ANTI-PSYCHIATRY

Main articles: Psychiatry
See also Biopsychiatry controversy''
'Anti-psychiatry' refers to a collection of movements that challenge the fundamental theories and practices of (mainstream) psychiatry. Common criticisms include: that psychiatry applies medical concepts and tools inappropriately to the mind and society; that it too often treats patients against their will; that it inappropriately dominates and excludes other potential approaches to mental distress/disorder; that its medical and ethical integrity is compromised by financial and professional links with pharmaceutical companies and insurance companies; that it uses a system of categorical diagnoses (e.g., Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) that stigmatizes and is poorly founded scientifically or clinically; and that the psychiatric system is experienced by too many of its patients as demeaning and controlling.
Some mental health professionals and academics profess anti-psychiatry views, including the professionals who publish in the journal of the International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology.[1] A proportion of users or ex-users of psychiatric services do as well.[2] Some critics now focus on the predominant biological psychiatry. [3][4][5] Despite its name, some parts of the movement promote a form of psychiatry which is merely contrary to current mainstream theories and methods. Some so-called "anti-psychiatrists" are keen to dissociate themselves from the term and the pejorative associations it has attracted.[6] Learned theorists now believe that human issues are enormously complex; and stem from social, environmental, and informational factors.

Contents
Origins of anti-psychiatry
Challenges and alternatives to psychiatric practice
Civilization as a cause of distress
Normality and illness judgments
Psychiatric labeling
Psychiatry and the pharmaceutical industry
Electroconvulsive therapy
Psychiatry and the law
Involuntary hospitalization
The "Therapeutic State"
CCHR: A parallel movement against psychiatry
See also
External links
Information
Articles
Organizations critical of psychiatry
Notes

