 million were prescribed anti-anxiety drugs and 3,396,066 prescribed “ADHD” drugs, many of which are more potent than cocaine.[31]

Now, potentially, hundreds of thousands more could be labeled at-risk of mental illness and drugged. It is a Brave New World paradigm in mental health when one has the power to unscientifically label and drug people before they are even “ill.”

Hopefully, this latest study from the Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry that refutes the use of antipsychotics to treat “at risk” symptoms can sway governments not to fund the practice and to prevent such abuse.

As Australian psychiatrist Niall McLaren best summed up such practices: “Not since [lobotomies] has psychiatry stumbled so far from the principle of Primum, non nocere. First, do no harm.”[32]

References:

[1] TianHong Zhang et. al, “Real-world effectiveness of antipsychotic treatment in psychosis prevention in a 3-year cohort of 517 individuals at clinical high risk from the SHARP (ShangHai At Risk for Psychosis),” Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 21 May, 2020, https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0004867420917449

[2] “For People “At Risk for Psychosis,” Antipsychotics Associated with Worse Outcomes,” MIA, 14 July 2020, https://www.madinamerica.com/2020/07/for-people-at-risk-for-psychosis-antipsychotics-associated-with-worse-outcomes/, citing: TianHong Zhang et. al, “Real-world effectiveness of antipsychotic treatment in psychosis prevention in a 3-year cohort of 517 individuals at clinical high risk from the SHARP (ShangHai At Risk for Psychosis),” Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, 21 May, 2020, https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0004867420917449

[3] Patrick D. McGorry and Barnaby Nelson, Ph.D., “Clinical High Risk for Psychosis—Not Seeing the Trees for the Wood,” JAMA Psychiatry, 11 Mar. 2020, https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapsychiatry/article-abstract/2762525

[4] Allen Frances, “Psychosis Risk Syndrome Is Back,” Psychiatric Times, 26 Nov. 2013, https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/psychosis-risk-syndrome-back

[5] https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/dsm5-in-distress/201007/psychosis-risk-syndrome-just-risky-new-name

[6] Sue Dunlevy, “US expert slams Patrick McGorry’s psychosis model,” The Australian, 14 June 2011, https://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/us-expert-slams-patrick-mcgorrys-psychosis-model/news-story/17af8dc06430231afbf44bc9df2d38bf

[7] Ibid.

[8] http://www.cedarclinic.org/index.php/understanding-early-psychosis/early-signs-of-psychosis; https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3085111/

[9] Richard Warner, MB, DPM, “Early intervention in psychosis: Future or fad?” Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, https://web.archive.org/web/20120417201845/http://www.camh.net/Publications/Cross_Currents/Winter_2007-08/futureorfad_crcuwinter0708.html.

[10] Arthur Maciel Nunes Gonçalves, et al, “Values and DSM-5: looking at the debate on attenuated psychosis syndrome,” BMC Medical Ethics, 20 Jan. 2016, online, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4721193/

[11] Allen Frances, “Psychosis Risk Syndrome Is Back,” Psychiatric Times, 26 Nov. 2013, https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/psychosis-risk-syndrome-back

[12] Arthur Maciel Nunes Gonçalves, et al, “Values and DSM-5: looking at the debate on attenuated psychosis syndrome,” BMC Medical Ethics, 20 Jan. 2016, online, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4721193/

[13] Allen Frances, “Psychosis Risk Syndrome Is Back,” Psychiatric Times, 26 Nov. 2013, https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/psychosis-risk-syndrome-back

[14] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4356506/

[15] Patrick McGorry, et al, “Beyond the ‘at risk mental state’ concept: transitioning to transdiagnostic psychiatry,” World Psychiatry, 24 May 2018, https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/wps.20514

[16] https://www.bbrfoundation.org/content/21st-century-approach-treating-psychosis-and-other-adolescent-mental-health-disorders

[17] Patrick McGorry, et al, “Beyond the ‘at risk mental state’ concept: transitioning to transdiagnostic psychiatry,” World Psychiatry, 24 May 2018, https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1002/wps.20514

[18] Allen Francis, M.D., “Psychiatry cannot promise more than it can deliver,” Psychology Today, 14 Apr. 2011, http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/dsm5-in-distress/201108/seven-questions-professor-patrick-mcgorry

[19] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4917625/

[20] https://insightplus.mja.com.au/2017/20/diagnosis-creep-the-new-problem-in-medicine/

[21] “Australians are increasingly facing ‘diagnosis creep’, where disease definitions are widened and people are unnecessarily turned into patients, experts say,” The Medical Republic, 11 Apr. 2016, http://medicalrepublic.com.au/warning-diagnosis-creep-rise/2494

[22] https://www.cchrint.org/issues/psycho-pharmaceutical-front-groups/australian-psychiatrist-patrick-mcgorrys-brave-new-world-of-pre-drugging-kids/

[23] “McGorry’s ‘early intervention’ in mental health: a prescription for disaster,” On Line Opinion, 6 Apr. 2010, https://www.onlineopinion.com.au/view.asp?article=10267

[24] http://mhealth.amegroups.com/article/view/30948/html

[25] https://www.cchrint.org/psychdrugdangers/

[26] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC181141/

[27] Allen Francis, M.D., “Psychiatry cannot promise more than it can deliver,” Psychology Today, 14 Apr. 2011, http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/dsm5-in-distress/201108/seven-questions-professor-patrick-mcgorry

[28] https://www.jeffreyliebermanmd.com/bio

[29] https://iepa.org.au/members/chi-cheng/

[30] https://www.cchrint.org/2015/04/27/drugging-kids-patrick-mcgorry/

[31] https://www.fightforkids.org/number-of-children-taking-psychiatric-drugs

[32] https://www.cchrint.org/2010/05/21/meet-the-psychiatrist-pushing-for-a-brave-new-world-of-pre-drugging-kids-patrick-mcgorry/ citing: Niall McLaren, M.D., “Psychosis Risk Syndrome (PRS),” 14 May 2010

CCHR Condemns FDA Stay on Ban of Skin-Shocking Students for Behavioral Control

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A banned device continues to be used to electroshock body parts of students for painful behavior modification & punishment and has human rights group riled. They want patient protections made a priority over the “torturous” device.

By Jan Eastgate
President CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
July 24, 2020

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is allowing a behavioral treatment device which the United Nations says “inflicts pain and suffering tantamount to torture in violation of international law,” to continue being used despite banning it in March this year.[1] Disability rights groups and the mental health industry watchdog, Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR), fought for years to get the Graduated Electronic Decelerator (GED) skin shock device banned. But less than a month after the FDA’s Final Rule outlawing the torturous device, the agency agreed to allow the Massachusetts-based Judge Rotenberg Center (JRC) to continue to use it for skin-shocking autistic and behaviorally challenged individuals, pending an appeal of the Order.[2]

It is astounding that the onus is not put on safeguarding individuals first while “ironing out legal.” The GED device uses a combination of high amperage and electrode spacing to deliver a punishment more painful than a commercial stun gun. Survivors report a life of terror punctuated by extreme pain, reported ADAPT, that has independently championed for their protection.[3] Electrodes are attached to the arms, legs, or stomachs of students to emit 60 volts and 15 milliamps of electricity in two-second bursts—in one case up to 77 times a day. The potential damage is horrific: pain, skin burns, trauma, tissue damage, suicidality, chronic and acute stress, nightmares and flashbacks of panic and rage, according to the FDA.[4]

Jeffrey Shuren, Director, Center for Devices and Radiological Health, FDA, also stayed the ban because of the current “public health emergency.” Under the GED Final Order, a physician-directed plan for transitioning from skin shocking to a safer alternative was required for individuals currently being shocked at JRC. Shuren stayed this because, in part, “it may divert healthcare delivery resources from other uses during the pandemic.”[5]

This is illogical given that the GED device already involves contact between a health care worker and the patient. The simplicity is this is a decision between torturing or not torturing already disturbed individuals, who are subjected to the practice usually against their will, with others consenting to it.

Even in its Final Rule banning the GED, FDA reported, “The shock need only be subjectively stressful enough to cause trauma or suffering. Trauma becomes more likely, for example, when the recipient does not have control over the shock or has developed a fear of future shocks….” Further, “The vulnerable population subject to ESDs [electrical stimulation devices]…are entitled to the public health protections under the FD&C Act [Food, Drug and Cosmetics Act.]”[6]

Nancy Weiss, Director, National Leadership Consortium on Developmental Disabilities at the University of Delaware, has led a national effort against the GED after visiting JRC in 1993.[7] Earlier this year, she reiterated the “incredibly painful, fall-on-the-floor, screaming-in-agony level electric shock for students. Why our government doesn’t protect these people, I don’t know.”[8]

Legislators and healthcare professionals should be outraged that this shock procedure has been stayed. It’s irrational while, morally, the stay is as insensitive as permitting CIA psychiatrists to continue conducting electroshock mind control experiments while awaiting the completion of the 1977 Congressional inquiry into this.

As The Guardian reported, “It is the ‘imagery of healing’ that has often been used for some of the other worst examples of medical practice….Techniques included forced hospitalization, electro-shock therapy, castration, torture drugs and lobotomies.”[9]

Determining whether certain treatment rises to the level of “torture” can be a challenge, the International Justice Resource Center says, but, “The right to freedom from torture is enshrined in many human rights instruments and protects all individuals from being intentionally subjected to severe physical or psychological distress by, or with the approval or acquiescence of, government agents….”[10]

JRC students have described such psychological stress in frightening terms: “I would ask God to make my heart stop because I did not want to live when that (electric shock) was happening to me,” “It was like being underground in hell” and “I just want to die and make it (electric shock) stop.”[11]  Pleas that the FDA has ignored for decades, CCHR says.

