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Psychiatric Drugs: Wonderful Revolution or Ongoing Catastrophe?

by Jeffrey Rubin, PhD

Welcome to From Insults to Respect.

A while ago, as I began to think about what topic to write about for my next post, I received an email from Mindfreedom International (MI). It brought attention to a demonstration it was planning. As MI expressed it in part:

A mock funeral mourning those lost to psychiatry or who have had their spirits broken and struggle to survive is to be held as protesters deliver a public message to psychiatrists at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association on Sunday, May 6, 2018. “First, Do No Harm” is the message that protesters hope will go viral and get people to think twice before getting involved with psychiatry.

Our coalition brings attention to the harm that psychiatry has caused for many people in the mental health system, psychiatric survivors, people of color, people with psychiatric histories, and people experiencing other forms of structural oppression. Uninformed or court-ordered psychiatric drugging; chemical and mechanical restraints, solitary confinement; forced and uninformed shock treatments….have caused irreversible damage to the minds, bodies, souls, and lives of people who voluntarily trusted their doctors or were brought to court to comply with their prescriptions over their objection….We will mourn the deaths and the ongoing forced treatment of our brothers and sisters.

Is there a way to move MI’s various conflicts with the psychiatric organization forward in a manner that leads to a more respectful relationship between the two?

My Views About Psychiatric Drugs

I became interested in the conflict about the use of psychiatric drugs very early in my career as a psychologist. I began to discuss the issues with psychiatrists as well as those who objected to this form of treatment. A broad outline of what I heard follows:

Advocates for the use of these drugs make the following claims: These drugs reduce emotional pain, correct abnormal brain patterns, and restore normal mental function. When used judiciously, they reduce hospitalization and may quickly alleviate symptoms of serious mental disorders such as depression and bipolar illness. Going off medication results in disruptive lives and devastating personal loss. Careers, relationships, financial troubles, and even life itself are all placed at grave risks without proper psychiatric medication management. 

In contrast, critics of psychiatric drugs have made the following counter claims: The use of psychiatric drugs has unleashed the worst medically induced disaster in history. They have caused millions of people to become addicted to them, suffering debilitating, life threatening side effects. Rather than promoting mental health, these drugs are being used to promote social control and conformity. Reduction in hospitalization, moreover, occurred not because of the use of these drugs, but because of a deinstitutionalization policy that became known as “dumping.” Problems now being handled with psychiatric drugs can be more effectively, safely, and humanely handled with a variety of social support systems, counseling, mindfulness, healthy diet, and physical exercise techniques.

As I heard these conflicting claims, I initially thought that psychiatrists had principles of science on their side. With my graduate training in research methods and statistics, I thought that by doing a thorough job finding out the scientific research that backs up the psychiatric drug supporters I could explain in an easy to understand language why psychiatric drugs are necessary. With such an explanation, perhaps the conflict would be resolved.

My Ritalin Research Analysis

I began with researching Ritalin because I was working in Rochester, NY’s school system. This was from 1974 to 1979. It was a time when drugs were just beginning to be prescribed more and more to treat students who had teachers dissatisfied with their activity level or ability to pay attention. I had witnessed a time when schools managed to deal with such problems without the use of this drug and life went on reasonably well. With the rise in its use, some thought it was a wonderful advancement, while others were expressing great discomfort at this new trend.

So, off I went to a medical library to learn the scientific merits of this new approach. A brief summary of what I found follows.

Supporting the use of Ritalin were short-term randomized controlled studies lasting less than 12 weeks. Both inattentiveness-impulsivity and activity level were reduced, as assessed by parent and teacher rating scales, direct observations in natural settings, and various laboratory tests.

Not all of the findings were supportive. At the time I initially did my research, there was only one study that looked at the long-term results of Ritalin use. It compared children placed on methylphenidate, the generic version of Ritalin, with those who received no treatment. The children in the two groups were matched with respect to age, IQ, socioeconomic class and sex. After 3 to 5 years, no statistically significant differences were found between the two groups on the following outcome measures: emotion maladjustment, delinquency, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children, Bender gestalt visual-motor test, and academic performance.