Origins of anti-psychiatry


Daniel Defoe, the author of ''Robinson Crusoe'', revealed, in the 18th century, that husbands used asylum hospitals to incarcerate their disobedient, but sane wives.[7] As psychiatry became more professionally established during the 19th century and they developed more invasive treatments, opposition increased. Other disputes concerned custodial rights over those seen as "mad," including in the expanding lunatic asylums, and divergent theoretical interpretations of mental problems. Emil Kraepelin introduced new medical categories of mental illness, which eventually came into psychiatric usage despite their basis in behavior rather than medical pathology or etiology.
In the 1800s abolitionists first encountered Drapetomania, the psychiatric rationale for why slaves ran away from their masters.
In the 1920s surrealist opposition to psychiatry was expressed in a number of surrealist publications.
In the 1930s several controversial medical practices were introduced including inducing seizures (by electroshock, insulin or other drugs) or cutting parts of the brain apart (leucotomy or lobotomy).[8] Both came into widespread use by psychiatry, but there were grave concerns and much opposition on grounds of morality, harmful effects, or misuse. In the 1950s new psychiatric drugs, notably the antipsychotic chlorpromazine, were designed in laboratories and slowly came into preferred use. Although often accepted as an advance in some ways, there was some opposition, partly due to serious adverse effects such as tardive dyskinesia.8 Patients often opposed psychiatry and refused or stopped taking the drugs when not subject to psychiatric control.8 There was also increasing opposition to the large-scale use of psychiatric hospitals and institutions, and attempts were made to base services in the community.
Coming to the fore in the 1960s, "anti-psychiatry" (a term first used by David Cooper in 1967) defined a movement that vocally challenged the fundamental claims and practices of mainstream psychiatry. Psychiatrists R.D. Laing, Theodore Lidz, Silvano Arieti and others argued that schizophrenia could be understood as an injury to the inner self inflicted by psychologically invasive "schizophrenogenic" parents, or as a healthy attempt to cope with a sick society. Psychiatrist Thomas Szasz argues that "mental illness" is an inherently incoherent combination of a medical and a psychological concept, but popular because it legitimizes the use of psychiatric force to control and limit deviance from societal norms. Adherents of this view referred to "the myth of mental illness" after Szasz's controversial book of that name. (Even though the movement originally described as anti-psychiatry became associated with the general counter-culture movement of the 1960s, Szasz, Lidz and Arieti never became involved in that movement.) Michel Foucault, Erving Goffman, Deleuze and Guatarri, and others criticized the power and role of psychiatry in society, including the use of "total institutions," "labeling" and stigmatizing.[9] Foucault argued that the concepts of sanity and insanity were social constructs that did not reflect quantifiable patterns of human behavior, and which, rather, were indicative only of the power of the "sane" over the "insane". The novel ''One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest'' became a bestseller, resonating with public concern about involuntary medication, lobotomy and electroshock procedures used to control patients.
In addition, Holocaust documenters argued that the medicalization of social problems and systematic euthanasia of people in German mental institutions in the 1930s provided the institutional, procedural, and doctrinal origins of the mass murder of the 1940s.[10][11] The Nuremberg Trials convicted a number of psychiatrists who held key positions in Nazi regimes. Observation of the abuses of psychiatry in the Soviet Union in the so-called Psikhushka hospitals also led to questioning the validity of the practice of psychiatry in the West.[12] In particular, the diagnosis of many political dissidents with schizophrenia led some to question the general diagnosis and punitive usage of the label schizophrenia. This raised questions as to whether the schizophrenia label and resulting involuntary psychiatric treatment could not have been similarly used in the West to subdue rebellious young people during family conflicts.[13]
New professional approaches were developed as an alternative or reformist complement to psychiatry. At least one network, epitomized by Jerome Agel's ''Rough Change: Therapy Means Change Not Adjustment'' (1974?), challenged this professional mediator approach, giving as alternatives authentic community making. Social work, humanistic or existentialist therapies, counseling and self-help and clinical psychology developed and sometimes opposed psychiatry. Psychoanalysis was increasingly criticized as unscientific or harmful.[14] Contrary to the popular view, critics and biographers of Freud, such as Alice Miller, Jeffrey Masson and Louis Breger, argued that Freud did not grasp the nature of psychological trauma. Non-medical collaborative services were developed, for example therapeutic communities or Soteria houses.
The anti-psychiatry movement was also being driven by individuals with adverse experiences of psychiatric services. This included those who felt they had been harmed by psychiatry or who felt that they could have been helped more by other approaches, including those compulsorily (including via physical force) admitted to psychiatric institutions and subjected to compulsory medication or procedures. During the 1970s, the anti-psychiatry movement was involved in promoting restraint from many practices seen as psychiatric abuses. The gay rights movement challenged the classification of homosexuality as a mental illness and, in a climate of controversy and activism, in 1974 the American Psychiatric Association membership (following a unanimous vote by the trustees in 1973) voted by a small majority (58%) to remove it as an illness category from the DSM, replacing it with a category of "sexual orientation disurbance" and then "ego-dystonic homosexuality," which was deleted in 1987, although "gender identity disorder" and a wide variety of "paraphilias" remain. Increased legal and professional protections, and merging with human rights and disability rights movements, added to anti-psychiatry theory and action.
Anti-psychiatry came to challenge a "biomedical" focus of psychiatry (defined to mean genetics, neurochemicals and drugs). There was also opposition to the increasing links between psychiatry and pharmaceutical companies, which were becoming more powerful and were increasingly claimed to have excessive, unjustified and underhand influence on psychiatric research and practice. There was also opposition to the codification of, and alleged misuse of, psychiatric diagnoses into manuals, in particular the American Psychiatric Association, which publishes the ''Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders''.
Anti-psychiatry increasingly challenged alleged psychiatric pessimism and institutionalized alienation regarding those categorized as mentally ill. An emerging Consumer/Survivor Movement often argues for full recovery, empowerment, self-management and even full liberation. Schemes were developed to challenge stigma and discrimination, often based on a social model of disability; to assist or encourage people with mental health issues to engage more fully in work and society (for example through social firms), and to involve service users in the delivery and evaluation of mental health services. However, those actively and openly challenging the fundamental ethics and efficacy of mainstream psychiatric practice remained marginalized within psychiatry, and to a lesser extent within the wider mental health community.

