Guest guest Posted October 18, 2004 Report Share Posted October 18, 2004 Anti-psychiatry wikipedia definition... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-psychiatry This " popular " wikipedia definition needs to be updated to stress the following anti-psychiatry supportive factors... APA's DSM publication development funded by Big Pharma. Recent developments concerning Big Pharma improprieties worldwide. Recent developments concerning FDA & other regulator & legislative improprieties. Recent developments concerning congressional & senatorial investigations of Big Pharma & FDA. Current prevalence of adverse drug reactions as a leading cause of death. Current public opinion very low concerning psychiatry profession & DSM as a result of Big Pharma manipulation affecting increasing number of families purely for profit. Inner divisional rift among two major conceptual groups within the APA concerning validity of DSM classifications. One subgroup's tenants has proven link to concommitant pedophilia (this subgroup of psychiatrists themselves are arguably " ill " ). APA's DSM publication updates history largely & repeatedly rooted in base motivations (greed/exploitation) targeting weaker societal segments. APA consistently & significantly retreated positionally when several of such segments organized verbal opposition. APA's DSM publication classifications largely scientifically unreliable and therefore scientifically invalid. There are approx 50 different names for essentially equivalent SSRI drug worldwide. APA ignores prolific scientific evidence of violent and aggressive patient acts associated with serotonergic drugs and their byproducts when measured in the CSF. http://www.cchr.org/event/31anni/violence/violpg2.htm http://www.cchr.org/issues/dsm/experts/index.htm [EXPERTS DEBUNK DSM ... " junk science, " according to an international poll of mental health experts conducted in England in 2001, the DSM-IV was voted one of the 10 worst psychiatric papers of the millennium.] The truth is when we try to fit psychiatry into the definition of a true science, it fails the test. The lack of science behind the DSM gives a clear idea of why it has earned such critics as the following small sample: Loren Mosher, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry: " DSM-IV is the fabrication upon which psychiatry seeks acceptance by medicine in general. Insiders know it is more a political than scientific document... DSM-IV has become a bible and a money making bestseller— its major failings notwithstanding. It confines and defines practice, some take it seriously, others more realistically. " And, " It is the way to get paid. Diagnostic reliability is easy to attain for research projects. The issue is what do the categories tell us? Do they in fact accurately represent the person with a problem? They don't, and can't, because there are no external validating criteria for psychiatric diagnoses. There is neither a blood test nor specific anatomic lesions for any major psychiatric disorder. " Margaret Hagen, author of Whores Of The Court, summarily dismisses the DSM: " Given their farcical `empirical' procedures for arriving at new disorders with their associated symptoms lists, where does the American Psychiatric Association get off claiming a scientific, research-based foundation for its diagnostic manual? This is nothing more than science by decree. They say it is science, so it is. " Dr. Dorman, internist and member of the Royal College of Physicians of the United Kingdom: " In short, the whole business of creating psychiatric categories of `disease', formalizing them with consensus, and subsequently ascribing diagnostic codes to them, which in turn leads to their use for insurance billing, is nothing but an extended racket furnishing psychiatry a pseudo-scientific aura. The perpetrators are, of course, feeding at the public trough. " A. Schaler, Ph.D.: The notion of scientific validity, though not an act, is related to fraud. Validity refers to the extent to which something represents or measures what it purports to represent or measure. When diagnostic measures do not represent what they purport to represent, we say that the measures lack validity. If a business transaction or trade rested on such a lack of validity, we might say that the lack of validity was instrumental in a commitment of fraud. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) published by the American Psychiatric Association and used by licensed psychotherapists throughout the country is notorious for low scientific validity. Yet it is instrumental in securing insurance reimbursement for psychotherapy services.... " Herb Kutchins of California State University, Sacramento, and Stuart A. Kirk of the University of California, Los Angeles, authors of Making Us Crazy: The Psychiatric Bible and the Creation of Mental Disorders: " The developers of DSM assume that if a group of psychiatrists agree on a list of atypical [new] behaviors, the behaviors constitute a valid mental disorder. Using this approach, creating mental disorders can become a parlor game in which clusters of all kinds of behaviors (i.e. syndromes) can be added to the manual. " " …there is ample reason to conclude that the latest versions of DSM as a clinical tool are unreliable and therefore of questionable validity as a classification system. " " There are indeed many illusions about DSM and very strong needs among its developers to believe that their dreams of scientific excellence and utility have come true…. " The " bitter medicine " is that DSM has " unsuccessfully attempted to medicalize too many human troubles. " [DSM] " …cannot be used to distinguish mental disorders from other human problems. In practical terms, this means that many people who do not have any mental