In addition to this, I found many studies documenting a number of common adverse effects of treatment, such as headaches, insomnia, anorexia, stomach pain, irritability, and weight loss. Suppression of the normal rate of growth was just beginning to be reported. The sudden development of a tic disorder that sometimes did not go away when treatment stopped was viewed as a rare occurrence, but troubling nevertheless. Other serious rare adverse events had been observed including some involving heart functioning such as angina and cardiac arrhythmias. Perhaps most troubling of all was the recognition that the safety of long term use of Ritalin had not been established despite many students being treated for years.

To make sure that my analysis of the available scientific evidence was complete, I sent a Freedom of Information Request to the Food and Drug Administration for the documents that it used to approve the use of Ritalin with children as a treatment for attention and activity problems. I soon received a fairly large packet of information, and upon reviewing its contents I became convinced that I had not overlooked anything of scientific merit.

In the end, I discovered that although the approval process of the FDA had in its documents the available scientific evidence in making its decision to approve Ritalin, the reviewers’ decision nevertheless relied more on their personal values. It seemed to me, and it still does, that different people looking over the same scientific evidence could, depending on their values, come to completely different conclusions about whether or not the drug should be approved.

For me, personally, with the full awareness of the scientific evidence, I would have voted against approval of the drug. Relevant to me was that after thousands of dollars had been spent by the parents of the child or their insurance company, there was no lasting positive effects, while treated children were suffering side effects. The additional facts, especially the one that indicated long term safety had not been established, seemed to me to make non-approval the obvious choice. And yet, according to the value judgments of those who sat on the FDA approval board, they ended up supporting approval.

What I Found Afterwards

Since then, more research has come out regarding the drugs used to deal with ADHD. It further supports the conclusion that there are no long term benefits from using these types of drugs. Moreover, additional harm from their use has been identified.

After what I learned about the ADHD drug treatments, my efforts to find out about psychiatric drugs expanded.

Dr. Ross J. Baldessarini

As time went on, I took a psychopharmacology course taught by Harvard professor Dr. Ross J. Baldessarini; did additional research to get the latest updates, not only on Ritalin, but on other psychiatric drug treatments; and participated in six debates on this subject.

I’ve come to the conclusion that as with Ritalin, when highly intelligent people become familiar with the scientific evidence, they still draw completely different conclusions from one another about whether or not it is morally okay to use the approved drugs as a treatment. The decision is not solely made on scientific evidence. Moreover, I’ve seen evidence that there are far safer non-drug alternatives.

Since I did my original research on Ritalin, I also learned something crucial about the reliability of the relevant research findings. Initially, I assumed the scientific studies were carried out in a manner that I could have confidence in. Since then, I’ve begun to seriously question this.

Many experts have written about the reliability of the research. For example, Marcia Angell, M.D., is a former editor in chief of The New England Journal of Medicine, and now is a member of Harvard’s Medical School. In her insightful book, The Truth About the Drug Companies: How They Deceive Us and What to Do About It, she writes, “Is there some way companies can rig clinical trials to make their drugs look better than they are? Unfortunately, the answer is yes. Trials can be rigged in a dozen ways, and it happens all the time” (p. 95).

Conclusion

And so, even if we believe that the available research is accurate, it just so happens that an examination of it leads to very different moral conclusions by very intelligent people about the wisdom of using these drugs. The pharmaceutical industry’s influences on the body of research about the safety and effectiveness of these drugs make these types of conclusions ever more questionable.

For those interested in following the peer reviewed scientific research about the effectiveness and safety of these drugs, I highly recommend the Mad In America website. It describes the latest research in non-technical language while providing the links to all of the actual research articles so readers, if they so choose, can read them for themselves.

Members of MI have seen first hand people who have died and who have suffered terribly as a result of their involvement with the psychiatric profession. At the same time, psychiatrists also well know that there are many incidences of tragic outcomes due to their treatments, but they have come to believe that overall the benefits of their treatments far outweigh all of those tragedies. And the enormous financial benefits that come with being a psychiatrist are very likely to influence their views.

