It
is known that in the north of Ireland there is a very
high rate of prescription in relation to anti-depressants
and tranquilliser medication. In areas
where there has been serious conflict and poor economic
investment this is particularly in evidence. It has
been established that these drugs are often addictive,
harmful, disabling and debilitating in their effects.
It reflects a world-wide trend whereby psychothropic
drugs are seen as the answer to severe mental distress.
It is important to note that psychiatry views depression,
certain states of anxiety and various forms of mental
suffering as illnesses related to brain pathology.
The fact is that psychiatry has never been able to
prove a physical cause to any of the so-called mental
illnesses. Given the symbiotic relationship between
psychiatry and the drug companies it is in their interests
to perpetuate the myth that mental illnesses
are the result of brain pathology and that drugs help
to redress some supposed biochemical imbalance.
One
of the tragedies of our time is that a social model
of psychiatry has not emerged to replace the biological
bias in the present model. This model views mental
illness, or to use its preferred term, severe
mental distress, as often being the result of poverty,
unemployment, poor housing and many other social ills
or interpersonal conflicts. If one looks around the
world the disease or biological model
of psychiatry doesnt stand up. It is the Irish
in Britain and other ethnic minorities who are more
likely to end up in psychiatric hospital, detained,
given a diagnosis of mental illness. African
Americans are also much more likely to suffer the
same fate, Aborigines in Australia, The Maori in New
Zealand and black people under the old apartheid regime
in S.Africa suffered appalling psychiatric abuses.
It is very often minorities and those suffering poverty
and deprivation who are much more likely to be affixed
with the label mentally ill.
Psychiatry
argues that certain groups show a genetic vulnerability
to psychosis yet no biological marker or genetic defect
has ever been found in relation to any of the many
and increasing number of invented psychiatric disorders.
These ever expanding disorders create
new markets for the drug companies. Their drugs often
have serious adverse and devastating effects.
Psychiatry
is without doubt a force for social control and serves
Big Pharma. George Bushs plans to screen the
entire US population for mental illness
as recently reported in the British Medical Journal,
beginning at pre-school level, will provide enormous
profit for these companies. This plan has grown out
of a political/pharmaceutical alliance with strong
drug company ties to the Bush Administration. The
reader can check out this link to the journals
website: http://bmj.bmjjournals.com/cgi/content/full/328/7454/1458.
It
is essential therefore that the issues surrounding
psychiatry be politicised. The proposed Community
Treatment Orders which may be introduced under the
new Mental Health Bill in Britain will ensure that
patients living in the community are forced
to take drugs if it is thought they are not taking
their medication. It will provide no choice
or availability of other ways in which the person
feels they could be helped. Only presently in Britain
and Ireland if someone is sectioned can
they be forced to take drugs against their will and
even given electro-conlusive therapy (ECT).
The British government also intends to pre-emptively
lock away some people whove been assessed
as being dangerous, even if theyve never committed
a crime. This is fundamentally against the spirit
of human rights and a policy that panders to the prejudices
of the right wing press and elements in society. It
is psychiatry itself which stigmatises people. They
apply a non-existent disease to them and deny them
their rights when they are deemed to lack capacity.
Their problems are objectified as being inside their
brains and their bodies poisoned with psychiatric
drugs.
Instead
of telling the poor, the marginalised, the alienated
and those simply different within society
that they have brain illness or disorders, we need
a new radical approach to psychiatry which will help
to build better societies by drawing attention to
the societal and environmental factors involved in
severe mental distress. Lets take the deeply
distressing and painful subject of suicide. Suicidal
thinking is increasingly being seen by psychiatry
as related to psychiatric comorbidity, in other words,
psychiatric illness related to alcohol/substance
abuse, etc. This then provides further justification
for psychiatric expansive interventions in communities
where people have tragically taken their lives. They
then advocate the use of drugs that paradoxically
increase the likelihood of suicide as the recent scandal
surrounding the drug Seroxat has shown. This drug
is worth £2billion a year to GlaxoSmithKline
- Britains biggest drugs firm which recently
caved in under pressure and revealed hidden research
which showed that its so called anti-depressant can
cause children to attempt suicide. It has also been
linked to suicide in adults and the drug regulators
have now banned its use in under-18s in Britain. There
is a further irony in that this same shamed drug company
donated a grant of £25,000 in 2002 to the Institute
for Counselling and Personal Development in Belfast
which offers support to the victims of the conflict
and those experiencing mental health difficulties.