Challenges and alternatives to psychiatric practice


Civilization as a cause of distress

In ''Civilization and Its Discontents'', Freud, in later life, wrote of the conflict between man's instinctive nature and the demands of society (a view rejected by some of Freud's later epigones as the cause of mental problems). Many others, before and after him, have written in similar vein, and some, such as George Miller Beard have pointed to an epidemic of "neurasthenia" (a condition no longer recognized as an illness) at the start of the twentieth century as indicative of the breakdown of a section of society under the increasing stresses of modern life. R. D. Laing emphasized family nexus as a mechanism whereby individuals become victimized by those around them.
In recent years, David Smail, a psychotherapist considered part of the anti-psychiatry movement, has written extensively of the "embodied nature" of the individual in society, and the unwillingness of even therapists to acknowledge the obvious part played by power and interest in modern Western society. He emphasizes the fact that feelings and emotions are not, as is commonly supposed, features of the individual, but rather responses of the individual to his situation in society. Even psychotherapy, he suggests, can only change feelings inasmuch as it helps a person to change the "proximal" and "distal" influences on his life, which range from family and friends, to politics and work.
Normality and illness judgments

Critics of psychiatry generally do not dispute the notion that some people have emotional or psychological problems, or that some psychotherapies do not work for a given problem. They do usually disagree with psychiatry on the source of these problems; the appropriateness of characterizing these problems as ''illness''; and on what the proper management options are. For instance, a primary concern of anti-psychiatry is that an individual's degree of adherence to communally, or majority, held values may be used to determine that person's level of mental health. Using this logic they argue that in a communal display of violence like a public stoning, a person who abstains from violence could be diagnosed ''mentally ill'' and should, subsequently, be ''treated''. Furthermore, if disagreement with the majority in a society constitutes delusion, then anyone whose statements are considered by that majority to be incorrect is delusional, regardless of the actual correctness of his or her ideas; or, alternately, the criteria by which a belief is deemed to be a delusion must necessarily fluctuate with the majority's opinion. Under this definition, critics of psychiatry argue, early proponents of heliocentrism, such as Galileo, would have been rightly characterized as delusional since their ideas were widely held to be incorrect when they were originally formulated; it is only because the majority ''currently'' backs a heliocentric model of the solar system that an ''opposing'' belief might now be considered a "delusion".
In addition, many feel that they are being pathologized for simply being different. Some people diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome or autism hold this position (see autism rights movement). While many parents of children diagnosed autistic support the efforts of autistic activists, there are some who say they value the uniqueness of their children and do not desire a "cure" for their autism. The autistic community has coined a number of terms that would appear to form the basis for a new branch of identity politics; terms such as "neurodiversity" and "neurotypical".[15]
It has been argued by philosophers like Foucault that characterizations of "mental illness" are indeterminate and reflect the hierarchical structures of the societies from which they emerge rather than any precisely-defined qualities which distinguish a "healthy" mind from a "sick" one. Furthermore, if a tendency toward self-harm is taken as an elementary symptom of mental illness, then humans, ''as a species'', are arguably insane in that they have tended throughout recorded history to destroy their own environments, to make war with one another, etc.[16]
Psychiatric labeling

There are recognized problems regarding the diagnostic reliability and validity of mainstream psychiatric diagnoses, both in ideal controlled circumstances[17] and even more so in routine clinical practice (McGorry ''et al''. 1995).[18] Criteria in the principal diagnostic manuals, the DSM and ICD, are inconsistent.[19] Some psychiatrists who criticize their own profession say that comorbidity, when an individual meets criteria for two or more disorders, is the rule rather than the exception. There is much overlap and vaguely-defined or changeable boundaries between what psychiatrists claim are distinct illness states.[20] There are also problems with using standard diagnostic criteria in different countries, cultures, genders or ethnic groups. Critics often allege that Westernized, white, male-dominated psychiatric practices and diagnoses disadvantage and misunderstand those from other groups. For example, several studies have shown that African Americans are more often diagnosed with schizophrenia than Caucasians,[21] and women more than men.
Some within the anti-psychiatry movement are critical of the use of diagnosis as it conforms with the medical biopsychiatry model. The late Kevin F. McCready, founder of San Joaquin Psychotherapy Center, was critical of the use of diagnosis for people suffering from psychological and emotional overwhelm. He opened a day treatment program in Fresno, California, utilizing an integrative milieu model of psychotherapy without the use of diagnosis or psychiatric drugs. This center has served clients from all over the world who have sought this type of specialized treatment where they could gradually titrate off of their psychiatric drugs. Today there are a number of centers open around the United States based on this model.[22]
Psychiatry and the pharmaceutical industry