disorder (although they may have other difficulties) will be inappropriately labeled as mentally ill and those who have a mental disorder will not have it recognized…If the unreliability of diagnosis were widely recognized and if there were no scientific patina [surface appearance] " to it, " the use of everyday behaviors as indicators of mental disorder would be more rigorously questioned by the public. The illusion that psychiatrists are in agreement when making diagnoses creates the appearance of a united professional consensus. " Professor Shorter, author of A History of Psychiatry: " Rather than heading off into the brave new world of science, DSM-IV-style psychiatry seemed in some ways to be heading out into the desert. " Szasz, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus: The Internationally renowned psychiatrist, Dr. Szasz, writes, " The ostensible validity of DSM is reinforced by psychiatry's claim that mental illnesses are brain diseases—a claim supposedly based on recent discoveries in brain imaging techniques and pharmacological agents for treatment. This is not true. " He also says, " There is no blood or other biological test to ascertain the presence of a mental illness, as there is for most bodily diseases. If such a test were developed, then the condition would cease to be a mental illness and would be classified, instead, as a symptom of a bodily disease. " Dr. Sydney , III, psychiatrist, neurologist: " [The DSM] has led to the unnecessary drugging of millions of American children who could be diagnosed, treated, and cured without the use of toxic and potentially lethal medications. " " The nonscientific approach used to create DSM leads to irrational and constantly changing diagnostic criteria: a patient might be perfectly normal according to one version of DSM and mentally ill by the standards of the next. (For instance, `narcissistic personality disorder'—used to describe vain people who are self-centered and frequently take advantage of others—was a DSM `diagnosis' until 1968. It was eliminated from the version used between 1968 and 1980, when it was reinstated. Thus, a self-centered, vain person was `mentally ill' before 1968, normal for the next twelve years, and then `mentally ill' again after 1980.) " Dr. Harold Pincus, Vice Chairman of the DSM-IV task force admitted, " There has never been any criterion that psychiatric diagnoses require a demonstrated biological etiology (cause). " R. McHugh, Professor of Psychiatry at s Hopkins University School of Medicine and psychiatrist-in-chief at the s Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore: " ... In the absence of validating conceptions like the six mechanisms of disease in internal medicine, American psychiatry has turned to " committees of experts " to define mental disorder. Membership on such committees is a mater of one's reputation in the APA—which means that those chosen can confidently be expected to manifest not only a requisite degree of psychiatric competence but, perhaps more crucially, some talent for diplomacy and self- promotion. " The new DSM approach of using experts and descriptive criteria in identifying psychiatric diseases has encouraged a productive industry. If you can describe it, you can name it; and if you can name it, then you can claim it exists as a distinct " entity " with, eventually, a direct treatment tied to it. Proposals for new psychiatric disorders have multiplied so feverishly that the DSM itself has grown from a mere 119 pages in 1968 to 886 in the latest edition; a new and enlarged edition, DSM-V, is already in the planning stages. Embedded within these hundreds of pages are some categories...that are dubious, in the sense that they are more like the normal responses of sensitive people than psychiatric " entities " ; and some that are purely the inventions of their proponents. " Genova, M.D., writing in Psychiatric Times, said: the " DSM diagnostic system has outlived its usefulness by about two decades. It should be abandoned, not revised. " Psychiatrist Dumont: " The humility and the arrogance in the prose are almost indistinguishable, frolicking like puppies at play. They say: `...while this manual provides a classification of mental disorder...no definition adequately specifies precise boundaries for the concept...' [APA, 1987]...They go on to say: `...there is no assumption that each mental disorder is a discrete entity with sharp boundaries between it and other mental disorders or between it and no mental disorder' [APA, 1987]. " Psychologist Garfinkel, a staff member of the American Psychological Association, said of the DSM-III-R work group: " The low level of intellectual effort was shocking. Diagnoses were developed by majority vote on the level we would use to choose a restaurant. You feel like Italian, I feel like Chinese, so let's go to a cafeteria. Then it's typed into the computer. " Healy, psychiatrist, director of the North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine and author of The Anti-Depressant Era: " There must inevitably be a struggle, or a dialectical process, to determine the meaning of physical symptoms and where the boundaries of health and disease lie. " J. Allan Hobson and A. Leonard, authors of Out of Its Mind, Psychiatry in Crisis, A Call For Reform: " ...DSM-IV's authoritative status and detailed nature tends to promote the idea that rote diagnosis and pill-pushing are acceptable. " Psychiatrist Al Parides: DSM is " a masterpiece of political maneuvering. " He also observed that " what they have done is medicalize many problems that don't have demonstrable, biological causes. " Elliot S. Valenstein, biopsychologist, author of Blaming the Brain: " DSM-IV is not an exciting document. It is purely descriptive and presents no new scientific insights or any theories about what causes the many mental disorders it lists. " Lawrence Diller, M.D., author of Running on Ritalin: " …[The] search for a biological marker is doomed from the outset because of the contradictions and ambiguities of the diagnostic construct of ADHD as defined by the DSM…I liken the efforts to discover a marker…to the search for the Holy Grail. " ] Note: WikiWiki is Hawaiian term meaning " quick " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 18, 2004 Report Share Posted October 18, 2004 Anti-psychiatry wikipedia definition... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-psychiatry This " popular " wikipedia definition needs to be updated to stress the following anti-psychiatry supportive factors... APA's DSM publication development funded by Big Pharma. Recent developments concerning Big Pharma improprieties worldwide. Recent developments concerning FDA & other regulator & legislative improprieties. Recent developments concerning congressional & senatorial investigations of Big Pharma & FDA. Current prevalence of adverse drug reactions as a leading cause of death. Current public opinion very low concerning psychiatry profession & DSM as a result of Big Pharma manipulation affecting increasing number of families purely for profit. Inner divisional rift among two major conceptual groups within the APA concerning validity of DSM classifications. One subgroup's tenants has proven link to concommitant pedophilia (this subgroup of psychiatrists themselves are arguably " ill " ). APA's DSM publication updates history largely & repeatedly rooted in base motivations (greed/exploitation) targeting weaker societal segments. APA consistently & significantly retreated positionally when several of such segments organized verbal opposition. APA's DSM publication classifications largely scientifically unreliable and therefore scientifically invalid. There are approx 50 different names for essentially equivalent SSRI drug worldwide. APA ignores prolific scientific evidence of violent and aggressive patient acts associated with serotonergic drugs and their byproducts when measured in the CSF. http://www.cchr.org/event/31anni/violence/violpg2.htm http://www.cchr.org/issues/dsm/experts/index.htm [EXPERTS DEBUNK DSM ... " junk science, " according to an international poll of mental health experts conducted in England in 2001, the DSM-IV was voted one of the 10 worst psychiatric papers of the millennium.] The truth is when we try to fit psychiatry into the definition of a true science, it fails the test. The lack of science behind the DSM gives a clear idea of why it has earned such critics as the following small sample: Loren Mosher, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry: " DSM-IV is the fabrication upon which psychiatry seeks acceptance by medicine in general. Insiders know it is more a political than scientific document... DSM-IV has become a bible and a money making bestseller— its major failings notwithstanding. It confines and defines practice, some take it seriously, others more realistically. " And, " It is the way to get paid. Diagnostic reliability is easy to attain for research projects. The issue is what do the categories tell us? Do they in fact accurately represent the person with a problem? They don't, and can't, because there are no external validating criteria for psychiatric diagnoses. There is neither a blood test nor specific anatomic lesions for any major psychiatric disorder. " Margaret Hagen, author of Whores Of The Court, summarily dismisses the DSM: " Given their farcical `empirical' procedures for arriving at new disorders with their associated symptoms lists, where does the American Psychiatric Association get off claiming a scientific, research-based foundation for its diagnostic manual? This is nothing more than science by decree. They say it is science, so it is. " Dr. Dorman, internist and member of the Royal College of Physicians of the United Kingdom: " In short, the whole business of creating psychiatric categories of `disease', formalizing them with consensus, and subsequently ascribing diagnostic codes to them, which in turn leads to their use for insurance billing, is nothing but an extended racket furnishing psychiatry a pseudo-scientific aura. The perpetrators are, of course, feeding at the public trough. " A. Schaler, Ph.D.: The notion of scientific validity, though not an act, is related to fraud. Validity refers to the extent to which something represents or measures what it purports to represent or measure. When diagnostic measures do not represent what they purport to represent, we say that the measures lack validity. If a business transaction or trade rested on such a lack of validity, we might say that the lack of validity was instrumental in a commitment of fraud. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) published by the American Psychiatric Association and used by licensed psychotherapists throughout the country is notorious for low scientific validity. Yet it is instrumental in securing insurance reimbursement for psychotherapy services.... " Herb Kutchins of California State University, Sacramento, and Stuart A. Kirk of the University of California, Los Angeles, authors of Making Us Crazy: The Psychiatric Bible and the Creation of Mental Disorders: " The developers of DSM assume that if a group of psychiatrists agree on a list of atypical [new] behaviors, the behaviors constitute a valid mental disorder. Using this approach, creating mental disorders can become a parlor game in which clusters of all kinds of behaviors (i.e. syndromes) can be added to the manual. " " …there is ample reason to conclude that the latest versions of DSM as a clinical tool are unreliable and therefore of questionable validity as a classification