In 2010, Mental Disability Rights International (MDRI) filed an urgent appeal to the UN Special Rapporteur against the GED. Laurie Ahern, President of MDRI stated, “The cruelty perpetrated against children and adults at JRC is psychological and physical abuse, couched in the name of ‘treatment.’”[12]

Juan Mendez, former United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture and now a Professor of Human Rights Law in Residence at the American University–Washington College of Law, said, “I feel very strongly that electricity applied to a person’s body creates a very extreme form of pain.” His successor as Special Rapporteur, Manfred Nowak, had no doubts that the electric shocks constituted torture. “I have no doubts about it,” said Nowak, “It is inflicted in a situation where a victim is powerless. And, I mean, a child in the restraint chair, being then subjected to electric shocks, how more powerless can you be?”[13]

It is of grave concern that JRC students could be skin-shocked for years to come, based on FDA’s past slowness to act. A 2016 challenge to the FDA’s Proposed Rule on electroconvulsive treatment or electroshock took more than two years for the FDA to respond. During that time, many tens of thousands of Americans were subjected to electroshock, which uses more than seven times the voltage of a GED device and can cause severe memory loss, brain damage, skin burns, heart irregularities and potentially death. FDA has allowed the use of the device on children aged five and younger, state government reports show. An online petition still calls for a ban on the ECT device.

FDA’s acquiescence to the electrical “torture” of JRC students excused as treatment should be investigated. And in the public interest and the interest of justice, both the GED and ECT devices should be banned.

References:

[1] “UN calls for investigation of US school’s shock treatments of autistic children,” The Guardian, 2 June 2012, https://www.theguardian.com/society/2012/jun/02/un-investigation-shock-treatments-autism; https://www.wbur.org/commonhealth/2020/03/04/judge-rotenburg-educational-center-shock-devices-fda-ban

[2] “Notice of Filing of Administrative Stay,” Judge Rotenberg Educational Center, 27 Mar. 2020, https://autistichoya.files.wordpress.com/2020/04/fda-notice-of-stay-filed-with-court-of-appeals.pdf

[3] https://adapt.org/united-nations-calls-it-torture-fda-is-looking-at-banning-it-jrc-calls-it-treatment/

[4] Paul Kix, “The Shocking Truth,” The Boston Globe, July 2008, https://www.bostonmagazine.com/2008/06/17/the-shocking-truth/; “Founder of electric shock autism treatment school forced to quit: Institute uses punishment machine to discipline severely autistic and emotionally disturbed children by giving them electric shocks,” The Guardian, 25 May 2011, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2011/may/25/electric-shock-autism-treatment-school; “Banned Devices; Electrical Stimulation Devices for Self-Injurious or Aggressive Behavior,” Food and Drug Administration Final Rule, 6 March 2020, Federal Register, 85 FR 13312, https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2020/03/06/2020-04328/banned-devices-electrical-stimulation-devices-for-self-injurious-or-aggressive-behavior

[5] Jeffrey Shuren, M.D., Letter regarding Stay of Action, Docket No. FDA-2020-P-1166, 27 Mar. 2020, “Notice of Filing of Administrative Stay,” Judge Rotenberg Educational Center, 27 Mar. 2020, https://autistichoya.files.wordpress.com/2020/04/fda-notice-of-stay-filed-with-court-of-appeals.pdf

[6] Op. cit., Food and Drug Administration Final Rule, 6 Mar. 2020

[7] https://www.wgbh.org/news/local-news/2020/01/03/fda-misses-its-deadline-to-ban-shocks-at-canton-school-for-students-with-disabilities; http://www1.udel.edu/udaily/2015/jun/humanitarian-award-060915.html

[8] https://www.wgbh.org/news/local-news/2020/01/03/fda-misses-its-deadline-to-ban-shocks-at-canton-school-for-students-with-disabilities

[9] “CIA torture is only part of medical science’s dark modern history,” The Guardian, 22 Jun. 2015, https://www.theguardian.com/science/blog/2015/jun/22/cia-torture-is-only-part-of-medical-sciences-dark-modern-history

[10] https://ijrcenter.org/thematic-research-guides/torture/

[11] https://adapt.org/united-nations-calls-it-torture-fda-is-looking-at-banning-it-jrc-calls-it-treatment/

[12] https://mindfreedom.org/affiliate-sponsors/as-archives/international/mdri/mdri-rotenberg/

[13] https://www.driadvocacy.org/the-united-nations-calls-again-for-investigation-of-jrcs-shock-treatments/


Date-Rape, Suicide-Inducing Drug FDA-Ok’ed to Treat Suicidal Ideas

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CCHR increases its monitoring of FDA approval of nasal spray antidepressant and mental health apps that could increase psychotropic drug use, leading to increased suicide. Latest drug approved is queried over date-rape and suicide allegations.

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
August 11, 2020

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved a variant of the anesthetic and party date-rape drug, ketamine, as a quick-acting antidepressant nasal spray for people with suicidal thoughts. The manufacturer, Janssen Pharmaceuticals has made claims that Spravato (esketamine) can reduce depressive symptoms in as little as four hours.[1] However, esketamine’s listed side effects include increased suicidal thoughts or actions and worsening depression.[2]  The FDA is out of control in approving a potential suicide-inducing drug to prevent suicidal ideation.

Citizens Commission on Human Rights is now also monitoring FDA fast tracking approval of mental health devices and apps in the wake of COVID-19, which could lead to increased prescriptions of antidepressants and other psychotropic drugs, with significant risk to Americans. Esketamine’s manufacturer, Janssen’s research and discovery division has partnered with a Singapore-based digital therapeutics company to explore the development of a digital mental health strategy in China.[3] Predictably, this could extend to the U.S., where digital apps can lead to psychotropic drug prescribing.

Janssen said the FDA has approved the supplemental new drug application for adults with major depressive disorder “with acute suicidal ideation or behavior,” while admitting that there is no evidence of effectiveness in preventing suicide or in reducing suicidal ideation or behavior.[4]

An April 2020 article published in Frontiers in Psychiatry on “intranasal esketamine,” proposed the drug be prescribed for suicidal ideation even though the author admitted it “may potentially be associated with the risk of addiction.” The author declared conflicts of interest with the manufacturer of esketamine and four other pharmaceutical companies in the past two years.[5] Another researcher, Dr. Gerard Sanacora, a professor of psychiatry at Yale University was involved in the studies leading to the FDA approval and has consulted for the manufacturer.[6]

Esketamine, like ketamine, can cause changes in blood pressure and heart rate, as well as out-of-body experiences for an hour or so after it is administered.[7] Potential serious risks are because of its molecular similarity to ketamine, a “club” and “date rape” drug that can cause disassociation, meaning victims enter a state in which they feel as if their mind and body aren’t connected.[8] There are reports of it also inducing “psychosis-like” effects.[9] Esketamine is also associated with cognitive performance decline.[10]

COVID-19 is being milked to advocate for more psychiatric funding and treatment, which often translates into more psychotropic drug prescriptions. This inevitably results in mind-altering drugs that numb out the very real emotional problems that come with such devastating situations as being faced now, but it cannot correct the source of these situations. And it’s all done under the guise of a “mental health crisis” or “pandemic fallout.”

This has historically occurred. For example, with the “Spanish” influenza of 1918–19, came with what psychiatrists called a widely recognized psychiatric phenomena: “psychoses of influenza.”[11]

Today, in the wake of current social chaos, psychiatrists have already cited surges in requests for new anti-anxiety prescriptions and longer refills on existing ones.[12] To address what the FDA called “mental health needs” during this chaos, in April, the agency announced it would relax certain premarket requirements for computer programs and mobile apps designed to support treatment of conditions such as depression, anxiety, obsessive compulsive disorder and insomnia. The FDA has also approved the use of prescription apps. CNBC reported the most popular mental wellness apps were downloaded 4 million times in April, up almost 30% since the pandemic began.

It’s a lucrative market. In a recent Nature Digital Medicine study, researchers found 1,435 mental health apps available in the app stores.[13] The global mental health apps market is expected to reach $3.9 billion by 2027.[14]

Add to that Medicare has lifted restrictions on telepsychiatry to enable delivery of “mental health services” without the need for office visits. There is a general lift of restrictions and loosening of regulations in the mental health industry that opens the door to fraud and abuse, especially when increasing prescriptions for antidepressants and, now nasal spray antidepressants. This takes advantage of people naturally stressed and anxious about mandated regulations and economic survival right now. The global telepsychiatry market is also a financial goldmine, expected to reach $36.3 billion by 2027.[15]

The psychiatric-pharmaceutical industry is profiting from the current crises and without accountability for its past failures. CCHR says greater monitoring is needed to evaluate links between a less regulated industry, increased psychiatric drug apps influencing prescription increases and potential concomitant rise in suicide.

References:

[1] https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/janssen-announces-us-fda-approval-of-spravato-esketamine-ciii-nasal-spray-to-treat-depressive-symptoms-in-adults-with-major-depressive-disorder-with-acute-suicidal-ideation-or-behavior-301104437.html; “Johnson & Johnson antidepressant spray approved for treating those at risk of suicide,” Fortune, 3 Aug. 2020, https://fortune.com/2020/08/03/johnson-johnson-spray-suicide-treatment/; “Nasal Spray Is A New Antidepressant Option For People At High Risk of Suicide,” NPR, 7 Aug. 2020, https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/08/07/900272454/nasal-spray-is-a-new-antidepressant-option-for-people-at-high-risk-of-suicide; https://www.gov1.com/public-safety/articles/what-to-know-about-ketamine-a-common-date-rape-drug-8DxnS7OteEhx7UmX/

[2] https://www.medicinenet.com/esketamine_spravato/article.htm#what_are_
the_side_effects_of_esketamine_spravato

[3] “Holmusk and Janssen R & D partner to develop digital mental health strategy in China,” mobihealthnews.com, 20 June 2019, https://www.mobihealthnews.com/content/asia-pacific/holmusk-and-janssen-r-d-partner-develop-digital-mental-health-strategy-china

[4] https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/janssen-announces-us-fda-approval-of-spravato-esketamine-ciii-nasal-spray-to-treat-depressive-symptoms-in-adults-with-major-depressive-disorder-with-acute-suicidal-ideation-or-behavior-301104437.html

