Trending...
- Safe Night Partners With Simsi To Offer A New Certification For Proactive Alliance With Rutgers University
- IFEZ captivates global audience with its innovative companies at CES 2025
- AI Technology Advances in 2025, Fully Automated Solutions Reach the Investment World
Expert declares mental health and psychiatry are in a tailspin. CCHR warns of psychiatric treatment risks, rising drug deaths, and poor psychiatric hospital outcomes requiring close scrutiny.
LOS ANGELES - nvtip -- Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, a leading mental health industry watchdog, is calling for a federal audit of the $280 billion spent annually on mental health services, citing decades of failed outcomes and lack of meaningful improvements. Additionally, as CCHR has been exposing since the 1990s, millions of dollars have been wasted on National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)-funded behavioral and psychiatric research that has included studying whiptail lizards, insects, electric fish and $3.1 million spent on the "vocal learning" of birds. Despite this massive investment, mental health in the U.S. continues to decline. CCHR warns that billions are being squandered on treatment-caused harm, overlooked polypharmacy risks, and rising deaths linked to psychotropic drugs.
President of CCHR, Jan Eastgate, said, "One thing we cannot be thankful for this year is an improved mental health system. We must acknowledge the financial costs and the toll on patients' health caused by extremely poor therapy outcomes, lack of cures, and rising deaths. The industry is plagued by iatrogenesis—the phenomenon of the 'healer' causing harm."
According to TIME magazine, "The U.S. has reached peak therapy. Counseling has become fodder for hit books, podcasts, and movies. Professional athletes, celebrities, and politicians routinely go public with their mental health struggles…. But something isn't adding up. Even as more people flock to therapy, U.S. mental health is getting worse by multiple metrics. Suicide rates have risen by about 30% since 2000."[1]
More on nvtip.com
Polypharmacy, the practice of prescribing multiple psychotropic drugs simultaneously, is alarmingly common. This approach often leads to harmful drug interactions. Among the most overprescribed drugs and dangerous drugs are benzodiazepines, commonly referred to as "benzos." From mid-February to mid-March of 2020, prescriptions for these increased by 34%. Within a few short weeks, patients can develop a physical dependence on them ending up worse off than before the medications, struggling with addiction and withdrawal. Benzos can also have serious side effects, including respiratory depression, which can cause death. Stanford psychiatrist Anna Lembke, lead author of a New England Journal of Medicine essay, calls our overprescribing and overuse of benzos a "hidden epidemic."[2]
Over 21 years (1999-2019), 51,446 psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths (where psychotropic drugs were a contributing cause of death) occurred, with the annual psychotropic-drug-implicated death rate increasing over 3.4 times from 0.40 to 1.37 per 100,000. During the same period, there were also 649,697 psychotropic drug overdoses.[3]
In psychiatry, iatrogenesis has traditionally been linked to complications of psychotropic drug treatment, Medical Xpress reports. "Current classification systems in psychiatry fail to consider the iatrogenic components of psychopathology related to behavioral toxicity [the negative effects of therapeutic levels of medication]." These drugs' "paradoxical effects, manifestations of tolerance (loss of clinical effect, refractoriness), withdrawal and post-withdrawal disorders, are increasingly common due to the widespread use of psychotropic drugs in the general population."[4] In other words, psychiatry often ignores the harmful side effects caused by psychiatric drugs, such as worsening mental health and withdrawal symptoms, which are becoming more common as these drugs are widely used.
There are at least 180 psychiatric drugs on the market, not including all generic versions. Some of the iatrogenic effects include irreversible movement disorders causing uncontrollable muscle contractions such as tardive dyskinesia (TD), akathisia and dystonia. TD occurs in 20%-50% of patients taking antipsychotics and is also linked to antidepressants, mood stabilizers and stimulants.[5]
More on nvtip.com
Some psychotropics are nearly six times more likely to drive the person taking them to suicide than those not taking them, while spending time in a psychiatric hospital can increase that risk of self-inflicted death by 44 times.[6]
Clinical Psychology Science and Practice reported there is considerable evidence of heightened suicide risk and other negative outcomes during and immediately following hospitalization. As such, psychiatric hospitalization is iatrogenic. Despite limited research demonstrating its effectiveness in reducing suicide risk, inpatient hospitalization remains a primary "treatment" (often legally mandated, or forced) for individuals with high risk of suicide.[7]
Stanton Peele, Ph.D., states that "The world of mental health and psychiatry is in a tailspin," and cites Insel's "own confessional professional memoir," admitting, "The U.S., a country that leads the world in spending on medical research, also stands out for its dismal outcomes in people with mental illnesses. Indeed, over the last three decades, even as the government invested billions of dollars in better understanding the brain, by some measures, those outcomes have deteriorated."[8]
Founded in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and renowned University of New York psychiatrist Prof. Thomas Szasz, CCHR is calling for a transparent audit of the funds allocated to psychiatric services and their outcomes, and mental health research under NIMH. This audit aims to identify the failed treatments and programs that have contributed to the worsening state of the nation's mental health system.
Sources:
[1] time.com/6308096/therapy-mental-health-worse-us/
[2] time.com/6280929/polypharmacy-dangers-essay/
[3] pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8355085/
[4] medicalxpress.com/news/2019-07-iatrogenic-disorders-psychiatry-common-neglected.html
[5] www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5472076/
[6] link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00127-014-0912-2
[7] www.researchgate.net/publication/339741738_The_potential_iatrogenic_effects_of_psychiatric_hospitalization_for_suicidal_behavior_A_critical_review_and_recommendations_for_research
[8] peele.net/lib/americanpsychiatry.html
President of CCHR, Jan Eastgate, said, "One thing we cannot be thankful for this year is an improved mental health system. We must acknowledge the financial costs and the toll on patients' health caused by extremely poor therapy outcomes, lack of cures, and rising deaths. The industry is plagued by iatrogenesis—the phenomenon of the 'healer' causing harm."
According to TIME magazine, "The U.S. has reached peak therapy. Counseling has become fodder for hit books, podcasts, and movies. Professional athletes, celebrities, and politicians routinely go public with their mental health struggles…. But something isn't adding up. Even as more people flock to therapy, U.S. mental health is getting worse by multiple metrics. Suicide rates have risen by about 30% since 2000."[1]
More on nvtip.com
- Holabird's huge, four-day Desert Riches Auction, Jan. 31-Feb. 3, features over 2,100 lots in many collecting categories
- Kaplan Morrell Attorney Ronda Cordova Recognized in The Best Lawyers in America® for Workers' Compensation Law – Claimants
- BEPeterson awarded Air Flask order from the Navel Supply Systems Command (NAVSUP)
- pi00a Takes the Grand Prize at 2025 SFA Winter Fancy Food Show Fancy Face-Off Pitch Competition
- RE1 Advisor Introduces RE1 Disaster Recovery
Polypharmacy, the practice of prescribing multiple psychotropic drugs simultaneously, is alarmingly common. This approach often leads to harmful drug interactions. Among the most overprescribed drugs and dangerous drugs are benzodiazepines, commonly referred to as "benzos." From mid-February to mid-March of 2020, prescriptions for these increased by 34%. Within a few short weeks, patients can develop a physical dependence on them ending up worse off than before the medications, struggling with addiction and withdrawal. Benzos can also have serious side effects, including respiratory depression, which can cause death. Stanford psychiatrist Anna Lembke, lead author of a New England Journal of Medicine essay, calls our overprescribing and overuse of benzos a "hidden epidemic."[2]
Over 21 years (1999-2019), 51,446 psychotropic-drug-implicated deaths (where psychotropic drugs were a contributing cause of death) occurred, with the annual psychotropic-drug-implicated death rate increasing over 3.4 times from 0.40 to 1.37 per 100,000. During the same period, there were also 649,697 psychotropic drug overdoses.[3]
In psychiatry, iatrogenesis has traditionally been linked to complications of psychotropic drug treatment, Medical Xpress reports. "Current classification systems in psychiatry fail to consider the iatrogenic components of psychopathology related to behavioral toxicity [the negative effects of therapeutic levels of medication]." These drugs' "paradoxical effects, manifestations of tolerance (loss of clinical effect, refractoriness), withdrawal and post-withdrawal disorders, are increasingly common due to the widespread use of psychotropic drugs in the general population."[4] In other words, psychiatry often ignores the harmful side effects caused by psychiatric drugs, such as worsening mental health and withdrawal symptoms, which are becoming more common as these drugs are widely used.
There are at least 180 psychiatric drugs on the market, not including all generic versions. Some of the iatrogenic effects include irreversible movement disorders causing uncontrollable muscle contractions such as tardive dyskinesia (TD), akathisia and dystonia. TD occurs in 20%-50% of patients taking antipsychotics and is also linked to antidepressants, mood stabilizers and stimulants.[5]
More on nvtip.com
- Amid Controversy with The Weeknd/Playboi Carti and Buzz Surrounding His Upcoming Project, Darrin Jones Drops Soulful New Single "Under Control"
- ADHDCourses.com Launches: Transforming Parenting with Expert-Led Online Education
- Greg Welch Joins Calovia as Managing and Founding Partner
- Inframark's Mississippi Teams Expand Presence and Receive Honors from NOAA
- Lumber Brings Advanced AI and Seamless Integration to Acumatica Marketplace, Transforming Construction Workforce Management
Some psychotropics are nearly six times more likely to drive the person taking them to suicide than those not taking them, while spending time in a psychiatric hospital can increase that risk of self-inflicted death by 44 times.[6]
Clinical Psychology Science and Practice reported there is considerable evidence of heightened suicide risk and other negative outcomes during and immediately following hospitalization. As such, psychiatric hospitalization is iatrogenic. Despite limited research demonstrating its effectiveness in reducing suicide risk, inpatient hospitalization remains a primary "treatment" (often legally mandated, or forced) for individuals with high risk of suicide.[7]
Stanton Peele, Ph.D., states that "The world of mental health and psychiatry is in a tailspin," and cites Insel's "own confessional professional memoir," admitting, "The U.S., a country that leads the world in spending on medical research, also stands out for its dismal outcomes in people with mental illnesses. Indeed, over the last three decades, even as the government invested billions of dollars in better understanding the brain, by some measures, those outcomes have deteriorated."[8]
Founded in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and renowned University of New York psychiatrist Prof. Thomas Szasz, CCHR is calling for a transparent audit of the funds allocated to psychiatric services and their outcomes, and mental health research under NIMH. This audit aims to identify the failed treatments and programs that have contributed to the worsening state of the nation's mental health system.
Sources:
[1] time.com/6308096/therapy-mental-health-worse-us/
[2] time.com/6280929/polypharmacy-dangers-essay/
[3] pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8355085/
[4] medicalxpress.com/news/2019-07-iatrogenic-disorders-psychiatry-common-neglected.html
[5] www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5472076/
[6] link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00127-014-0912-2
[7] www.researchgate.net/publication/339741738_The_potential_iatrogenic_effects_of_psychiatric_hospitalization_for_suicidal_behavior_A_critical_review_and_recommendations_for_research
[8] peele.net/lib/americanpsychiatry.html
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights
0 Comments
Latest on nvtip.com
- 7 years ago a vision was born. Today 700+ clients are thriving with Cyntexa's expertise
- Infinity Garage Door Repair Offers 24/7 Emergency Service & Smart Home Upgrades in Las Vegas
- SlotCycle Raises $5.6M to Transform Secondary Gaming Equipment Market, Led by Discerning Capital
- Integris Composites Debuts its Concealed Response Shield System; 'Situational Armor' for Active-Shooter Responders When Seconds Count
- FOLKS Expands With The Launch Of FOLKS USA
- Safe Night Partners With Simsi To Offer A New Certification For Proactive Alliance With Rutgers University
- Human in Motion Robotics' XoMotion™ Recognized as USA Today's Top Robot at CES 2025
- AI Technology Advances in 2025, Fully Automated Solutions Reach the Investment World
- IFEZ captivates global audience with its innovative companies at CES 2025
- The One Experience™, Inc. Announces Inspiring Lineup of Pathway Guides for The One 2025 Event
- Stange Law Firm Opens Divorce and Family Law Office in Louisville, Kentucky
- Stange Law Firm Expands to Houston, Bringing Family Law Services to Texas
- A Look Back at Our 2024 Accomplishments: Complete Sliding Doors & Windows Continues to Lead with Excellence
- Franchising Success, One Pour at a Time
- FamBam Foods® Expands Healthy Snack Portfolio with Launch of Caulitos®
- Los Angeles Fires: Supporting Recovery Without Psychotropic Drug Risks
- Morphy's Heads to Las Vegas Jan. 24-25 to Host Old West Show & Auction Featuring Cowboy, Western and Native American Art and Antiques
- "Global Accreditation Failures: How the Wuhan Lab Certification Exposed Systemic Weaknesses and Paved the Way for COVID-19"
- TradeTek 2.0 Construction Takeoff and Estimating Software
- Get to know Dr. Raphael E. Cuomo, PhD, Professor and Scientist at the University of California, San Diego