This groups work tends to be concentrated in
areas like North and West Belfast where there has
been an alarming number of tragic deaths as a result
of suicide. It is highly likely that in its work this
group supports the so-called anti-depressants as being
essential in treating depression despite the growing
doubts about their efficacy and the corrupt activities
of the drug companies involved. The behind the scenes
machinations that were involved in the approval and
promotion of Prozac is another case in point. It is
also a fact that all the state funded mental
health organisations support the present biological
psychiatric model. It is also a sad but hardly ever
reported fact that there is a clear link between the
heavy psychiatric or neuroleptic drugs and suicide.
Many psychiatric patients in the end take their own
lives after suffering the lethal side
effects of these drugs for many years. Psychiatry
is also targeting children now with drugs for so called
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and conduct
disorders.
Instead
of masking problems with drugs we need to understand
how oppressive structures in society affect people
and cause disharmony, stress and tension which can
then precipitate severe mental distress and even suicide.
There needs to be a much clearer focus on these economic,
social and class structures and the effects they have
on mental well being. It is becoming increasing clear
that in the future people and communities may have
to find a way of managing their own mental health
by not leaving it to psychiatric propaganda eager
for cash cows in a system that would collapse
if it actually made efforts towards truly helping
others. A new social or holistic psychiatry would
therefore seek to understand and explorelife
experience and the problems of living.
The north of Ireland could take a leading role here.
We know that the levels of mental distress are greater
here than in other parts of Ireland or in Britain.
Instead of a system inextricably linked to pharmaceutical
companies, which supports delusional projects like
the Genetic Epidemiology of Mental Illness In Northern
Ireland (GEMINI) in its search for the elusive defective
gene in mental illness, why not put money
into projects that help people to rebuild their lives
and deal with the root causes of their mental suffering.
Forums could be established whereby people could make
their voice heard and their mental/emotional distress
understood. For psychiatric patients therapeutic
housing could be set up where they are helped to withdraw
from neuroleptic drugs and to get their lives back
again. The Soteria therapeutic housing project founded
by radical American psychiatrist, Loren Mosher, who
sadly just died (12 July 2004) proved to be a great
success for many psychiatric patients and yet was
totally ignored and arrogantly dismissed by the psychiatric
establishment. This is a model for the future and
a common-sense alternative run by ordinary caring
people that actually worked.
Instead
of creating depressed and alienated communities awash
with addictive benzodiazepines,anti-depressant
and other psychiatric drugs, activists for a radical
or holistic approach to mental health should seek
to build supportive communities. In this model strong
social ties and inclusive networks would bind communities
and ensure that people are not left isolated, disempowered
and impoverished by a system driven by pharmaceutical
interests. The great radical psychiatrist, R D Laing
recognised the need for this wider social change if
the psychiatric establishment was to be overthrown.
Biological psychiatry is also seen today in the current
fashion for Western medical and mental health agencies
to develop projects for victims of war in other countries,
often wars provoked by Western governments. They seek
to objectify mental suffering as an entity apart.
They make it into a clinical problem to which they
apply Western treatments. They often dismiss
indigenous knowledge or ways of treatment. Often they
ignore the fact that what people really want is not
to look inwards at their own mental lives but help
in rebuilding their devastated social, economic or
cultural ways of life. It is this exclusion of the
wider context that makes the present system so reprehensible.
This is in clear contrast to the innovative work of
the British Inter-war years psychiatrist, Harry Stack
Sullivan, who for a period helped to steer the traditional
psychiatric focus away from the individual to the
interpersonal and who highlighted the need for more
socially orientated and holistic therapies.
A
social model of psychiatry better serves societies
and communities that have suffered conflict, war and
economic deprivation. Those labelled mentally ill
or are seen as suffering from one or other psychiatric
disorder are being demeaned and harmed by the
present practice. It seems to me that by building
therapeutic housing projects and communities those
who have been targeted with psychiatric drugs could
draw attention to the societal, environmental and
political causes of severe mental distress and thereby
help to effect real and radical change in society
by exposing biological psychiatry for what it is
pseudo science and psycho babble that serves Big Pharma.
A new radical psychiatry would work with people in
a non- pathologising way and help to understand the
real origins of their mental pain. The way forward
is through self-determination for those who suffer
severe mental distress and a new social and healing
model of psychiatry that understands and relates to
the experience of the person in context with others
and the wider society. This clearly calls for a strong
and active movement not afraid to challenge and end
the present oppressive psychiatric system.
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