[5] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7203410/

[6] “Nasal Spray Is A New Antidepressant Option For People At High Risk of Suicide,” NPR, 7 Aug. 2020, https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/08/07/900272454/nasal-spray-is-a-new-antidepressant-option-for-people-at-high-risk-of-suicide

[7] “Nasal Spray Is A New Antidepressant Option For People At High Risk of Suicide,” NPR, 7 Aug. 2020, https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2020/08/07/900272454/nasal-spray-is-a-new-antidepressant-option-for-people-at-high-risk-of-suicide

[8] https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/320409.php; https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-02-05/ketamine-could-soon-be-used-to-treat-suicidal-ideation; https://rxisk.org/bait-and-switch-the-great-ketamine-breakthrough/

[9] https://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/2009/nov/heavy-ketamine-use-affects-short-term-memory

[10] Randall L. Morrison, et al., “Effect of intranasal esketamine on cognitive functioning in healthy participants: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study,” Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2018; 235(4), 1107-1119, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5869899/

[11] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7054463/

[12] Nick Brown, “CORRECTED-As coronavirus takes emotional toll, mental health professionals brace for spike in demand,” Reuters, 20 March 2020,  https://ca.reuters.com/article/idUSXXN2BC01G

[13] “Holmusk and Janssen R & D partner to develop digital mental health strategy in China,” mobihealthnews.com, 20 June 2019, https://www.mobihealthnews.com/content/asia-pacific/holmusk-and-janssen-r-d-partner-develop-digital-mental-health-strategy-china

[14] https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/mental-health-apps-market-accounted-for-us-587-9-mn-in-2018-and-is-expected-to-generate-a-revenue-of-us-3-918-40-mn-by-2027–at-a-growth-rate-of-23-7-from-2019–2027–300997559.html

[15] https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/telepsychiatry-market-size-worth-36-3-billion-by-2027–cagr-24-7-grand-view-research-inc-301096750.html

Psycho-Pharma Front Groups Paid Million$

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Campaigns to “Stop the Stigma” of Mental Illness were Launched by the Psycho-Pharmaceutical Industry

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
August 17, 2020

With a seemingly altruistic agenda, the fact is campaigns aimed at ending the “stigma” of mental illness often have a hidden agenda: they are driven and funded by those who benefit from more people being labeled mentally ill and drugged—the psychiatric-pharmaceutical industry. The conflicts of interest with many of these groups is so pervasive that in 2009, a U.S. Senate investigation probed into the nation’s largest mental illness advocacy group, the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI). The group was asked to disclose any financial backing from drug companies or from foundations created by the industry.[1]

It was revealed that in two years alone (2006-2008) the pharmaceutical industry (Pharma) funded NAMI to the tune of $23 million, representing about three-quarters of its donations.

Other groups of concern were Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (CHADD), the Depression and Bipolar Support Alliance (DBSA), and Mental Health America (MHA), formerly the National Mental Health Association, to name but a few.

In an incestuous relationship, some of the groups advocating for “mental illnesses” awareness campaigns were formed by former directors or researchers from the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)—the very organization that needed mental health advocacy groups to make demands on Congress for increased funding. All of them had board or advisory board members with financial ties to Pharma and the majority of the groups were heavily funded by psychotropic drug makers. This was a brilliant marketing/lobbying strategy: Set up patients’ rights groups as a marketing arm for the psychiatric-pharmaceutical industry, use public relations (PR) firms to market how devastating mental illnesses are, which  increases the demand for more psychotropic drugs, resulting in greater profit.

  • As Mother Jones exposed, public-relations firms launched campaigns to promote a new mental disease, “using dramatic statistics from corporate-sponsored studies…patient groups are recruited to serve as the ‘public face’ for the condition, supplying quotes and compelling human stories for the media; many of the groups are heavily subsidized by drug makers, and some operate directly out of the offices of drug companies’ P.R. firms. The strategy has enabled the pharmaceutical industry to squeeze millions in additional revenue from the blockbuster drugs known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs), a family of pharmaceuticals that includes Paxil, Prozac, Zoloft, Celexa, and Luvox.”[2]
  • A Clinical Psychology Review report cited the incestuous relationship between NAMI, the American Psychiatric Association (APA), NIMH, and the pharmaceutical industry, as a “powerful quartet of voices [that] came together during the 1980s eager to inform the public that mental disorders were brain diseases. Pharmaceutical companies provided the financial muscle. The APA and psychiatrists at top medical schools conferred intellectual legitimacy upon the enterprise. The NIMH put the government’s stamp of approval on the story. NAMI provided moral authority. This was a coalition that could convince American society of almost anything….”[3]
  • Advocacy groups “can be counted on to speak out for [the company]” and “the media will view them as more objective sources than industry spokespeople.”

    Josh Weinstein, “a veteran pharma marketer” writing for the trade magazine Pharmaceutical Executive, said: “I have witnessed that the most direct and efficient tool for driving long-term support for [drug] brands has been, and continues to be, a well-designed, advocacy-based public education program….” Further, “Unlike DTC, advocacy-based promotion brings with it a cadre of allies….This factor grows in importance as the pharma industry becomes more of a political target.” In such a situation, advocacy groups “can be counted on to speak out for [the company]” and “the media will view them as more objective sources than industry spokespeople.”[4]
  • In 2002, the Wall Street Journal revealed that Mental Health America (in collaboration with the JED Foundation) agreed to send 3,000 college presidents a letter and 13-page study titled, “Safeguarding Your Students Against Suicide.” It was underwritten by Wyeth and Forest Labs, apparently aimed at offering widespread campus talks on depression called “Depression in College: Real World, Real Life, Real Issues” and funded by the makers of the antidepressant, Effexor.[5]
  • In 2009, Wyeth reportedly gave $40,000 to American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP), $269,000 to DBSA, $388,500 to MHA and $255,500 NAMI. DBSA, NAMI and MHA, along with the American Psychiatric Foundation, and several other organizations were all a part of the “Depression is Real” Coalition, and each individually received funds from Wyeth for that same project totaling $176,000.[6]
  • The pharmaceutical industry magazine Pharmaceutical Executive published a report by PR expert Teri Cox called “Forging Alliances, Advocacy Partners.” According to Cox, partnering with advocacy groups helps drug companies to “diffuse industry critics by delivering positive messages about the healthcare contributions of pharma companies to legislators, the media, and other key stakeholders.” And they help influence the decisions of policy-makers and regulators.[7]
  • Jeffrey Winton, former vice-president of global public relations for Pharmacia and former president and head of global communications at Eli Lilly and Co., was even clearer about the use of these groups. “Gone are the days when companies just handed out big checks to groups with no discussion afterward,” said Winton. “Now, we seek opportunities with groups that not only help them achieve their goals and objectives, but also help us move our business along.”[8] [Emphasis added] 

Biomedical Mental Illness Model Sells Drugs: Fraudulent “Chemical Imbalance” Theory

To be clear, people with mental issues clearly deserve the best care, especially as they are often seeking relief from emotional turmoil. That makes the misuse of them all the more egregious—having them support groups heavily built upon pharmaceutical funding and a “biological model.” Group members may be unaware that the biological theory of “mental ills” is not founded on science; the theory emphasizes treatment to target presumed biological abnormalities that, unlike for physical illnesses, no medical or physical tests can prove.

This does not mean that mental problems don’t exist; they do. This is not saying that mental problems aren’t as important as medical illnesses. But psychiatrists twist the fact that mental disorders are not physically-based diseases to accuse experts and groups stating this of not believing in mental disability. This lie protects a psychotropic drug industry, with false claims that mind-altering “medication” is needed to correct mental disease.

No psychiatric-defined mental disorder meets the scientific definition of “disease” recognizable to pathologists and scientists have not substantiated a single reliable biomarker for any mental disorder.

Consumers need to know that no psychiatric-defined mental disorder meets the scientific definition of “disease” recognizable to pathologists and that scientists have not substantiated a single reliable biomarker for any mental disorder.

There is no credible evidence that a “chemical imbalance” is causing any mental disorder such as depression, or that any “medicine”—namely SSRI antidepressants—corrects one.

Indeed, three prominent psychiatrists interviewed on National Public Radio (NPR) concurred that this theory is scientifically invalid but suggested that it remains popular because it facilitates pharmaceutical “therapy.” Another well-known psychiatrist called the “chemical imbalance” theory an “urban legend.”[9]

Yet, “numerous patient advocacy groups (e.g., DBSA, NAMI) claim that mental disorders are caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain,”  according to B.J. Deacon in Clinical Psychology Review (2013).[10] A NAMI “Family Guide” to explain adolescent depression told parents that “some individuals develop depression because of a chemical imbalance in their brain.”[11] [Emphasis added]

Deacon wrote that it is unclear whether individuals “would agree that disseminating misleading information about the cause and treatment of depression in order to increase the credibility of antidepressant medication constitutes ethical medical practice.”[12]

In their 2020 book, Children of the Cure: Missing Data, Lost Lives and Antidepressants, Professor David Healy, a psychiatrist and international expert on psychopharmacology and his co-authors wrote, “In the 1990s, when the SSRIs were being marketed, no academic could state publicly that serotonin was low in people with depression. So, the role of persuading people to restore their serotonin levels to ‘normal’ fell to patient representatives and patient groups—heavily funded by pharmaceutical companies. The lowered serotonin story took root in the public domain. The public’s concept of serotonin was like Freud’s notion of libido—vague, and incapable of testing.”[13]

NAMI purports mental health stigma can be reduced by attributing mental disorders to “brain diseases”—the biomedical model.[14] The group’s campaign to stop the “stigma” and “end discrimination” against the mentally ill—had, as its ”Founding Sponsors,” eight pharmaceutical companies that manufacture psychotropic drugs and profit from a biomedical model for mental problems.

DSM Harms Legitimate Medicine

Look at the mental disorders in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) and you’ll find a list of symptoms that often reflect normal behavior; however, when impacting the individual’s life and ability to function, psychiatrists re-define these as “illnesses” in order to obtain insurance rebates for treating them. The solutions offered—often damaging psychotropic drugs, electroshock or other brain intervention procedures—are trustingly accepted in the hope of a cure. At best, the drugs, including antidepressants, antipsychotics, stimulants and sedatives, may temporarily “relieve” symptoms but this masks the real problem, which is then not addressed and cured.