Stern concerns about how disease is managed in large populations for financial purposes alone appear constantly in the literature critical of the medical profession and the industry.[23]
Psychiatrists prescribe drugs for adults and children. Administration of the drugs can be undertaken voluntarily or, in certain situations, involuntarily. Psychiatrists claim that a number of medications have a proven efficacy for improving or managing a number of mental health disorders. This includes ranges of different drugs referred to as stimulants, antidepressants, tranquilizers and neuroleptics (antipsychotics).
On the other hand, organizations such as MindFreedom International and World Network of Users and Survivors of Psychiatry maintain that psychiatrists exaggerate the evidence of medication and minimize the evidence of adverse drug reaction. They and other activists also complain that individuals are not given sufficient balanced information or truly informed consent, that current psychiatric medications do not appear to be specific to particular disorders in the way mainstream psychiatry asserts;[24] and psychiatric drugs not only don't correct measurable chemical imbalances in the brain, but also induce undesirable side effects. For example, though children on Ritalin and other psycho-stimulants become more obedient to parents and teachers,[25] critics have noted that they can also develop abnormal movements such as tics, spasms and other involuntary movements[26] This has not been shown to be directly related to the therapeutic use of stimulants, but to neuroleptics.[27][28] The diagnosis of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder on the basis of inattention to compulsory schooling also raises critics' concerns regarding the use of psychoactive drugs as a means of unjust social control of children.25
The influence of pharmaceutical companies is another major issue for the antipsychiatry movement. The pharmaceutical industry is one of the most profitable and powerful in existence, and as Joe Sharkey has argued, there are many financial and professional links between psychiatry, regulators, and pharmaceutical companies. Drug companies routinely fund much of the research conducted by psychiatrists, advertise medication in psychiatric journals and conferences, fund psychiatric and healthcare organizations and health promotion campaigns, and send representatives to lobby general physicians and politicians. Peter Breggin, Sharkey, and other investigators of the psycho-pharmaceutical industry maintain that many psychiatrists are members, shareholders or special advisors to pharmaceutical or associated regulatory organizations.[29]
There is evidence that research findings and the prescribing of drugs are influenced as a result. A United Kingdom cross-party parliamentary inquiry into the influence of the pharmaceutical industry in 2005 concludes: "The influence of the pharmaceutical industry is such that it dominates clinical practice"[30] and that there are serious regulatory failings resulting in "the unsafe use of drugs; and the increasing medicalization of society".30 The campaign organization ''No Free Lunch'' details the prevalent acceptance by medical professionals of free gifts from pharmaceutical companies and the effect on psychiatric practice.[31] The ghost-writing of articles by pharmaceutical company officials, which are then presented by esteemed psychiatrists, has also been highlighted.[32] Systematic reviews have found that trials of psychiatric drugs that are conducted with pharmaceutical funding are several times more likely to report positive findings than studies without such funding.[33]
The number of psychiatric drug prescriptions have been increasing at an extremely high rate since the 1950s and show no sign of abating.8 In the United States antidepressants and tranquilizers are now the top selling class of prescription drugs, and neuroleptics and other psychiatric drugs also rank near the top, all with expanding sales.33 As a solution of this alleged conflict of interests, critics propose legislation to separate the pharmaceutical industry from the psychiatric profession.
Electroconvulsive therapy

Main articles: Electroconvulsive therapy controversy

Psychiatrists may advocate psychiatric drugs, psychotherapy or more controversial interventions such as electroshock or psychosurgery to treat mental illness. The use of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is administered worldwide typically for severe mental disorders such as severe depression,[34] sometimes involuntarily. Across the globe it has been estimated that approximately 1 million patients receive ECT per year.[35] Exact numbers of how many persons per year have ECT in the United States are unknown due to the variability of settings and treatment. Researchers' estimates generally range from 100,000 to 200,000 persons per year.[36] Anti-psychiatry critics particularly hold this procedure in low repute. John Breeding, a vocal critic of psychiatric practices, believes that "Electroshock always causes brain damage".[37]
[38] On the other hand, a 2003 systematic review concluded that, despite these risks, ECT "is an effective short-term treatment for depression".[39] It is used most often in situations of life-threatening, i.e., suicidal, depression.