Civil rights activists worked for generations to make some progress in achieving their goals. Among the most successful of these advocates was Martin Luther King, Jr. When advocating for civil rights, he avoided throwing insults at those who resisted the changes he was after. Instead, he focussed on painting his dream in beautiful, hopeful phrases and demonstrating in nonviolent, but impossible to ignore, peaceful resistance.

In a country where many of our current politicians have taken to insulting anyone who disagrees with them, King’s approach may seem out of style. As for me, I personally think King’s approach is as timeless as stars twinkling in the heavens.

 

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About the Author

Jeffrey Rubin grew up in Brooklyn and received his PhD from the University of Minnesota. In his earlier life, he worked in clinical settings, schools, and a juvenile correctional facility. More recently, he authored three novels, A Hero Grows in Brooklyn, Fights in the Streets, Tears in the Sand, and Love, Sex, and Respect (information about these novels can be found at http://www.frominsultstorespect.com/novels/). Currently, he writes a blog titled “From Insults to Respect” that features suggestions for working through conflict, dealing with anger, and supporting respectful relationships.

7 Comments

  1. Mary Power says:

    It is not possible to please psychiatrists and be one’s own self. They are only happy when their patients totally obey (submit) to their (the psychiatrist’s) suggested label(s) / treatment / drugs / wishes. They do NOT take criticism well. And refuse to tolerate dissent, legitimate questions, disobedience or refusals-to-consent to unwanted psychiatric interventions. Their lack of personal and professional insight plus their ad-lib flouting of internationally recognized ethical guidelines… has to be experienced to be believed. The law has handed them supreme power over us. Which they are more than happy to remind us. Rub ANY one of them the wrong way and they will destroy you. The End.

    The above is a brief summary of my personal experiences of psychiatric “care”. Irish-style. Mary

    • Dr. Jeffrey Rubin says:

      Hi Mary Power.
      Much thanks for sharing with us your personal experiences. People really need to hear stories like yours because the enormously well funded pharmaceutical industry that is backing psychiatry gets the overwhelming amount of media time that it uses for promoting what they want people to hear.

  2. Sarah Smith says:

    It is not possible to be honest with psychiatrists. If one discloses anything it will be pathologized. All chances of a therapeutic trusting alliance are destroyed by involuntary treatment and forced medication as our daughter learned. We don’t dare disclose when our daughter experiences trauma related ‘symptoms’, or drug induced paradoxical reactions (worsening symptoms due to drugging) because the inevitable reaction by the psychiatrist is to increase the dosages or add a medication (polypharmacy). They never stop to consider iatrogenic harm. They are too egotistical or concerned about liability to consider that they may have made a mistake or they don’t have all the answers. Never mind that psychiatric patients never, ever win malpractice suits so there is zero threat to psychiatrists. They project fear anyway. Fear and loathing of patients and family members who are critical of the medical model.
    Everything a psychiatric patients says is discredited by a subjective diagnosis, even if it is decades old, especially if the diagnosis was related one of the ‘psychotic’ disorders, or an unfavorable ‘personality disorders; Families who are in solidarity with a loved one are deemed to be in ‘denial’ never mind about the denial of psychiatrists to deal with their own profession’s dismal outcomes.

    I asked a psychiatrist how many patients she had cured. She said “none”.

    Parents who desire alternatives to the medical model, suffer in silence because those alternatives do not exist especially for those who are deemed ‘persistently seriously mentally ill’ and who are suffering from years of being locked away in state hospitals.

    Families do not dare to disclose suffering when a psychiatric refugee living at home; we paint a rosy picture to stay off the system’s radar; we don’t dare evoke the standard, knee-jerk over zealous response from professionals who have become ideological shills for an industry gone awry and suffer from permanent cognitive dissonance.

    I fail to understand where you are going by waxing poetically about MLK. He spoke truth to power. He didn’t gloss over harm and abuse to his people. Should we be polite and mindful of the tender feelings of psychiatrists who have based their entire practice on silly prescribing algorithms developed by big Pharma to sell brand loyalties?