DSM is published by the American Psychiatric Association. Nearly 70% of DSM-5 task force members (2013) reported financial relationships with pharmaceutical companies—up from 57% for DSM-4 (1994).[15]

Since 1991, Pharma penalties totaled $19.8 billion.

In June 2019, Pharmaceutical Technology reported: “Fraudulent and illegal conduct by pharmaceutical companies poses a great risk to public health and maligns the decisions of healthcare providers, costing billions of dollars to the government.”[16] By 2010, drug companies were No. 1 when it came to defrauding the government between 2007 and 2010, according to Public Citizen. It found that since 1991, Pharma penalties totaled $19.8 billion.[17]

Public Citizen also documented that from 1991 through 2015, drug makers paid $35.7 billion to settle federal and state civil and criminal charges of fraudulent practices.[18]

  • For example, Eli Lilly paid a $515 million criminal fine and up to $800 million as civil settlements to resolve allegations related to the unlawful promotion of its antipsychotic drug Zyprexa in 2009. Eli Lilly misbranded the drug for the treatment of conditions in elderly patients for which it was not Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved—called “off-label.” The company trained its sales force to unlawfully promote off-label uses and promoted the drug in nursing homes and to provide rewards for doctors for prescribing them to patients for the unapproved uses. False claims were submitted to federal insurance programs such as Medicaid.[19]
  • In 2012, Abbott pleaded guilty to unlawfully promoting its drug Depakote, which resulted in a $700 million criminal fine and forfeiture, in addition to $800 million in civil settlements. The FDA approved Depakote for three indications, including epileptic seizures, bipolar mania and migraine prevention. Abbott promoted off-label use for dementia patients for controlling behavioral disturbances, and for attention deficit disorder, autism and more.[20] Depakote side effects include: mood swings, agitation, tremor, weight changes, enlarged breasts, and an increase the risk of suicidal thoughts or behavior in patients.[21]

Psychiatric-Pharma Industry Creates Patient Group Marketing Arm: Mental Health Screening

In 1991, shortly after Eli Lilly’s SSRI antidepressant Prozac was launched as the latest “miracle pill” to treat depression, Lilly funded a “National Depression Screening Day,” which used a subjective questionnaire lasting less than five minutes to complete.[22] Screening was conducted at 2,000 sites across the country in 1994 and lectures on depression were given: at one, the audience was told “Antidepressants are not stimulants, not addictive, they make you normal.” A Marketing Director showed a video called Moving into the Light —an infomercial produced by Mental Health America (then named National Mental Health Association) with money provided by Eli Lilly.[23]

In actuality, there are serious withdrawal effects from SSRI antidepressants.  Eli Lilly recognized this and “cleansed” the effect, calling it “antidepressant discontinuation syndrome.” In a 2019 article on antidepressant withdrawal for The New York Times, Benedict Carey reported that doctors for years “have dismissed or downplayed such symptoms, often attributing them to the recurrence of underlying mood problems.” Drug-makers also helped minimize the problem by urging staff and publicists in internal memos, “Highlight the benign nature of discontinuation symptoms, rather than quibble about their incidence.”[24]

Children of the Cure reported: “Antidepressants cause dependence. Over 80% of antidepressant takers of all ages have been on them for more than a year, many for decades.”[25]

Allen Frances, Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Duke University, said: “There’s absolutely no interest on the part of the pharmaceutical companies in advertising the fact that getting on an antidepressant may trap you for years and maybe for life….”[26]

Post-withdrawal symptoms from antidepressants “may last several months to years” and include disturbed mood, emotional lability (excessive emotional reactions and frequent mood changes) and irritability, according to a study in Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics in 2012.[27]

By 1993, 5,406,000 individuals in the U.S. were treated for depression, which increased 19% in 1994 to 6,674,000 patients, according to IMS America (now IQVia).

Depression screening started in 1991. By 1993, 5,406,000 individuals in the U.S. were treated for depression, which increased 19% in 1994 to 6,674,000 patients, according to IMS America (now IQVia), a research organization that tracks the pharmaceutical industry. IMS America analyzed “diagnosis visits for depression” and also reported a 19% increase in visits where drugs were prescribed, administered or recommended. Prozac’s total U.S. sales grew to $1.27 billion in 1994—up 41% in dollar volume.[28]

National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) reported the rate of antidepressant use in the U.S. among teens and adults (people ages 12 and older) increased by almost 400% between 1988–1994 and 2005–2008—with women largely the targeted public.[29] The number of Americans who said they’d taken an antidepressant over the past month rose by 65% between 1999 and 2014, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention survey found.[30]

Mental Health America continued to be supported by Big Pharma. Between 2001 and 2015, it received more than $26 million from drug companies—averaging $1.85 million a year. This was not disclosed in its “Stop the Stigma” campaign or the fact that at the time 78 million Americans were taking prescribed psychiatric drugs that carried 286 drug regulatory agency warnings, including, mania, psychosis, heart attack, stroke, diabetes, suicide, and sudden death, to name a few.[31]

Between 2015 and the third quarter of 2019, MHA received at least another $4.85 million from drug companies.[32] The group offers a mental health screening program and during the same period, at least eight pharmaceutical companies donated about $1.19 million to MHA’s screening campaign.[33]

Even today, MHA’s online depression screening questionnaire is copyrighted to Pfizer, manufacturer of Pristiq and Zoloft. The anti-anxiety questionnaire on MHA’s website is also Pfizer copyrighted; Pfizer manufacturers the anti-anxiety drug Xanax (alprazolam). In 2004, alprazolam was prescribed nearly 18 million times. As of 2017, the number of prescriptions had risen to over 25 million.[34]

Adverse effects of Xanax include: memory problems, irritability, confusion, difficulty concentrating, changes in sex drive, seizures, suicidality, increased heart rate, liver damage and dependency.[35] Xanax is one of the class of drugs called benzodiazepines, which are implicated in approximately one-third of intentional overdoses or suicide attempts.[36]

Overdose deaths involving benzodiazepines — such as Xanax, Librium, Valium and Ativan—quadrupled between 2002 and 2015, according to the National Institute on Drug Abuse. The trend was fueled by a 67% rise in prescriptions. The market for these drugs is expected to reach $3.8 billion in the U.S. by 2020, reported Zion Market Research.[37]

Antidepressants Cause Youth Suicide

As of 2019, there were 2.1 million American children and teens on antidepressants despite the FDA warning that this class of drugs can cause suicidal thoughts and behavior.

As of 2019, there were also 2.1 million American children and teens on antidepressants despite the FDA warning that this class of drugs can cause suicidal thoughts and behavior. Of these, over 33,000 were aged five or younger, of which more than 7,800 were one or younger.[38]

In 2018, the antidepressant sales market was valued at $13.69 billion in the U.S. alone. [39]

David Healy and colleagues questioned, “Something must surely be wrong if the frequency of depression has apparently jumped a thousand-fold since the introduction of antidepressants.”[40]

Eli Lilly donated $450,000 to NAMI for its “Campaign for the Mind of America.”[41] The company also “loaned” one of its executives to NAMI to work out of the organization’s headquarters on “strategic planning.”[42] Pfizer funded the creation of a “PTSD Alliance,” a group that was staffed by employees of Pfizer’s New York public-relations firm. The Alliance connected journalists with PTSD experts, one an officer of the Anxiety Disorders Association of America, a group heavily subsidized by Pfizer as well as GlaxoSmithKline, Eli Lilly, and other drug-industry companies.[43]

The potential influence is telling—in fact, dangerous to the community. In 2004, the FDA issued its strongest “black box” warning on antidepressants indicating they could cause an increased risk of suicidal thoughts and behaviors in under 18-year-olds (later increased to age 24). NAMI opposed this protection, stating that they asked the FDA committee “not to recommend action that would restrict safe and effective treatment options at a time when youth suicide is a public health crisis….”[44]

Between 2006 and 2015, 15 clinical trials of antidepressants recruiting more than 6,000 children took place. All were negative and showed an excess of suicidality took place, Healey, et al., reported.[45]

A June 2020 Australian study published in Frontiers in Psychiatry, reinforced that rather than antidepressants reducing the risk of suicide, they increased it. Using statistics from Australia, the researchers reported per-capita child, adolescent and young adult antidepressant dispensing (0–27 years old) and suicide (0–24 years) rates increased approximately 66% and 49%, respectively. Additionally, “there was a 98% increase in intentional poisonings among 5 to 19-year-olds in New South Wales and Victoria between 2006 and 2016” and commonly dispensed psychotropic drugs were the most commonly used in self-poisoning. “These results do not support claims that increased antidepressant use reduces youth suicide risk,” the study found.[46]

Alongside antidepressant increase, “there is a rising tide of admissions for self-harm, which is not supposed to happen when treatments work. It’s not just antidepressant use that is rising in adolescents—it’s all psychotropic drug use as antidepressant disinhibition or suicidality spun as bipolar disorder leads to treatment with anticonvulsants and antipsychotics,” reported Healy and his co-authors. Further, “Aside from suicide, most psychotropic drugs affect the heart. Teenagers put on them, especially in combination treatments, drop dead.”[47]

Yet, NAMI opposed a parents and children’s rights federal Child Medication Safety Act enacted in 2004 that protected children from being forced onto a psychotropic drug as a requisite for attending school.[48] Their opposition was also despite parents being threatened with criminal charges if they chose not to drug their child.