Psychiatry and the law


Psychiatrists often give testimony in competence hearings. These hearings seek to determine whether an individual is mentally fit to face trial. Since the 1960s Szasz has argued that, because mental illness is an incoherent concept, the insanity defense should be abolished. Most experts in the field do not accept this view.
While the insanity defense is the subject of controversy as a viable excuse for wrong-doing, Szasz and other critics contend that being committed in a psychiatric hospital is often much worse than criminal imprisonment, since it involves the risk of compulsory medication with neuroleptics or the use of electroshock treatment.[40][41] Moreover, while a criminal imprisonment has a predetermined time of end that could be anticipated, in the case of being committed in a psychiatric hospital the duration is not fixed, it can be extended at the will of the psychiatrist.[42]
Involuntary hospitalization

Psychiatry is at the forefront of the practice of mental health care in hospital wards, or other medical settings, using legally-sanctioned force to admit individuals against their will. Critics point out that this practice runs against one of the pillars of open or free societies: John Stuart Mill's principles, as advanced in his foundational work regarding the concept of liberty. Mill argues that society should never use coercion to subdue an individual as long as he (or she) does not harm others. Involuntary psychiatric hospitalization, critics contend, violates this principle. In contrast to the Hollywood portrait of schizophrenics, disturbed people are usually no more prone to violence than sane individuals.[43] The growing practice, in the United Kingdom and elsewhere, of care in the community was instituted partly in response to such concerns.
Alternatives to involuntary hospitalization include the development of non-medical crisis care in the community.
In the case of people suffering from severe psychotic crises, the American Soteria project used to provide, critics of psychiatry contend, a more humane and compassionate alternative to coercive psychiatry. The Soteria houses closed in 1983 in the United States due to lack of financial support. However, Soteria-like houses are presently flourishing in Europe, especially in Sweden and other North European countries.[44]
The "Therapeutic State"

The "Therapeutic State" is a phrase coined by American psychiatrist Thomas Szasz in 1963.
Civil libertarians warn that the marriage of the State with psychiatry could have catastrophic consequences for civilization.[45] In the same vein as the separation of church and state, Szasz believes that a solid wall must exist between psychiatry and the State.[46]

CCHR: A parallel movement against psychiatry


Main articles: CCHR, Scientology and psychiatry, Psychiatry: An Industry of Death

A controversial contemporary religious movement, Scientology, has also challenged psychiatric theory or practice.[47] L. Ron Hubbard, who founded Scientology, became increasingly at odds with psychiatry and in 1969, with Szasz he cofounded the Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR). CCHR was formed as an advocacy group focused on what it calls psychiatry's "human rights crimes". In 1986, the Special Rapporteur of the United Nations submitted a report that was published and distributed by the United Nations. In this report the CCHR was credited for the introduction and passage many pieces of legislation to improve the rights of individuals with regard to psychiatric treatment.[48][49]
In the keynote address at the 25th anniversary of CCHR, Szasz stated: ''"We should all 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 been done in human history before."''49 Nonetheless, Szasz has never been a Scientologist, instead self-identifying as a secular humanist.[50]
However, the delineation between the viewpoints of the critics associated with Scientology, and those within anti-psychiatry is not absolute, especially with regards to mental illness, psychiatry, and psychiatric drugs. For example, the CCHR hosts content about these subjects by noted anti-psychiatry critics like Szasz,[51] Gary Null[52] and Fred Baughman.[53] Even Peter Breggin, who has completely dissociated himself from his former associations with Scientology, hosts seminars through the ICSPP with Baughman, and also wrote a scientific paper with him. Baughman is a medical expert for the CCHR (but not a Scientologist).
Despite sharing notable antipsychiatrists' views on some issues, Scientology doctrine differs in some respects. Scientology has promoted psychiatry-related conspiracy theories, including the 9/11 terrorist attack[54][55] and that psychiatrists caused the universe's havoc billions of years ago.[56] Scientologists are religiously committed never to take psychiatric drugs and to reject psychology outright. These positions are shared by few, if any, secular critics of psychiatry.
The socio-political roots of the movements also differ. Classic anti-psychiatrists such as David Cooper and Ronald Laing had ties with the political left of the 1960s; Szasz, with the civil libertarians of the right. On the other hand, Jon Atack considered the sources of Scientology to be a mixture of Freud's abreaction therapy, science fiction, Buddhist ideas, and Aleister Crowley's magic.[57]