    Our daughter has been deeply damaged psychologically by forced/coerced ‘treatment’. A decade of court ordered psychotropic drugging has cognitively impaired her and wreaked havoc on her nervous system and metabolic system. She is a 28 year old going on seventy years in terms of her physical health. Being polite and being truthful are separate issues.

    Which of the words from MindFreedom was inconsistent with MLK’s principles of non-violence?

    • Dr. Jeffrey Rubin says:

      Hi Sarah Smith,

      I always find it deeply troubling, but also of enormous value as well, when I hear from parents of someone who has had the kinds of experiences you relate in your thoughtful comment. Such experiences have motivated me to write blog posts and journal articles on this topic and to organize various debates that seek to communicate the very types of concerns that parents have been expressing for many years now. I welcome all that you have written.

      As you conclude your comment, you asked, “Which of the words from MindFreedom was inconsistent with MLK’s principles of non-violence?” I didn’t mean to suggest in any way that any of the words MindFreedom had used were inconsistent with MLK’s principles of non-violence. I like what that organization had said, and that’s the reason I reprinted in abbreviated form its position on this topic for my readers to see.

      I brought up MLK because MindFreedom seeks to win human rights for people who come in contact with the mental health system. Because MLK was among the most successful persons that furthered the cause of human rights, I wanted to highlight his style. At one point he advocated that we “… not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred.” As we move forward in vigorously advocating for positive changes in how people are treated within the mental system, as well as beyond that system, I do think it is worthwhile to keep these words of MLK in mind.

      My Best, Jeff

    • Mary Power says:

      My sentiments exactly! Psychiatrists are in total denial of the harm they do. Plus their peers in the medical profession let them get away with it. In truth the only protection any of us has against the sadistic self-serving behaviour of psychiatrists is a strong and determined family that will not yield to the demands of the mental health industry to “hand over” their vulnerable members to be permanently harmed by cruel sadistic psychiatrists. I have seen it – and experienced it – myself. And it is getting WORSE rather than better. 😐

  3. sarah smith says:

    Jeff:

    Thank you for clarifying your perspective and for sharing the quote ” Not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred” Every day I try to live up to these wise words but I confess it is a struggle to even come close to following Dr. King when it comes to iatrogenic harm.

    It is through my daughter being iatrogenically harmed repeatedly for a decade, that I have come to see the dark side of psychiatry. And since very few representatives from that profession want to engage in open, public debate, it makes it harder for us to enjoy reconciliation. Without reconciliation, there is no recognition of harm and no apology.

    For example, my daughter was locked up in a small, rural facility for a year and was drugged, often by force for trying to run away. For a year she never left the facility to go on an outing. Told repeatedly that this was for her own good, she was given three kinds of neuroleptics simultaneously by a nurse practitioner who happened to be the town’s mayor. Once, was injected by force with Thorazine, in order to deal with neuroleptic induced intoxication which had led to hostility, aggressiveness, and other akathisia related conditions. She was so overdosed with Thorazine that she couldn’t stand up and people walked over her body in the hallway, calling her manipulative and attention seeking. A family visitor, seeing her in this state, assumed it was a part of her ‘disease’ (schizoaffective disorder). It wasn’t until a year later, a psychiatric, carefully going over the charts realized she had been horribly over medicated and was not violent and should be weaned off most of her medication. This took a year of lock up just to restore her trust and get her to engage in agreements and win necessary privileges to go out into the community again.

    Once, in an acute care facility ,she was so intoxicated due to overmedication with several neuroleptics that her bladder went to sleep with the result that she was horribly incontinent. Brought before a judge in a civil commitment hearing wearing only the wet hospital scrubs that she had just peed on, the psychiatrist used her disheveled condition as ‘evidence’ of her ‘grave illness’ and why she couldn’t leave the facility where she would be consistently medicated by force. Do you see, what we are up against? Do you see the pattern, here?

    I have come to realize the absolute banality of evil.