In 2006, MHA opposed the FDA extending the Black Box suicide warning placed on antidepressants to adults.[49] A decade later, The Pharmaceutical Journal reported: “Healthy adults who are taking certain antidepressants have a higher risk of suicidal thoughts and violent behavior, according to the results of a systematic review.” Researchers based at the Nordic Cochrane Centre and the University of Copenhagen in Denmark said the drugs can “double the risk of suicidality and violence” and their results suggest that it is likely antidepressants increase the number of suicides in people of all ages. They warned that their risk calculation may be an underestimate because they were unable to access data from 2 of the 13 relevant trials identified.[50]

In 2019, a study published in the journal Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, found adults who start treatment with antidepressants for depression are 2.5 times more likely to attempt suicide when compared to placebo.[51]

NAMI gave a special thanks to the industry partners that were part of its 2017 Advancing Discovery Steering Committee: Alkermes, Eli Lilly, Janssen, and Otsuka.[52] And its philanthropic partners in 2019 included the pharmaceutical companies Acadia Pharmaceuticals, Alkermes, Allergen, Bristol Myers Squibb (BMS), Boehringer Ingelheim, Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Lundbeck United States, Merck, Otsuka, Pfizer, Sunovion, Supernus Pharmaceuticals, Takeda and Teva pharmaceuticals.[53] Numerous psychiatrists are speakers or researchers for such companies or their advisors.

  • Fourteen drug companies have been exposed for some type of notorious conduct or criminal or civil misconduct, with those sued or coming under Department of Justice investigation often settling their cases, while admitting no liability.

    Of these 15 companies, 14 have been exposed for some type of notorious conduct or criminal or civil misconduct, with those sued or coming under Department of Justice investigation often settling their cases, while admitting no liability. Fines and settlements were a combined total of more than $24.8 billion between 2002 and 2020, although $22 billion was in the last decade (2010-2020).

  • What’s more of a shocker is the conduct, which for some of the companies, involved withholding serious drug risks to the consumer, including death, cancer-causing agents or female breast growth (gynecomastia) in young boys, including one who grew size 46 DD breasts and another forced to undergo a double mastectomy. The humiliation, bullying and mental distress caused by this adverse drug reaction begs the question why a charity group is financially affiliated with a company that makes such a drug.
  • Several Pharma companies admitted to felony fraud charges over illicit marketing of potentially dangerous drugs or products for conditions not approved by the FDA, despite risks that included, for one drug, heart attacks that a reported 27,000 consumers suffered. Some companies paid kickbacks to doctors to prescribe their drugs, including one company’s incentives that included: a Los Angeles Lakers basketball camp for doctors and their children; prepaid golf outings at luxury courses; tickets for doctors and their families to see Broadway shows and concert tickets for doctors who were especially big prescribers.[54]
  • Two companies marketed off-label use of an antipsychotic for pediatric use and dementia-related psychosis, knowing the drug could also cause compulsive behavior, including gambling and suicide attempts.[55]
  • Three companies were fined or settled legal cases against them for over $847 million for their role in the U.S. opioid crisis.[56] Opioids were involved in 400,000 overdose deaths from 1999 to 2017, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.[57]
  • One company used a charity as a conduit to pay illegal kickbacks to Medicare patients[58] and another was under Department of Justice investigation over its support of charities that helped Medicare patients cover out-of-pocket drug costs,[59] arguably increasing drug sales.

Consider law enforcement comments on the illicit actions of pharma companies that are partnering with psychiatric illness advocacy groups. 

  • “Fraudulent marketing of drugs through off-label promotion and kickbacks to doctors undermines trustworthy medical decision-making, and FDA’s protections in the drug approval process….Such conduct—as alleged in this case—poorly serves patients and taxpayers alike,” said Daniel R. Levinson, Inspector General of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.[60]
  • “Drug companies should not market their drug for off-label uses or make claims that are not supported by scientific evidence,” Attorney General Schneiderman said in 2016. “Consumers must be able to rely on their doctor’s advice for medication without having to worry about drug companies manipulating their advertising to promote their products at the expense of patients.”[61]   
  • “When companies put profit over patients’ health and misuse taxpayer dollars, we demand accountability,” said Associate Attorney General Tony West. [62]
  • “The conduct at issue in this case jeopardized the health and safety of patients and damaged the public trust,” said former Attorney General Eric Holder. [63]

Psychotropic Drug Trade Creates Conflicts of Interest

As further evidence of how those well-intentioned supporters of mental illness advocacy groups are being misled, in July 2018, NPR and the Center for Public Integrity were looking at all the ways the drug industry tries to keep Medicaid money flowing to pharmaceutical companies. Trish Riley, executive director of the National Academy for State Health Policy said there were more than 150 bills related to drug prices pending in state legislatures that year. Drug companies spent tens of millions of dollars supporting patient advocacy groups that lobby state lawmakers. “The pharmaceutical industry is aware that they’re not popular oftentimes, and so we see an increasing engagement of consumer groups,” Riley said.[64]

Big Pharma has aggregated and sometimes co-opted patients into lobbying groups for high-priced drugs.

The Center for Health Journalism also reported, “Under the pretense of better mental health care, Big Pharma has aggregated and sometimes co-opted patients into lobbying groups for high-priced drugs. While the groups say they fight the ‘stigma’ of mental illness, they spend their time fighting lawmakers and insurers for payment of high-priced drugs. How much do the drugs cost? One hundred middle dose pills of the depression drug Abilify can cost $1,644 and Invega, a drug used for bipolar conditions, $1,789.” “When insurers balk at reimbursing patients for new prescription medications,” the Los Angeles Times reported, these groups “typically swing into action, rallying sufferers to appear before public and consumer panels [and] contact lawmakers.”[65]

Sally Zinman of the California Network of Mental Health Clients warned that NAMI’s “focus on drugs obscures issues such as housing and income support, vocational training, rehabilitation, and empowerment, all of which play a role in recovery.” Zinman argued that Thorazine, Prozac, and other drugs routinely prescribed for the mentally ill can be counterproductive and even harmful.[66]

In Summary

“The financial ties are troubling if they cause even one patient group to act in a way that’s ‘not fully representing the interest of its constituents,’” said Matthew McCoy, a medical ethics professor at the University of Pennsylvania who co-authored a 2017 study about patient advocacy groups’ influence and transparency.[67]

These are groups operating under the guise of advocates for the “mentally ill,” which in reality are heavily funded psychiatric-pharmaceutical front groups—lobbying and working on state and federal laws which effect the entire nation—from our elderly in nursing homes to our military, pregnant women, nursing mothers and schoolchildren.

Presenting themselves as patient advocacy groups is highly disingenuous, not only to their membership, many of which may have a sincere desire to help a loved one or a family member with mental problems, but also to legislators, the press and the American public—for they have consistently lobbied for legislation that benefits the psychiatric and pharmaceutical drug industries which fund them, and not the patients they claim to represent.

To put it simply, these groups are not what they appear to be. Yet their influence over legislation, lobbying, drug regulation (or lack thereof), and public relations campaigns is substantial and can have an adverse impact. They claim to be the voice of the “mentally ill.” But are they? Or, are they the result of a brilliant marketing/lobbying campaign designed to benefit the Psycho/Pharmaceutical industry that funds them and increase the number of Americans unwittingly getting hooked on mind-altering prescription drugs.

References:

[1] http://alison-bass.blogspot.com/2009/04/nami-exposed-drug-money-behind-this.html; http://pharmagossip.blogspot.com/2009/04/nami-how-i-love-ya-how-i-love-ya.html

[2]Brendon I Koerner, “Disorders Made to Order,” Mother Jones,  Jul/Aug. 2020, https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2002/07/disorders-made-order/

[3] Brett J. Deacon, “The biomedical model of mental disorder: A critical analysis of its validity, utility, and effects on psychotherapy research,” Clinical Psychology Review, 8 April 2013, http://www.jonabram.web.unc.edu/files/2013/09/Deacon_biomedical_model_2013.pdf

[4]Gary Kohl, M.D., “Beware the So-Called Mental Health ‘De-Stigmatization’ Campaigns such as Make It OK and NAMI, for they are Front Groups for Big Pharma,” Deluth Reader, 24 May 2018, http://duluthreader.com/articles/2018/05/24/13470_beware_the_so_called_mental_health_de

[5] https://www.madinamerica.com/2014/03/dear-nami-apologies-ive-unfair/; “From the Maker of Effexor: Campus Talks on Depression,” Wall Street Journal, 10 Oct. 2002, https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB1034194386674920716

[6] https://www.madinamerica.com/2014/03/dear-nami-apologies-ive-unfair/

[7] Ibid.

[8] Ibid.

[9] Brett J. Deacon, “The biomedical model of mental disorder: A critical analysis of its validity, utility, and effects on psychotherapy research,” Clinical Psychology Review, 8 April 2013, http://www.jonabram.web.unc.edu/files/2013/09/Deacon_biomedical_model_2013.pdf

[10] Brett J. Deacon, “The biomedical model of mental disorder: A critical analysis of its validity, utility, and effects on psychotherapy research,” Clinical Psychology Review, 8 April 2013, http://www.jonabram.web.unc.edu/files/2013/09/Deacon_biomedical_model_2013.pdf

[11] https://studyres.com/doc/15057899/what-families-should-know-about-adolescent-depression-and

[12] Brett J. Deacon, “The biomedical model of mental disorder: A critical analysis of its validity, utility, and effects on psychotherapy research,” Clinical Psychology Review, 8 April 2013, http://www.jonabram.web.unc.edu/files/2013/09/Deacon_biomedical_model_2013.pdf

[13] David Healy, M.D., Joanna Le Noury, Julie Wood, Children of the Cure: Missing Data, Lost Lives and Antidepressants, (Samizdat Health Writer’s Co-operative Inc., 2020), p. 23.