See also



Bruce Levine

Indeterminacy in philosophy

★ ''Interpretation of Schizophrenia''

Laura's Law

The Gene Illusion

Rosenhan experiment

Shock therapy

External links


Information


The Antipsychiatry Coalition

National Mental Health Consumers' Self-Help Clearinghouse

Blog building an effort to push the consumer movement through eco friendly relaxation centers focused on those displaced by mental health infrastructure
Articles


Oikos.org - The Dark Side of Psychiatry

PLoS Medicine - Why Most Published Research Findings Are False, by John P. A. Ioannidis. Vol. 2, No. 8, DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.0020124.Last accessed 16 June 2006

PLoS Medicine - Medical Journals Are an Extension of the Marketing Arm of Pharmaceutical Companies, by Richard Smith, Vol.2, No.5, e138 DOI:10.1371/journal.pmed.0020138. Last accessed 16 June 2006

British Medical Journal - Commercial influence and the content of medical journals, by Joel Lexchin, associate professor1, Donald W Light, professor2, BMJ 2006;332:1444-1447 (17 June),doi:10.1136/bmj.332.7555.1444; Last accessed 16 June 2006

PLoS Medicine - The Latest Mania: Selling Bipolar Disorder, by David Healy, Vol.3, No.4, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.0030185; Last accessed 16 June 2006
Organizations critical of psychiatry


www.scientology.org - The Church of Scientology

LaingSociety.org - The Society for Laingian Studies, R.D. Laing (1927-1989)

Mosher Soteria - Loren Mosher, MD, (1933-2004)

Szasz.com - The Thomas S. Szasz, MD, Cybercenter for Liberty and Responsibility

ICSPP.org - International Center for the Study of Psychiatry and Psychology

MindFreedom.org - Support Coalition International (a coalition of groups supporting "United Action for Human Rights in Mental Health")

PsychRights.org - Law Project for Psychiatric Rights

CCHR.org - Citizens Commission on Human Rights

IAAPA International Association Against Psychiatric Assault

PSAT Psychiatric Survivor Archives of Toronto

TanaDineen.com Homepage of Tana Dineen

Anti-Psychiatry Livejournal - Anti-Psychiatry Community on Livejournal, Most Updated Resource.

Notes


1. http://www.springerpub.com/journal.aspx?jid=1523-150X
2. http://www.mindfreedom.org
3. "Biological psychiatry: science or pseudoscience?" in Colin Ross and Alvin Pam ''Pseudoscience in Biological Psychiatry: Blaming the Body'', NY: Wiley & Sons, pp. 7-84, , Alvin, Pam, , 1995,