    “Of all tyrannies a tyranny sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most oppressive. C.S. Lewis

    When one has to deal everyday with the aftermath of iatrogenic harm involving a loved one, in the absence of a wider healing dialogue involving ‘truth and reconciliation’ (recall under Nelson Mandela’s town hall meetings victims got to face their former torturers) well, just surviving from day to day with one’s integrity intact, while trying to employ alternative healing modalties at the micro level while at the macro level, one continues to be bombarded by external messages through the media and the community that extreme distress is a genetic coin toss and that sedation is the best solution for every mental and emotional problem…

    Our daughter had a right to seek comfort and support when she experienced a crisis. She never hurt anyone. When she tried to run away from the ER she was stripped, put in an isolation room restrained with five point restraints, and forcibly injected with enough Haldol to sedate an elephant. On the most vulnerable day of her life, when her boundaries needed emergency reinforcements, our society stripped her boundaries away even more and put vinegar in her wound.

    This is punative treatment not healing treatment. The alliance and trust was broken the very first day that I brought her to the ER and exposed her to psychiatry and the aftermath has been dogging our daughter in the form of cycling in an out of institutions ever since. This isn’t an isolated incident. It is happening to young adults in ER’s throughout the U.S. every day.

    Families are running for milk and cookies from pseudo advocacy organizations like the National Alliance for Mental Illness (NAMI) which receives 60% of its funding from big Pharma, which lists the word ‘biological on its website over 700 times, last time MFI counted. NAMI doesn’t even give a rat’s *ss about healing within families and communities.
    Once a family member is diagnosed with a severe mental disorder, the rest of the family is off the hook. There are no attempts to facilitate a dialogue within families and communities when a sensitive individual experiences a personal crisis. Once a family member is told she has a chemical imbalance, there is no need to look at other, more systemic unbalances in the family or community

    I probably don’t have to tell you that the knowledge exists to help individuals and families can learn emotional resiliency from sources like Daniel Fisher’s Emotional CPR or Intentional Peer Support. I wish psychologists to bring their power to bear on the madness of allowing medical practitioners to enjoy a near monopoly on the ‘treatment’ of all human distress.

    How about forcing school districts and campuses to reject all early screening tests for ‘depression’ and replace them with screening for abuse and bullying?

    These early screening programs, funded by industry and other pill pushers throw ever more children and young adults into silly categories of the DSM where they will inevitably be informed they have a lifelong, biological based condition. Medication is a shotgun approach at best which sedates individuals, impairing their ability to focus and resolve problems which originate in toxic relations: injustice, rejection, failure, loss, and imbalance.

    Psychologists, instead of cowtowing to psychiatrists or engaging in ‘turf wars’ could be leading a national effort to teach people skills for dealing with grief, anxiety, rage, etc in households and communities with dialogical interaction, non-violent communication, etc. Skills for de-escalating extreme responses to unfortunate life circumstances, abuse, trauma, injustice, loss, betrayal, etc. conditions which should not be monopolized by ‘professionals’ or ‘experts’. Bussing in grief counselors after a school shooting? This is the best we can do? This reminds me of the well intended but stupid white people who flew into Rwanda after the genocide to get victims to sit in cubicles with white ‘professionals’ to deal with their grief. It failed miserably until the stupid white ‘experts’ realized that what the natives really wanted was to dance and drum in their grief, not sit with someone in a room

    Investments need to be made in our communities to democratize ‘treatment’ so it can be deployed at the grass roots level by people with lived experience in a collaborative spirit of curiosity, learning, spontaneity, and mutuality. Experts should not be colonizing communities of color and other marginalized communities. Treatment providers should look like those they serve. If a client is struggling with poverty, it doesn’t work that the treatment provider is middle class.

    Attributes that should be role modeled by psychologists and therapists are mutuality, democracy, egalitarianism, willingness to challenge authoritarianism, patriarchal oppression, respect, listening, and receptivity.

    I will try hard not to dwell on the abuses of to dwell on people who practice a branch of medicine that is based on fraud and deceit, but the mental health system is beyond reform. It needs a full scale revolution. I will ask of those who took away my daughter’s rights, on what scientific basis are

  4. Mary Power says:

    I an just overwhelmed by all the evil that has been revealed here and the reluctance of anyone/ everyone in authority to acknowledge the truth of what is going on ,”(

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