[14] Brett J. Deacon, “The biomedical model of mental disorder: A critical analysis of its validity, utility, and effects on psychotherapy research,” Clinical Psychology Review, 8 April 2013, http://www.jonabram.web.unc.edu/files/2013/09/Deacon_biomedical_model_2013.pdf

[15] “DSM-5 Criticized for Financial Conflicts of Interest,” ABC News, 13 Mar. 2012, https://abcnews.go.com/Health/MindMoodNews/dsm-fire-financial-conflicts/story?id=15909673

[16] https://www.pharmaceutical-technology.com/features/biggest-pharmaceutical-lawsuits/

[17] http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2010/12/drug-companies-are-now-no-1-when-it.html

[18] https://www.statnews.com/pharmalot/2016/07/19/bristol-myers-kickbacks-doctors/

[19] https://www.pharmaceutical-technology.com/features/biggest-pharmaceutical-lawsuits/

[20] https://www.pharmaceutical-technology.com/features/biggest-pharmaceutical-lawsuits/

[21] https://www.rxlist.com/depakote-side-effects-drug-center.htm

[22] Joseph Glenmullen, M.D., Prozac Backlash, (Simon & Schuster, NY, 2000), pp. 228-229

[23] https://beyondthc.com/prozac-and-the-marketing-of-depression/

[24] Christopher Lane, Ph.D., “Antidepressant Guidelines to Tighten in the UK: Welcome policy change also reveals scale of the problem,” Psychology Today, 31 May, 2019, https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/side-effects/201905/antidepressant-guidelines-tighten-in-the-uk.

[25] David Healy, M.D., Joanna Le Noury, Julie Wood, Children of the Cure: Missing Data, Lost Lives and Antidepressants, (Samizdat Health Writer’s Co-operative Inc., 2020), p. 239

[26] https://www.madinamerica.com/2018/10/allen-frances-increasing-use-antidepressants/.

[27] “Patient Online Report of Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor-Induced Persistent Post-withdrawal Anxiety and Mood Disorders,” Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, 19 Jan. 2012, https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/341178.

[28] https://beyondthc.com/prozac-and-the-marketing-of-depression/

[29] https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/astounding-increase-in-antidepressant-use-by-americans-201110203624

[30] https://www.cbsnews.com/news/antidepressant-use-soars-65-percent-in-15-years/

[31] https://www.cchrint.org/2015/05/08/mental-health-month-patient-advocacy-or-pharma-funded-advertising/

[32]  https://www.mhanational.org/foundation-and-corporate-support

[33] https://www.mhanational.org/foundation-and-corporate-support

[34] https://www.statista.com/statistics/781816/alprazolam-sodium-prescriptions-number-in-the-us/

[35] https://drugabuse.com/xanax/effects-use/

[36] https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5846112/

[37] “Antianxiety drugs — often more deadly than opioids — are fueling the next drug crisis in US,” CNBC, 3 Aug. 2018, https://www.cnbc.com/2018/08/02/antianxiety-drugs-fuel-the-next-deadly-drug-crisis-in-us.html

[38] https://www.cchrint.org/psychiatric-drugs/children-on-psychiatric-drugs/

[39] https://www.medgadget.com/2019/08/antidepressant-drugs-market-size-share-current-trends-opportunities-competitive-analysis-and-forecast-to-2019-2025.html

[40] David Healy, M.D., Joanna Le Noury, Julie Wood, Children of the Cure: Missing Data, Lost Lives and Antidepressants, (Samizdat Health Writer’s Co-operative Inc., 2020), p. 20,

[41] https://www.propublica.org/article/health-advocacy-groups-take-drug-company-cashoften-without-full-disclosures

[42] Ken Siliverstein, “Prozac.org: An influential mental health nonprofit finds its ‘grassroots’ watered by pharmaceutical millions,” Mother Jones, Nov/Dec. 1999, https://www.motherjones.com/politics/1999/11/prozacorg/

[43] “Disorders Made to Orders,” Mother Jones, Nov/Dec. 1999, https://www.motherjones.com/politics/1999/11/prozacorg/

[44] “FDA Advisory Committee Recommends ‘Black Box Warnings’ for Anti-depression Medications,” NAMI, Sept 15, 2004, URL https://web.archive.org/web/20081108114443/http://www.nami.org/Template.cfm?Section=Child_and_Adolescent_Action_Center&template=/ContentManagement/
ContentDisplay.cfm&ContentID=17662.

[45] David Healy, M.D., Joanna Le Noury, Julie Wood, Children of the Cure: Missing Data, Lost Lives and Antidepressants, (Samizdat Health Writer’s Co-operative Inc., 2020), p. 238

[46] Martin Whitely, et al., “Antidepressant Prescribing and Suicide/Self-Harm by Young Australians: Regulatory Warnings, Contradictory Advice, and Long-Term Trends,” Frontiers in Psychiatry, 5 June 2020, https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00478/full

[47] David Healy, M.D., Joanna Le Noury, Julie Wood, Children of the Cure: Missing Data, Lost Lives and Antidepressants, (Samizdat Health Writer’s Co-operative Inc., 2020), pp. 238-239

[48] “Policy Alerts,” NAMI Beginnings, Summer 2003, pg 13.

[49] “Advocates’ Message Prevails at FDA Panel Hearing on Antidepressant Safety,” e-Bell Newsletter, MHA, April 2007, https://web.archive.org/web/20100930071159/http://www.nmha.org/pressroom/bell/2007-04/index.html; “FDA Meeting on Antidepressants, Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors,” MHA, Dec 13, 2006, https://web.archive.org/web/20130809152657/http://mentalhealthamerica.net/index.cfm?objectid=790A21C0-1372-4D20-C8E07FD59217A4FB

[50] https://www.pharmaceutical-journal.com/news-and-analysis/news/antidepressants-associated-with-increased-risk-of-suicidal-thoughts-in-healthy-adults/20201834.article?firstPass=false

[51] “New study: antidepressants significantly raise the risk of suicide in the treatment of depression for adults,” Council-for Evidence-Based Psychiatry, 25 June 2019, http://cepuk.org/2019/06/25/new-study-antidepressants-significantly-raise-risk-suicide-treatment-depression-adults/

[52] https://www.nami.org/NAMI/media/NAMI-Media/Research/ADS-2017-Summary-Report.pdf

[53] https://www.nami.org/NAMI/media/NAMI-Media/PDFs/Financials/2019NAM-AnnualReport-web.pdf

[54] http://www.nbcnews.com/id/6192603/ns/health-arthritis/t/report-vioxx-linked-thousands-deaths/#.Xx-OoudlA2w; https://www.statnews.com/2019/12/11/fda-blasts-alkermes-vivitrol-branding/; https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/allergan-agrees-plead-guilty-and-pay-600-million-resolve-allegations-label-promotion-botox; https://www.statnews.com/pharmalot/2016/07/19/bristol-myers-kickbacks-doctors/

[55] https://www.drugwatch.com/abilify/lawsuits/

[56] Companies were Allergan for $5 million, Janssen for $572 million and $20.4 million and Teva for $250 million;  https://www.wsj.com/articles/allergan-to-pay-5-million-to-settle-ohio-opioid-suit-11567166120; https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/08/26/754481268/judge-in-opioid-trial-rules-johnson-johnson-must-pay-oklahoma-572-million; https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/johnson-and-johnson-reaches-tentative-204-million-settlement-in-massive-opioid-case/2019/10/01/6a8a9670-e48e-11e9-b403-f738899982d2_story.html; https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/21/teva-shares-surge-after-announcing-global-opioid-settlement.html; https://www.reuters.com/article/us-teva-pharm-ind-results/teva-pharm-says-opioid-settlement-will-not-derail-ability-to-cut-debt-idUSKBN1XH1TK

[57] https://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-opioids-litigation/drugmakers-endo-allergan-agree-to-15-million-in-settlements-in-major-opioid-case-idUSKCN1VA1FU

[58] https://www.reuters.com/article/us-h-lundbeck-settlement/drugmaker-lundbeck-to-settle-us-charity-probe-for-526-million-idUSKCN1J22PL

[59] https://www.reuters.com/article/us-h-lundbeck-settlement/drugmaker-lundbeck-to-settle-us-charity-probe-for-526-million-idUSKCN1J22PL

[60] https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/boehringer-ingelheim-pay-95-million-resolve-false-claims-act-allegations

[61] https://ag.ny.gov/press-release/2016/ag-schneiderman-announces-195-million-multi-state-agreement-bristol-myers-squibb

[62] https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/johnson-johnson-pay-more-22-billion-resolve-criminal-and-civil-investigations

[63] https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/johnson-johnson-pay-more-22-billion-resolve-criminal-and-civil-investigations

[64]“How Drug Companies Control How Their Drugs Are Covered By Medicaid,” NPR, 18 Jul. 2018, https://www.npr.org/2018/07/18/630246488/how-drug-companies-are-controlling-how-their-drugs-are-covered-by-medicaid

[65] Martha Rosenberg, “Pharma funding advocacy groups,” Center for Health Journalism Member Posts, 15 Oct. 2014, https://www.centerforhealthjournalism.org/2014/10/15/discredited-patient-group-fights-mental-illness

[66] Ken Siliverstein, “Prozac.org: An influential mental health nonprofit finds its ‘grassroots’ watered by pharmaceutical millions,” Mother Jones, Nov/Dec. 1999, https://www.motherjones.com/politics/1999/11/prozacorg/

[67] https://khn.org/news/patient-advocacy-groups-take-in-millions-from-drugmakers-is-there-a-payback/

New Research Supports Electroshock Causes Brain Damage: Ban Re-urged

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CCHR says new UK research on electroshock “therapy” damage—given each year to 100,000 Americans, including children as young as five—should prompt review of U.S. studies and a ban on the practice.

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Industry Watchdog
August 18, 2020

Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, a mental health industry watchdog, praised new UK peer-reviewed research published in the journal Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry that found electroconvulsive therapy (also known as electroshock and ECT) has “no place” in evidence-based medicine due to risks of brain damage.[1] CCHR and others have long called for the practice that sends up to 460 volts of electricity to the brain causing a grand mal convulsion to be banned.

The researchers, which includes Prof. Irving Kirsch, an expert on placebo effects based at Harvard Medical School, concluded that, “the high risk of permanent memory loss and the small mortality risk means that its use should be immediately suspended.”[2]

CCHR was pivotal in getting it banned in California for children and adolescents. In Western Australia, they had ECT banned for this age group with criminal penalties if administered. It said the recent research paper goes to the heart of the issue of why a ban is necessary.

The review assessed the quality of five meta-analyses and the 11 studies on which they were based, and reported: “There have been no ECT versus simulated ECT (SECT) studies since 1985. The five meta-analyses of ECT versus SECT studies all claim that ECT is more effective than SECT for its primary target, severe depression.” However, the researchers debunked this, having found, “The quality of most SECT–ECT studies is so poor that the meta-analyses were wrong to conclude anything about efficacy, either during or beyond the treatment period. There is no evidence that ECT is effective for its target demographic—older women, or its target diagnostic group—severely depressed people, or for suicidal people, people who have unsuccessfully tried other treatments first, involuntary patients, or children and adolescents.[3]

CCHR called for a review of research and studies that psychiatrists and other mental health professionals presented to the FDA to convince the agency to lower the ECT device to a lower risk classification in 2018. Experts working with the group said the evidence relied upon was not scientifically valid. The Final Order on the ECT device failed to mention that electroshock causes brain damage.

The UK paper concedes that “the severity and significance of the brain damage and memory loss (following ECT) is rarely studied.” However, in 2018, a class action lawsuit was settled in the U.S. after a federal court ruled that a reasonable jury could find against manufacturers of ECT equipment if they failed to warn of the dangers of brain damage. One manufacturer, Somatics, immediately added “permanent brain damage” to the list of risks from the treatment.[4]

CCHR addresses brain damage and more in its latest documentary, Therapy or Torture: The Truth About Electroshock. Jan Eastgate, President of CCHR International, said: “We created Therapy or Torture not to upset people. Or to scare them. But instead, to move them into action to get electroshock banned. Already over 121,500 people have signed a petition in support of the ban.”

Eastgate appears in the documentary speaking about her experiences being subjected to electroshock 45 years ago when doctors misdiagnosed her underactive thyroid as “depression” and administered psychotropic drugs that worsened the underlying condition. She was then electroshocked ten times without being fully informed of the long-term damage it can cause.

Two-thirds of those who receive ECT are women, and the average age of ECT recipients is between 60 and 65.[5] But in the U.S., CCHR has discovered that five out of 18 states that responded to keeping statistics on ECT use, allowed delivery of electroshock to those in the 0-5 age bracket. Fifteen of the states reported elderly aged 65 and over were subjected to it in 2019, covered by Medicaid.

When Jack Nicholson’s character was subjected to ECT in the film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, people were appalled that such a brutal procedure was even being used in contemporary mental health treatment. Banned in several countries, and restricted in many others, in the U.S. today, a reported 100,000 Americans are subjected to electroshock each year.

Celebrities that have been harmed by electroshock include Pulitzer Prize winning novelist Ernest Hemmingway; Sylvia Plath, American writer and poet; Judy Garland, actress and singer; Frances Farmer, American actress; Janet Frame, New Zealand writer and poet; Peter Green, English blues guitarist, founding member of Fleetwood Mac; Lou Reed, The Velvet Underground; Vivien Leigh, English actress; Paul Robeson, singer, actor and civil rights forerunner; Bud Powell, American jazz musician; and Emil Post, famous American mathematician who died in 1954 of a heart attack following ECT.[6]

Dozens of UK patients who underwent electroshock treatment are currently suing, alleging that ECT causes brain damage and they were never informed that electroshock could result in permanent memory loss and facial recognition problems, as well as trouble with basic everyday tasks like walking and reading.[7] Lawsuits are also mounting in the U.S.

Anyone who knows of someone damaged from electroshock can report this to CCHR.

References:

[1] “ECT depression therapy should be suspended, study suggests,” BBC News 2 June 2020, https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-52900074; “Electroconvulsive Therapy for Depression: A Review of the Quality of ECT versus Sham ECT Trials and Meta-Analyses,” Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry, Vol 21, Issue 2, July 2020, https://connect.springerpub.com/content/sgrehpp/21/2/64

[2] Ibid., BBC News

[3] Op. cit., Ethical Human Psychology and Psychiatry

[4] Op. cit., BBC News

[5] https://www.madinamerica.com/2020/06/new-review-finds-lack-evidence-support-ect/

[6] https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/archived/intothemusic/paul-robeson/4691690

[7] “Dozens of patients sue the NHS over claims they suffered brain damage after having depression treatment of electrical currents through the head,” Daily Mail, 18 July 2020, https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-8537431/Dozens-patients-sue-NHS-claims-suffered-brain-damage-having-therapy.html

New Study Further Confirms Severe Withdrawal Effects of Antidepressants

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CCHR spokesperson, Fred Shaw, warns about antidepressant adverse effects and risk of African Americans being prescribed electroshock treatment when antidepressants fail. Calls it double jeopardy: prescribed drug addiction and brain damage.”

By CCHR International
The Mental Health Watchdog
August 25, 2020

The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association published a study that further confirms withdrawal effects from antidepressants that more than 44 million Americans are taking.[1] With psychiatrists also admitting at least a 30% chance of the drugs being ineffective, Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), a mental health industry watchdog—which says any effectiveness is questionable—said it is concerned that this could lead to Americans also being recommended for electroshock treatment.

Rev. Frederick Shaw, a spokesperson for the group and Executive Director of the NAACP Inglewood-South Bay branch, said that he fears that “in the wake of the recent acknowledgment of the pain that racism causes and injustice, more African Americans could be prescribed antidepressants without knowing of their adverse effects and withdrawal risks. Electroshock may also be recommended, causing even worse effects on the brain. It’s double jeopardy: prescribed drug addiction and brain damage.”

The global antidepressants market is expected to grow from $14.3 billion in 2019 to about $28.6 billion in 2020, with the market surging during the current pandemic.[2] And, arguably the impact of racism, Shaw adds. Electroshock treatment is an estimated $3.5 to $5.4 billion a year market in the U.S.

The Midwestern University Chicago College of Osteopathic Medicine study said antidepressants are not considered addictive in that users do not seek them to “get high,” but they can cause dependence.[3] The newly published book, Children of the Cure: Missing Data, Lost Lives and Antidepressants, said that in the mid-1990s, an antidepressant manufacturer recognized the effect, held a meeting of “opinion leaders” and invented the term “antidepressant discontinuation syndrome” to deflect from dependence problems.[4]

“Many people experience grave difficulties in discontinuing from treatment” with antidepressants, Children of the Cure reports. “In lay terms, you can just as easily become hooked on SSRIs [antidepressants] as on benzodiazepines or opiates, and SSRIs can be more difficult to get off than anything else. For most of us this is the meaning of addiction.”[5]

Withdrawal effects include influenza-like symptoms, headache, lethargy, abdominal pain, diarrhea, insomnia, dizziness, nausea, imbalance, electric shock sensations, irritability, anxiety, and low mood.[6]

The College of Osteopathic Medicine study recommended gradual reductions in dosing rather than abrupt discontinuation.  However, even then gradual tapering of an SSRI “does not completely prevent antidepressant discontinuation syndrome.”[7]

The effectiveness of the drugs is also debatable as they don’t cure depression or correct the now discredited theory that a chemical imbalance in the brain causes depression. “That was marketing hype to sell drugs, the pharmaceutical industry now admits,” Shaw added. “Consumers were deceived, just as they were about and antidepressants not being addictive, which is now proved to be false.”

Shaw, who recently organized a Task Force Against Racism and Modern Day Eugenics, said, “For years, psychiatrists have claimed that Black Americans have not received electroshock—the passage of up to 460 volts of electricity through the brain—as whites. However, federal and state government agencies do not closely monitor the use of ECT, if at all. They don’t know how many people undergo electroshock, which causes memory loss and brain damage.”

He points to several famous African Americans ruined after psychiatric treatment, especially electroshock, including brilliant jazz pianist Bud Powell (1924-1964) and legendary bass-baritone Paul Robeson (1898-1976).

In 1945, Powell, an extraordinary genius, who also helped create “bebop,” was suffering the effects of a severe police beating and was admitted to Belleview psychiatric hospital in New York. On the admission form he wrote under occupation: “Pianist and composer of over 1,000 songs.” The psychiatrist diagnosed this as “delusions of grandeur” and put him in a straitjacket. From the beating he suffered excruciating headaches, seizures and erratic behavior. In 1947, he was institutionalized for 11 months and given electroshock. Friend Jackie Maclean said, “Bud didn’t remember too much, actually, about his life prior to going to the hospital because of the [ECT] treatment….” In 1959, Powell moved to France where he was kept on Thorazine, a powerful antipsychotic known as a “chemical lobotomy.” He died in July 1966 from a combination of liver failure, TB and malnutrition.[8]

ABC News reported the brutal treatment of Robeson, who fought for justice against racism. By the early 1960s, he was a “musical giant on the world stage.” He performed overseas, including in Russia. From 1941 Robeson was under surveillance by the FBI. In the 1960s, after he suddenly became ill and was hallucinating during a party in Moscow, he returned to London and was put in the Priory psychiatric hospital, where he received 54 doses of electroshock over two years. He was given a cocktail of powerful depressive and anti-depressive drugs. Friends finally managed to have Robeson transferred to a clinic in East Berlin where doctors questioned the high level of barbiturates and ECT he’d been administered. More than twenty years after his death, Robeson was awarded a Lifetime Achievement Grammy Award and a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. His work towards ending apartheid in South Africa was posthumously rewarded by the UN General Assembly.[9]

CCHR says addictive antidepressants and electroshock should never be used as “treatment” for the impact of racism or current social restrictions. CCHR recommends any withdrawal effects from antidepressants or electroshock damage be reported to it and to sign the petition to ban ECT.

References:

[1] Mireille Rizkalla, PhD, et al., “Antidepressant Discontinuation Syndrome: A Common but Underappreciated Clinical Problem,” The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association, Mar. 2020, Vol. 120, 174-178, https://jaoa.org/article.aspx?articleid=2761944; Statistics obtained by IQ Via, https://www.cchrint.org/psychiatric-drugs/people-taking-psychiatric-drugs/

[2] https://www.globenewswire.com/news-release/2020/04/21/2019282/0/en/Global-Antidepressants-Market-2020-to-2030-COVID-19-Implications-and-Growth.html

[3] Op cit., The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association

[4] David Healy, M.D., Joanna Le Noury, Julie Wood, Children of the Cure: Missing Data, Lost Lives and Antidepressants, (Samizdat Health Writer’s Co-operative Inc., 2020), pp. 43-44

[5] Ibid., p. 44

[6] Op cit.,  The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association

[7] Ibid.

[8] “Psychiatry Harming Artists,” Citizens Commission on Human Rights, (Los Angeles, 2004), p. 26, http://www.cchr.org.uk/downloads/Harming%20Artists.pdf; https://www.npr.org/sections/ablogsupreme/2012/09/27/161890387/five-essential-bud-powell-recordings

[9] “Paul Robeson: the singer who fought for justice and paid with his life,” ABC News, 7 June 2013, https://www.abc.net.au/radionational/programs/archived/intothemusic/paul-robeson/4691690

CCHR Honors Co-founder Thomas Szasz’s Legacy Against Coercive Psychiatry

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CCHR dispels the myths attributed to Szasz, an iconic psychiatrist who defied “psychiatric slavery” and “totalitarian control,” and whose works against coercive psychiatry are now recognized the world over, even by the UN.

September 8 marks the eight-year anniversary of the death of Thomas Szasz, an iconic professor of psychiatry, co-founder of the mental health industry watchdog, Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR), and one of the most prolific authors against coercive psychiatry. With more than 35 books published since 1961, he challenged conventional psychiatry, including in Psychiatric Slavery, where Szasz took aim at psychiatric interventions imposed on persons by force, including involuntary commitment and treatment.[1] CCHR recognizes the changes in international views on enforced psychiatric treatment as a legacy of what Szasz pioneered nearly 40 years ago.

Publisher’s Weekly described Psychiatric Slavery as Szasz putting the “American psychiatry and legal establishment on trial, with disturbing results. He investigates abuses in diagnostic methods, electroshock ‘therapy’ and judicial apparatus.”[2] Szasz, who was a professor of psychiatry at the State University of New York Upstate Medical University and a distinguished lifetime fellow of the American Psychiatric Association, said, “Involuntary mental hospitalization is like slavery. Refining the standards for commitment is like prettifying the slave plantations. The problem is not how to improve commitment, but how to abolish it.”[3]

An estimated 400,000 Americans are involuntarily committed to psychiatric facilities every year and potentially forcibly drugged.[4] African Americans are disproportionately subjected to coercive and restrictive measures, including 72-hour involuntary commitment, seclusion, restraints and forcibly drugged.[5] Szasz’s works should serve as a warning to African Americans today facing psychiatric recommendations for more “mental health services” and government funds allocated to psychiatrically treat the impact of racism.

The collaboration between government and psychiatry results in what Szasz called the “Therapeutic State,” a system in which disapproved thoughts, emotions, and actions are repressed (“cured”) through pseudomedical interventions.[6] For example, during the Civil Rights movement in the 1960s, psychiatrists invented the term “protest psychosis” to diagnose Blacks marching against racism as mentally ill.[7] Advertisements for powerful antipsychotic drugs in psychiatric journals used pictures of angry Black men to influence the prescriptions of these damaging drugs to African Americans.[8]

Szasz would have argued that such “classification” is an example of how psychiatrists what they claim to be “(mis)behavior as illness,” which “provides an ideological justification for state-sponsored social control”—a form of totalitarianism.[9]

Szasz was often been misquoted that he didn’t believe in “mental illness,” but this was psychiatrists and front groups misconstruing his ideas and obfuscating the fact that he simply said behavioral disorders are not physical diseases. Szasz asserted that psychiatry, unlike medicine, could not provide any physical test to demonstrate mental problems as “diseases” to be “treated.”[10]

He was very clear on this point, stating: “In asserting that there is no such thing as mental illness, I do not deny that people have problems coping with life and each other.” Szasz never denied that organic conditions—such as Alzheimer’s disease or untreated syphilis—can have an impact on thought and behavior.[11]

Today, that view is accepted medical fact. As the American Psychological Society reported: “Diagnosing mental illness isn’t like diagnosing other chronic diseases. Heart disease is identified with the help of blood tests and electrocardiograms. Diabetes is diagnosed by measuring blood glucose levels. But classifying mental illness is a more subjective endeavor. No blood test exists for depression; no X-ray can identify a child at risk of developing bipolar disorder.”[12] This is “Szasz 101.”

An interview with Szasz published in Reason in 2000 pointed out that “people do seem to be more skeptical than they used to be of psychiatry’s attempts to medicalize behavior. Psychiatrists themselves often acknowledge that the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders is increasingly arbitrary and unscientific.”[13] Indeed, in 2013, DSM5 was met with mental health professionals calling for an international boycott of the manual.[14]

The chemical imbalance in the brain causing depression theory has been completely discredited—invented by psychopharmaceutical makers to sell SSRI antidepressants. In February 2020, Philip Hickey, Ph.D., a retired psychologist, went a great deal further stating: “The spurious chemical imbalance theory of depression is arguably the most destructive thing that psychiatry has ever done.”[15]

Szasz maintained throughout his career that he was not “antipsychiatry” but was rather anti-coercive psychiatry. He opposed involuntary commitment and enforced treatment.[16] His legacy is now embedded in United Nations documents.

  • 2013: The UN Special Rapporteur on Torture recommended: “Impose an absolute ban on all forced and non-consensual medical interventions against persons with disabilities, including the non-consensual administration of psychosurgery, electroshock and mind-altering drugs such as neuroleptics, the use of restraint and solitary confinement, for both long- and short-term application. The obligation to end forced psychiatric interventions based solely on grounds of disability is of immediate application and scarce financial resources cannot justify postponement of its implementation.”[17]
  • 2017: UN Special Rapporteur on the right to health, Dr. Dainius Pūras, called for a revolution in mental health care to “end decades of neglect, abuse and violence.” “There is now unequivocal evidence of the failures of a system that relies too heavily on the biomedical model of mental health services, including the front-line and excessive use of psychotropic medicines, and yet these models persist,” Dr. Pūras, said.[18] 
  • 2018: UN Human Rights Council (HRC) supported a ban on all forced medical interventions against persons with disabilities, including the administration of electroshock, psychosurgery, and mind-altering drugs. HRC strongly stated that countries “should reframe and recognize these practices as constituting torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment….”[19]

As a libertarian, he equated coercion with slavery, quoting Abraham Lincoln, who said: “If slavery is not wrong, nothing is wrong. I cannot remember when I did not so think, and feel.” To which Szasz added: “I knew very little about Lincoln when I grew up in post-World War I Hungary. But I did recognize, as a gut feeling, that if the domination of the mental patient by the psychiatrist is not wrong, then nothing is wrong. I cannot remember when I did not so think and feel.”[20]

Dr. Szasz: “I am probably the only psychiatrist in the world whose hands are clean. I have never committed anyone. I have never given electric shock. I have never, ever, given drugs to a mental patient.” It is a legacy that the mental health system today sorely needs.[21]

Szasz became a co-founder of CCHR in its forming year, 1969, through an involuntary commitment case where a fellow Hungarian had been labeled as “schizophrenic” when as Szasz found he was simply speaking Hungarian and no-one could understand his protest of being locked up against his will. Szasz said of CCHR: “We should honor CCHR because it is really the organization that for the first time in human history has organized a politically, socially, internationally significant voice to combat psychiatry. This has never happened in human history before.”

References:

[1] https://selfdefinition.org/psychology/Thomas-Szasz-Psychiatric-Slavery.pdf

[2] Ibid.

[3] https://www.cchrint.org/about-us/co-founder-dr-thomas-szasz/

[4] Gerbasi, JB and Simon, RI, “Patients Rights and Psychiatrists’ Duties: Discharging Patients Against Medical Advice,” Emergency Medicine News, July 2016, Vol. 38, Iss. 7, pp. 14-17, journals.lww.com/em-news/Fulltext/2016/07000/InFocus__The_Risks_of_Discharging_Psych_Patients.8.aspx

[5] https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/Treaties/CERD/Shared%20Documents/USA/INT_CERD_NGO_USA_17741_E.pdf

[6] “Curing the Therapeutic State: Thomas Szasz interviewed by Jacob Sullum,” Reason, July 2000, https://reason.com/2000/07/01/curing-the-therapeutic-state-t/

[7] Jonathan M. Metzl, The Protest Psychosis, How Schizophrenia became a Black Disease, (Beacon Press, Boston, 2009), p. xiv.

[8] “The Protest Psychosis: How Schizophrenia Became a Black Disease,” Amer. Journ. Of Psychiatry (online), Apr. 2010.

[9] Op. cit., Reason

[10] https://aeon.co/essays/the-psychiatrist-who-didn-t-believe-in-mental-illness

[11] Op. cit., Reason

[12] https://www.apa.org/monitor/2012/06/roots

[13] Op. cit., Reason

[14] https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/saving-normal/201302/dsm-5-boycotts-and-petitions

[15] https://www.madinamerica.com/2020/02/chemical-imbalance-theory-going/

[16] https://aeon.co/essays/the-psychiatrist-who-didn-t-believe-in-mental-illness

[17] A/HRC/22/53, “Report of the Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, Juan E. Méndez,” United Nations, General Assembly, Human Rights Council, Twenty-second Session, 1 Feb. 2013, p. 23, Point 4 (89) (b), https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/HRBodies/HRCouncil/RegularSession/Session22/A.HRC.22.53_English.pdf

[18] “World needs ‘revolution’ in mental health care – UN rights expert,” http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=21689&LangID=E#sthash.MMIxDbIx.dpuf; http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=21689&LangID=E

[19] “Mental Health and Human Rights,” United Nations Human Rights Council, 39th session; 10–28 Sept. 2018, https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/MentalHealth/A_HRC_39_36_EN.pdf.

[20]  https://www.thenewamerican.com/usnews/health-care/item/12839-the-passing-of-dr-thomas-szasz

[21] http://articles.latimes.com/print/2012/sep/17/local/la-me-thomas-szasz-20120917-1

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