4. Blaming the Brain: The Truth about Drugs and Mental Health, , Elliot, Valenstein, The Free Press, 1998,

5. The Gene Illusion: Genetic Research in Psychiatry and Psychology Under the Microscope, , Jay, Joseph, Algora, , ISBN 0-87586-344-2
6. What was anti-psychiatry? from UEA Critical Psychiatry website
7. Daniel Defoe, quoted in Thomas Szasz: ''Schizophrenia: the sacred symbol of psychiatry'' (NY: Syracuse Univ. Press). Defoe's text was titled ''Demand for public control of madhouses''.
8. Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and the Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill, , Robert, Whitaker, Basic Books, , ISBN 0-7382-0799-3
9. [1]
10. Mass Murderers in White Coats : Psychiatric Genocide in Nazi Germany and the United States, , Lenny, Lapon, , , ISBN 0961496193
11. http://home.iprimus.com.au/burgess1/breggin.html
12. http://www.aaas.org/news/releases/2003/1212reich.shtml
13. http://www.antipsychiatry.org/kendra-c.htm
14. http://www.jeffreymasson.com/freud.html
15.
16. Madness and Civilization: a History of Insanity in the Age of Reason, , Michel, Foucault, Vintage Books, ,
17. The structured clinical interview for DSM-III-R (SCID) II: Multi-site test-retest reliability, , J..B., Williams, Archives of General Psychiatry,
18. Spurious precision: procedural validity of diagnostic assessment in psychotic disorders PD McGorry
19. A comparison of the utility of dimensional and categorical representations of psychosis, , J., van Os, Psychological Medicine,
20. http://www.rossinst.com/trauma.htm
21. http://www.psychjourney.com/Schizophrenia%20Among%20Blacks.htm
22. http://www.medsfree.com
23. Selling Sickness: How the World's Biggest Pharmaceutical Companies are Turning Us All Into Patients'', Nation Books, , Ray and Alan Cassels, Moynihan, , 2006,

24. http://content.karger.com/ProdukteDB/produkte.asp?doi=83999
25. Reclaiming Your Children: A healing Plan for a Nation in Crisis, , Peter, Breggin, Perseus Publishing, ,
26. http://breggin.com/Newstimulants.pdf
27. [2] - ''New York Times'' article
28. [3] - ''USA Today'' article
29. http://heall.com/holistic_psychology/toxic_psychiatry.html
30. http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200405/cmselect/cmhealth/42/42.pdf
31. http://www.nofreelunch.org
32. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,6903,1101680,00.html
33. http://www.nihcm.org/finalweb/spending2001.pdf
34. http://www.camhindia.org/campaign_against_direct_ect.html
35. journals.cambridge.org/article_S0033291701003750
36. http://www.ect.org/paper-on-ect-statistics-at-mh-stats-conference
37. The right to know, the right to remember: informed consent for electroshock is still a sham, , John, Breeding, Mind Freedom Journal,
38. Electroshock and informed consent, , John, Breeding, Journal of Humanistic Psychology,
39. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=12642045&query_hl=6&itool=pubmed_docsum
40. Law, Liberty, and Psychiatry: An Inquiry into the Social Uses of Mental Health Practices, , Thomas, Szasz, Syracuse University Press; Reprint edition, ,
41. http://www.stopshrinks.org/yoder/index.htm
42. Patient or Prisoner?, , Thomas, Szasz, Ideas on Liberty,
43. Mental disorder and violent behavior: perceptions and evidence, , J., Monahan, American Psychologist,
44. http://ahrp.org/infomail/04/07/13.php
45. http://www.fff.org/freedom/fd0411b.asp
46. http://www.independent.org/pdf/tir/tir_05_4_szasz.pdf
47. http://www.cchr.org/index.cfm/13106
48. http://www.psych.org/pnews/96-12-06/halpern.html
49. http://www.scientology.org/en_US/news-media/faq/pg037.html
50. http://www.etla.net/~willey/personal/humanism.html
51. http://www.cchr.org/index.cfm/11112
52. http://www.freedommag.org/english/vol2704/rights.htm
53. http://www.cchr.org/index.cfm/search/5367/7314
54. The Terror Doctors, , Gordon, Thomas, Freedom Magazine, "Emerging from research into terrorist kingpins — those engineers of terrorist calamities from 9/11 to the Madrid bombings—one is struck by the dominance of members of the psychiatric profession in their midst..."
55. Scientology vs. Science Andrew Gumbel
56. Hubbard Communications Office Bulletin 26 August 1982, "Pain and Sex". Cited in A Piece of Blue Sky, , Jon, Atack, Carol Publishing Group, 1990, ISBN 0-8184-0499-X , p. 288. " are the sole cause of decline in this universe ..."
57. A Piece of Blue Sky, , Jon, Atack, Carol Publishing Group, 1990, ISBN 0-8184-0499-X


This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves