âSocial Factors Influence Schizophrenia?â
PsychCentral covers new research linking social deprivation, population density and inequality with higher rates of psychotic symptoms and diagnoses for schizophrenia. âThis is important because other research has shown that many health and social outcomes also tend to be optimal when societies are more equal.â
Duty to Warn â 14 Lies That Our Psychiatry Professors in Medical School Taught...
Revealing the false information provided about psychiatry should cause any thinking person, patient, thought-leader or politician to wonder: âhow many otherwise normal or potentially curable people over the last half century of psych drug propaganda have actually been mis-labeled as mentally ill (and then mis-treated) and sent down the convoluted path of therapeutic misadventures â heading toward oblivion?â
âDavid Bowie, Psychosis and Positive Nonconformityâ
For MinnPost, Susan Perry discusses the late singer-songwriter and actor David Bowie and his experiences with psychosis. She highlights the work of psychologist Vaughan Bell, who details how Bowieâs family history of psychosis is reflected in his work, and Stephanie Pappas, explaining âwhy Bowieâs positive expression of nonconformity has helped so many people who feel like misfits.â
SCOTUS Declines Risperdal Appeal, J&J to Pay $124 M
On Monday, the US Supreme Court declined to hear Johnson and Johnsonâs final appeal, forcing the company to pay $124 million for the deceptive marketing of the antipsychotic Risperdal. In 2011, South Carolina ordered the company to pay $327 million for pursuing âprofits-at-all-costsâ in its efforts to persuade doctors to prescribe their drug, but the fine was lowered to $136 million last year. The company had hoped to argue that the remaining penalties constituted an âexcessive fineâ and was supported by PhRMA, the Washington Legal Foundation, the Cato Institute and the Chamber of Commerce.
âPsychotic Symptoms in Children on Stimulants. What are the Implications for the Clinician?â
âA little background digging revealed to me that this study is the tip of a new iceberg relative to ADHD diagnosis, stimulant treatment, and...
âWhy Are So Many Children on Antipsychotic Drugs?â
âDo they make people less aggressive? Yes, sometimes they do. Will they sedate people? Absolutely. Will they make kids easier to manage? They will,â Robert Whitaker tells Liz Spikol for Philadelphia Magazine. âBut I know of no study that shows that medicating these kids long-term will help them grow up and thrive. The developing brain is a very delicate thing. The narrative is that these side effects are mild, and thatâs just not true, and that the benefits are well-established, and so often theyâre not.â
Being Bullied by Age Eight Linked to Depression in Adulthood
There is a growing body of evidence suggesting that being exposed to bullying in childhood can contribute to mental health problems later in life. In a new study, published in JAMA Psychiatry, the researchers found that children who reported being bullied at age eight were significantly more likely to seek treatment for mental health problems by age twenty-nine.
Becoming a Hearing Voices Facilitator
For three days in December, I was fortunate enough to attend the Hearing Voices Facilitator Training held in Portland, OR. This training expanded my understanding of the voice hearing experience and equipped me with a number of tools to use in facilitating hearing voices support groups. Grounded in a feeling of community, the training was dynamic, emotionally therapeutic, and educational all at the same time â a crystal clear example of how support groups themselves might manifest in the lives of their members.
Letters to the Editor: âThe Treatment of Choiceâ
Readers respond to the New York Times article, âThe Treatment of Choice,â about innovative programs for psychosis and schizophrenia that involve patients and their families in treatment decisions. âNarratives of success counter a drumbeat of faulty links of mental illness and violence, inaccuracies which serve only to further stigmatize and isolate individuals with psychiatric illness.â
Study Examines Womenâs Experiences of Hearing Voices
An international group of researchers from multiple disciplines has published a historical, qualitative, and quantitative investigation into voice-hearing in women. The interdisciplinary project, freely available from Frontiers in Psychiatry, explores how sexism, exploitation, and oppression bear on womenâsâ experiences of hearing voices.
Is an Ominous New Era of Diagnosing Psychosis by Biotype on the Horizon?
When former NIMH chief Dr. Thomas Insel speaks, people listen. Dr. Insel famously criticized the DSM a couple of years ago for its lack of reliability. He notably broke ranks with the APA by saying there were no bio-markers, blood tests, genetic tests or imaging tests that could verify or establish a DSM diagnosis of schizophrenia, bipolar or schizoaffective disorder. However in a new article he announces research that claims to have found bona-fide physiological markers that identify specific "biotypes" of psychosis. This system could, purportedly, identify a person as possessing a specific biotype of psychosis, instead of a DSM-category diagnosis.
Timberrr! Psychiatryâs Evidence Base For Antipsychotics Comes Crashing to the Ground
When I wrote Anatomy of an Epidemic, one of my foremost hopes was that it would prompt mainstream researchers to revisit the scientific literature. Was there evidence that any class of psychiatric medicationsâantipsychotics, antidepressants, stimulants, benzodiazepines, and so forthâprovided a long-term benefit? Now epidemiologists at Columbia University and City College of New York have reported that they have done such an investigation about antipsychotics, and their bottom-line finding can be summed up in this way: Psychiatryâs âevidence baseâ for long-term use of these drugs does not exist.
Researchers Test Harms and Benefits of Long Term Antipsychotic Use
Researchers from the City College of New York and Columbia University published a study this month testing the hypothesis that people diagnosed with schizophrenia treated long-term with antipsychotic drugs have worse outcomes than patients with no exposure to these drugs. They concluded that there is not a sufficient evidence base for the standard practice of long-term use of antipsychotic medications.
âPrograms Expand Schizophrenic Patientsâ Role in Their Own Careâ
Benedict Carey at the New York Times covers the push for new programs that emphasize supportive services, therapy, school and work assistance, and family education, rather than simply drug treatment.
Madness and the Family, Part III: Practical Methods for Transforming Troubled Family Systems
We are profoundly social beings living not as isolated individuals but as integral members of interdependent social systemsâour nuclear family system, and the broader social systems of extended family, peers, our community and the broader society. Therefore, psychosis and other forms of human distress often deemed âmental illnessâ are best seen not so much as something intrinsically âwrongâ or âdiseasedâ within the particular individual who is most exhibiting that distress, but rather as systemic problems that are merely being channeled through this individual.
Child Poverty Linked to Early Neurological Impairment
A new NIH-funded study suggests that children from low-income environments are more likely to have neurological impairments. The researchers claim that these neurodevelopmental issues are âdistinct from the risk of cognitive and emotional delays known to accompany early-life poverty.â
âForensic Psychiatric Patients and Staff View the Effects of âMental Illnessâ Differentlyâ
âOffenders sentenced to forensic psychiatric care do not consider their mental illness to be the main reason for their crime. Instead, they point to abuse, poverty or anger toward a particular person.â
âPsychiatric DrugâNot AntibioticâMesses with Gut Microbes, Spurs Obesityâ
In a series of experiments in mice, researchers found that the drug risperidone alters gut microbes, which in turn profoundly influence metabolism, weight, and overall health.
Book Review: “Overmedicated and Undertreated”
A former pharma executive has broken ranks with the industry in a new book by reporting how multiple psychiatrists, schools, and his desperate hopes pressed him to allow higher and higher doses of antipsychotic medications. The result: his 15-year-old son's death from Seroquel.
âChantix: For People Who are Dying to Quit Smokingâ
A four-part series from Canada Free Press on Pfizerâs smoking cessation drug Chantix and its connection to violence and suicide. âThe 26 case reports included three actual suicides. In every case, the acts or thoughts of violence towards others appeared to be both unprovoked and inexplicable. Most of the perpetrators had no previous history of violence, and most of them were middle-aged womenânot a group known for its propensity towards violent behavior.â
REFOCUS Psychosis Recovery Intervention Ready for Trials
A new pro-recovery manualized intervention â called the REFOCUS intervention â has been developed and will now be evaluated in a multisite randomized control trials. The strengths-based intervention, which focuses on promoting relationships, is outlined in the latest issue of the British Journal of Psychiatry.
âThe Rise and Fall of the Blockbuster Antipsychotic Seroquelâ
Martha Rosenberg highlights how the popular antipsychotic Seroquel is a perfect example of how direct-to-consumer advertising made billion dollar blockbuster drugs possible before side-effects...
âResearch Shows Sexual Abuse May Cause Schizophreniaâ
âGroundbreaking research in New Zealand shows sexual abuse may cause schizophrenia.â "The biggest myth about schizophrenia is that it's a solely biological disorder," co-author...
âHealing Voicesâ Documentary Announces Grass Roots Non-Theatrical Release
The producers of âHealing Voicesâ â a new social action documentary about mental health â have announced an innovative plan to release the film via community screening partners in a coordinated one-night global event. Written and Directed by PJ Moynihan of Digital Eyes Film, âHealing Voicesâ explores the experience commonly labeled as âpsychosisâ through the stories of real-life individuals, and asks the question: What are we talking about when we talk about âmental illnessâ? The film follows three subjects â Oryx, Jen, Dan â over nearly five years, and features interviews with notable international experts including: Robert Whitaker, Dr. Bruce Levine, Celia Brown, Will Hall, Dr. Marius Romme, and others, on the history of psychiatry and the rise of the âmedical modelâ of mental illness.
âDoes Schizophrenia Exist on an Autism-Like Spectrum?â
The results of epidemiological studies of the prevalence of hallucinations strongly imply that psychosis exists on a spectrum, according to the Scientific American. This suggests âthat the standard treatment for a psychotic episode might be due for an overhaul.â