system. " " There are indeed many illusions about DSM and very strong needs among its developers to believe that their dreams of scientific excellence and utility have come true…. " The " bitter medicine " is that DSM has " unsuccessfully attempted to medicalize too many human troubles. " [DSM] " …cannot be used to distinguish mental disorders from other human problems. In practical terms, this means that many people who do not have any mental disorder (although they may have other difficulties) will be inappropriately labeled as mentally ill and those who have a mental disorder will not have it recognized…If the unreliability of diagnosis were widely recognized and if there were no scientific patina [surface appearance] " to it, " the use of everyday behaviors as indicators of mental disorder would be more rigorously questioned by the public. The illusion that psychiatrists are in agreement when making diagnoses creates the appearance of a united professional consensus. " Professor Shorter, author of A History of Psychiatry: " Rather than heading off into the brave new world of science, DSM-IV-style psychiatry seemed in some ways to be heading out into the desert. " Szasz, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus: The Internationally renowned psychiatrist, Dr. Szasz, writes, " The ostensible validity of DSM is reinforced by psychiatry's claim that mental illnesses are brain diseases—a claim supposedly based on recent discoveries in brain imaging techniques and pharmacological agents for treatment. This is not true. " He also says, " There is no blood or other biological test to ascertain the presence of a mental illness, as there is for most bodily diseases. If such a test were developed, then the condition would cease to be a mental illness and would be classified, instead, as a symptom of a bodily disease. " Dr. Sydney , III, psychiatrist, neurologist: " [The DSM] has led to the unnecessary drugging of millions of American children who could be diagnosed, treated, and cured without the use of toxic and potentially lethal medications. " " The nonscientific approach used to create DSM leads to irrational and constantly changing diagnostic criteria: a patient might be perfectly normal according to one version of DSM and mentally ill by the standards of the next. (For instance, `narcissistic personality disorder'—used to describe vain people who are self-centered and frequently take advantage of others—was a DSM `diagnosis' until 1968. It was eliminated from the version used between 1968 and 1980, when it was reinstated. Thus, a self-centered, vain person was `mentally ill' before 1968, normal for the next twelve years, and then `mentally ill' again after 1980.) " Dr. Harold Pincus, Vice Chairman of the DSM-IV task force admitted, " There has never been any criterion that psychiatric diagnoses require a demonstrated biological etiology (cause). " R. McHugh, Professor of Psychiatry at s Hopkins University School of Medicine and psychiatrist-in-chief at the s Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore: " ... In the absence of validating conceptions like the six mechanisms of disease in internal medicine, American psychiatry has turned to " committees of experts " to define mental disorder. Membership on such committees is a mater of one's reputation in the APA—which means that those chosen can confidently be expected to manifest not only a requisite degree of psychiatric competence but, perhaps more crucially, some talent for diplomacy and self- promotion. " The new DSM approach of using experts and descriptive criteria in identifying psychiatric diseases has encouraged a productive industry. If you can describe it, you can name it; and if you can name it, then you can claim it exists as a distinct " entity " with, eventually, a direct treatment tied to it. Proposals for new psychiatric disorders have multiplied so feverishly that the DSM itself has grown from a mere 119 pages in 1968 to 886 in the latest edition; a new and enlarged edition, DSM-V, is already in the planning stages. Embedded within these hundreds of pages are some categories...that are dubious, in the sense that they are more like the normal responses of sensitive people than psychiatric " entities " ; and some that are purely the inventions of their proponents. " Genova, M.D., writing in Psychiatric Times, said: the " DSM diagnostic system has outlived its usefulness by about two decades. It should be abandoned, not revised. " Psychiatrist Dumont: " The humility and the arrogance in the prose are almost indistinguishable, frolicking like puppies at play. They say: `...while this manual provides a classification of mental disorder...no definition adequately specifies precise boundaries for the concept...' [APA, 1987]...They go on to say: `...there is no assumption that each mental disorder is a discrete entity with sharp boundaries between it and other mental disorders or between it and no mental disorder' [APA, 1987]. " Psychologist Garfinkel, a staff member of the American Psychological Association, said of the DSM-III-R work group: " The low level of intellectual effort was shocking. Diagnoses were developed by majority vote on the level we would use to choose a restaurant. You feel like Italian, I feel like Chinese, so let's go to a cafeteria. Then it's typed into the computer. " Healy, psychiatrist, director of the North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine and author of The Anti-Depressant Era: " There must inevitably be a struggle, or a dialectical process, to determine the meaning of physical symptoms and where the boundaries of health and disease lie. " J. Allan Hobson and A. Leonard, authors of Out of Its Mind, Psychiatry in Crisis, A Call For Reform: " ...DSM-IV's authoritative status and detailed nature tends to promote the idea that rote diagnosis and pill-pushing are acceptable. " Psychiatrist Al Parides: DSM is " a masterpiece of political maneuvering. " He also observed that " what they have done is medicalize many problems that don't have demonstrable, biological causes. " Elliot S. Valenstein, biopsychologist, author of Blaming the Brain: " DSM-IV is not an exciting document. It is purely descriptive and presents no new scientific insights or any theories about what causes the many mental disorders it lists. " Lawrence Diller, M.D., author of Running on Ritalin: " …[The] search for a biological marker is doomed from the outset because of the contradictions and ambiguities of the diagnostic construct of ADHD as defined by the DSM…I liken the efforts to discover a marker…to the search for the Holy Grail. " ] Note: WikiWiki is Hawaiian term meaning " quick " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 18, 2004 Report Share Posted October 18, 2004 Anti-psychiatry wikipedia definition... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-psychiatry This " popular " wikipedia definition needs to be updated to stress the following anti-psychiatry supportive factors... APA's DSM publication development funded by Big Pharma. Recent developments concerning Big Pharma improprieties worldwide. Recent developments concerning FDA & other regulator & legislative improprieties. Recent developments concerning congressional & senatorial investigations of Big Pharma & FDA. Current prevalence of adverse drug reactions as a leading cause of death. Current public opinion very low concerning psychiatry profession & DSM as a result of Big Pharma manipulation affecting increasing number of families purely for profit. Inner divisional rift among two major conceptual groups within the APA concerning validity of DSM classifications. One subgroup's tenants has proven link to concommitant pedophilia (this subgroup of psychiatrists themselves are arguably " ill " ). APA's DSM publication updates history largely & repeatedly rooted in base motivations (greed/exploitation) targeting weaker societal segments. APA consistently & significantly retreated positionally when several of such segments organized verbal opposition. APA's DSM publication classifications largely scientifically unreliable and therefore scientifically invalid. There are approx 50 different names for essentially equivalent SSRI drug worldwide. APA ignores prolific scientific evidence of violent and aggressive patient acts associated with serotonergic drugs and their byproducts when measured in the CSF. http://www.cchr.org/event/31anni/violence/violpg2.htm http://www.cchr.org/issues/dsm/experts/index.htm [EXPERTS DEBUNK DSM ... " junk science, " according to an international poll of mental health experts conducted in England in 2001, the DSM-IV was voted one of the 10 worst psychiatric papers of the millennium.] The truth is when we try to fit psychiatry into the definition of a true science, it fails the test. The lack of science behind the DSM gives a clear idea of why it has earned such critics as the following small sample: Loren Mosher, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry: " DSM-IV is the fabrication upon which psychiatry seeks acceptance by medicine in general. Insiders know it is more a political than scientific document... DSM-IV has become a bible and a money making bestseller— its major failings notwithstanding. It confines and defines practice, some take it seriously, others more realistically. " And, " It is the way to get paid. Diagnostic reliability is easy to attain for research projects. The issue is what do the categories tell us? Do they in fact accurately represent the person with a problem? They don't, and can't, because there are no external validating criteria for psychiatric diagnoses. There is neither a blood test nor specific anatomic lesions for any major psychiatric disorder. " Margaret Hagen, author of Whores Of The Court, summarily dismisses the DSM: " Given their farcical `empirical' procedures for arriving at new disorders with their associated symptoms lists, where does the American Psychiatric Association get off claiming a scientific, research-based foundation for its diagnostic manual? This is nothing more than science by decree. They say it is science, so it is. " Dr. Dorman, internist and member of the Royal College of Physicians of the United Kingdom: " In short, the whole business of creating psychiatric categories of `disease', formalizing them with consensus, and subsequently ascribing diagnostic codes to them, which in turn leads to their use for insurance billing, is nothing but an extended racket furnishing psychiatry a pseudo-scientific aura. The perpetrators are, of course, feeding at the public trough. " A. Schaler, Ph.D.: The notion of scientific validity, though not an act, is related to fraud. Validity refers to the extent to which something represents or measures what it purports to represent or measure. When diagnostic measures do not represent what they purport to represent, we say that the measures lack validity. If a business transaction or trade rested on such a lack of validity, we might say that the lack of validity was instrumental in a commitment of fraud. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) published by the American Psychiatric Association and used by licensed psychotherapists throughout the country is notorious for low scientific validity. Yet it is instrumental in securing insurance reimbursement for psychotherapy services.... " Herb Kutchins of California State University, Sacramento, and Stuart A. Kirk of the University of California, Los Angeles, authors of Making Us Crazy: The Psychiatric Bible and the Creation of Mental Disorders: " The developers of DSM assume that if a group of psychiatrists agree on a list of atypical [new] behaviors, the behaviors constitute a valid mental disorder. Using this approach, creating mental disorders can become a parlor game in which clusters of all kinds of behaviors (i.e. syndromes) can be added to the manual. " " …there is ample reason to conclude that the latest versions of DSM as a clinical tool are unreliable and therefore of questionable validity as a classification system. " " There are indeed many illusions about DSM and very strong needs among its developers to believe that their dreams of scientific excellence and utility have come true…. " The " bitter medicine " is that DSM has " unsuccessfully attempted to medicalize too many human troubles. " [DSM] " …cannot be used to distinguish mental disorders from other human problems. In practical terms, this means that many people who do not have any mental disorder (although they may have other difficulties) will be inappropriately labeled as mentally ill and those who have a mental disorder will not have it recognized…If the unreliability of diagnosis were widely recognized and if there were no scientific patina [surface appearance] " to it, " the use of everyday behaviors as indicators of mental disorder would be more rigorously questioned by the public. The illusion that psychiatrists are in agreement when making diagnoses creates the appearance of a united professional consensus. " Professor Shorter, author of A History of Psychiatry: " Rather than heading off into the brave new world of science, DSM-IV-style psychiatry seemed in some ways to be heading out into the desert. " Szasz, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus: The Internationally renowned psychiatrist, Dr. Szasz, writes, " The ostensible validity of DSM is reinforced by psychiatry's claim that mental illnesses are brain diseases—a claim supposedly based on recent discoveries in brain imaging techniques and pharmacological agents for treatment. This is not true. " He also says, " There is no blood or other biological test to ascertain the presence of a mental illness, as there is for most bodily diseases. If such a test were developed, then the condition would cease to be a mental illness and would be classified, instead, as a symptom of a bodily disease. " Dr. Sydney , III, psychiatrist, neurologist: " [The DSM] has led to the unnecessary drugging of millions of American children who could be diagnosed, treated, and cured without the use of toxic and potentially lethal medications. " " The nonscientific approach used to create DSM leads to irrational and constantly changing diagnostic criteria: a patient might be perfectly normal according to one version of DSM and mentally ill by the standards of the next. (For instance, `narcissistic personality disorder'—used to describe vain people who are self-centered and frequently take advantage of others—was a DSM `diagnosis' until 1968. It was eliminated from the version used between 1968 and 1980, when it was reinstated. Thus, a self-centered, vain person was `mentally ill' before 1968, normal for the next twelve years, and then `mentally ill' again after 1980.) " Dr. Harold Pincus, Vice Chairman of the DSM-IV task force admitted, " There has never been any criterion that psychiatric diagnoses require a demonstrated biological etiology (cause). " R. McHugh, Professor of Psychiatry at s Hopkins University School of Medicine and psychiatrist-in-chief at the s Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore: " ... In the absence of validating conceptions like the six mechanisms of disease in internal medicine, American psychiatry has turned to " committees of experts " to define mental disorder. Membership on such committees is a mater of one's reputation in the APA—which means that those chosen can confidently be expected to manifest not only a requisite degree of psychiatric competence but, perhaps more crucially, some talent for diplomacy and self- promotion. " The new DSM approach of using experts and descriptive criteria in identifying psychiatric diseases has encouraged a productive industry. If you can describe it, you can name it; and if you can name it, then you can claim it exists as a distinct " entity " with, eventually, a direct treatment tied to it. Proposals for new psychiatric disorders have multiplied so feverishly that the DSM itself has grown from a mere 119 pages in 1968 to 886 in the latest edition; a new and enlarged edition, DSM-V, is already in the planning stages. Embedded within these hundreds of pages are some categories...that are dubious, in the sense that they are more like the normal responses of sensitive people than psychiatric " entities " ; and some that are purely the inventions of their proponents. " Genova, M.D., writing in Psychiatric Times, said: the " DSM diagnostic system has outlived its usefulness by about two decades. It should be abandoned, not revised. " Psychiatrist Dumont: " The humility and the arrogance in the prose are almost indistinguishable, frolicking like puppies at play. They say: `...while this manual provides a classification of mental disorder...no definition adequately specifies precise boundaries for the concept...' [APA, 1987]...They go on to say: `...there is no assumption that each mental disorder is a discrete entity with sharp boundaries between it and other mental disorders or between it and no mental disorder' [APA, 1987]. " Psychologist Garfinkel, a staff member of the American Psychological Association, said of the DSM-III-R work group: " The low level of intellectual effort was shocking. Diagnoses were developed by majority vote on the level we would use to choose a restaurant. You feel like Italian, I feel like Chinese, so let's go to a cafeteria. Then it's typed into the computer. " Healy, psychiatrist, director of the North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine and author of The Anti-Depressant Era: " There must inevitably be a struggle, or a dialectical process, to determine the meaning of physical symptoms and where the boundaries of health and disease lie. " J. Allan Hobson and A. Leonard, authors of Out of Its Mind, Psychiatry in Crisis, A Call For Reform: " ...DSM-IV's authoritative status and detailed nature tends to promote the idea that rote diagnosis and pill-pushing are acceptable. " Psychiatrist Al Parides: DSM is " a masterpiece of political maneuvering. " He also observed that " what they have done is medicalize many problems that don't have demonstrable, biological causes. " Elliot S. Valenstein, biopsychologist, author of Blaming the Brain: " DSM-IV is not an exciting document. It is purely descriptive and presents no new scientific insights or any theories about what causes the many mental disorders it lists. " Lawrence Diller, M.D., author of Running on Ritalin: " …[The] search for a biological marker is doomed from the outset because of the contradictions and ambiguities of the diagnostic construct of ADHD as defined by the DSM…I liken the efforts to discover a marker…to the search for the Holy Grail. " ] Note: WikiWiki is Hawaiian term meaning " quick " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 18, 2004 Report Share Posted October 18, 2004 Anti-psychiatry wikipedia definition... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-psychiatry This " popular " wikipedia definition needs to be updated to stress the following anti-psychiatry supportive factors... APA's DSM publication development funded by Big Pharma. Recent developments concerning Big Pharma improprieties worldwide. Recent developments concerning FDA & other regulator & legislative improprieties. Recent developments concerning congressional & senatorial investigations of Big Pharma & FDA. Current prevalence of adverse drug reactions as a leading cause of death. Current public opinion very low concerning psychiatry profession & DSM as a result of Big Pharma manipulation affecting increasing number of families purely for profit. Inner divisional rift among two major conceptual groups within the APA concerning validity of DSM classifications. One subgroup's tenants has proven link to concommitant pedophilia (this subgroup of psychiatrists themselves are arguably " ill " ). APA's DSM publication updates history largely & repeatedly rooted in base motivations (greed/exploitation) targeting weaker societal segments. APA consistently & significantly retreated positionally when several of such segments organized verbal opposition. APA's DSM publication classifications largely scientifically unreliable and therefore scientifically invalid. There are approx 50 different names for essentially equivalent SSRI drug worldwide. APA ignores prolific scientific evidence of violent and aggressive patient acts associated with serotonergic drugs and their byproducts when measured in the CSF. http://www.cchr.org/event/31anni/violence/violpg2.htm http://www.cchr.org/issues/dsm/experts/index.htm [EXPERTS DEBUNK DSM ... " junk science, " according to an international poll of mental health experts conducted in England in 2001, the DSM-IV was voted one of the 10 worst psychiatric papers of the millennium.] The truth is when we try to fit psychiatry into the definition of a true science, it fails the test. The lack of science behind the DSM gives a clear idea of why it has earned such critics as the following small sample: Loren Mosher, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry: " DSM-IV is the fabrication upon which psychiatry seeks acceptance by medicine in general. Insiders know it is more a political than scientific document... DSM-IV has become a bible and a money making bestseller— its major failings notwithstanding. It confines and defines practice, some take it seriously, others more realistically. " And, " It is the way to get paid. Diagnostic reliability is easy to attain for research projects. The issue is what do the categories tell us? Do they in fact accurately represent the person with a problem? They don't, and can't, because there are no external validating criteria for psychiatric diagnoses. There is neither a blood test nor specific anatomic lesions for any major psychiatric disorder. " Margaret Hagen, author of Whores Of The Court, summarily dismisses the DSM: " Given their farcical `empirical' procedures for arriving at new disorders with their associated symptoms lists, where does the American Psychiatric Association get off claiming a scientific, research-based foundation for its diagnostic manual? This is nothing more than science by decree. They say it is science, so it is. " Dr. Dorman, internist and member of the Royal College of Physicians of the United Kingdom: " In short, the whole business of creating psychiatric categories of `disease', formalizing them with consensus, and subsequently ascribing diagnostic codes to them, which in turn leads to their use for insurance billing, is nothing but an extended racket furnishing psychiatry a pseudo-scientific aura. The perpetrators are, of course, feeding at the public trough. " A. Schaler, Ph.D.: The notion of scientific validity, though not an act, is related to fraud. Validity refers to the extent to which something represents or measures what it purports to represent or measure. When diagnostic measures do not represent what they purport to represent, we say that the measures lack validity. If a business transaction or trade rested on such a lack of validity, we might say that the lack of validity was instrumental in a commitment of fraud. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) published by the American Psychiatric Association and used by licensed psychotherapists throughout the country is notorious for low scientific validity. Yet it is instrumental in securing insurance reimbursement for psychotherapy services.... " Herb Kutchins of California State University, Sacramento, and Stuart A. Kirk of the University of California, Los Angeles, authors of Making Us Crazy: The Psychiatric Bible and the Creation of Mental Disorders: " The developers of DSM assume that if a group of psychiatrists agree on a list of atypical [new] behaviors, the behaviors constitute a valid mental disorder. Using this approach, creating mental disorders can become a parlor game in which clusters of all kinds of behaviors (i.e. syndromes) can be added to the manual. " " …there is ample reason to conclude that the latest versions of DSM as a clinical tool are unreliable and therefore of questionable validity as a classification system. " " There are indeed many illusions about DSM and very strong needs among its developers to believe that their dreams of scientific excellence and utility have come true…. " The " bitter medicine " is that DSM has " unsuccessfully attempted to medicalize too many human troubles. " [DSM] " …cannot be used to distinguish mental disorders from other human problems. In practical terms, this means that many people who do not have any mental disorder (although they may have other difficulties) will be inappropriately labeled as mentally ill and those who have a mental disorder will not have it recognized…If the unreliability of diagnosis were widely recognized and if there were no scientific patina [surface appearance] " to it, " the use of everyday behaviors as indicators of mental disorder would be more rigorously questioned by the public. The illusion that psychiatrists are in agreement when making diagnoses creates the appearance of a united professional consensus. " Professor Shorter, author of A History of Psychiatry: " Rather than heading off into the brave new world of science, DSM-IV-style psychiatry seemed in some ways to be heading out into the desert. " Szasz, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry Emeritus: The Internationally renowned psychiatrist, Dr. Szasz, writes, " The ostensible validity of DSM is reinforced by psychiatry's claim that mental illnesses are brain diseases—a claim supposedly based on recent discoveries in brain imaging techniques and pharmacological agents for treatment. This is not true. " He also says, " There is no blood or other biological test to ascertain the presence of a mental illness, as there is for most bodily diseases. If such a test were developed, then the condition would cease to be a mental illness and would be classified, instead, as a symptom of a bodily disease. " Dr. Sydney , III, psychiatrist, neurologist: " [The DSM] has led to the unnecessary drugging of millions of American children who could be diagnosed, treated, and cured without the use of toxic and potentially lethal medications. " " The nonscientific approach used to create DSM leads to irrational and constantly changing diagnostic criteria: a patient might be perfectly normal according to one version of DSM and mentally ill by the standards of the next. (For instance, `narcissistic personality disorder'—used to describe vain people who are self-centered and frequently take advantage of others—was a DSM `diagnosis' until 1968. It was eliminated from the version used between 1968 and 1980, when it was reinstated. Thus, a self-centered, vain person was `mentally ill' before 1968, normal for the next twelve years, and then `mentally ill' again after 1980.) " Dr. Harold Pincus, Vice Chairman of the DSM-IV task force admitted, " There has never been any criterion that psychiatric diagnoses require a demonstrated biological etiology (cause). " R. McHugh, Professor of Psychiatry at s Hopkins University School of Medicine and psychiatrist-in-chief at the s Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore: " ... In the absence of validating conceptions like the six mechanisms of disease in internal medicine, American psychiatry has turned to " committees of experts " to define mental disorder. Membership on such committees is a mater of one's reputation in the APA—which means that those chosen can confidently be expected to manifest not only a requisite degree of psychiatric competence but, perhaps more crucially, some talent for diplomacy and self- promotion. " The new DSM approach of using experts and descriptive criteria in identifying psychiatric diseases has encouraged a productive industry. If you can describe it, you can name it; and if you can name it, then you can claim it exists as a distinct " entity " with, eventually, a direct treatment tied to it. Proposals for new psychiatric disorders have multiplied so feverishly that the DSM itself has grown from a mere 119 pages in 1968 to 886 in the latest edition; a new and enlarged edition, DSM-V, is already in the planning stages. Embedded within these hundreds of pages are some categories...that are dubious, in the sense that they are more like the normal responses of sensitive people than psychiatric " entities " ; and some that are purely the inventions of their proponents. " Genova, M.D., writing in Psychiatric Times, said: the " DSM diagnostic system has outlived its usefulness by about two decades. It should be abandoned, not revised. " Psychiatrist Dumont: " The humility and the arrogance in the prose are almost indistinguishable, frolicking like puppies at play. They say: `...while this manual provides a classification of mental disorder...no definition adequately specifies precise boundaries for the concept...' [APA, 1987]...They go on to say: `...there is no assumption that each mental disorder is a discrete entity with sharp boundaries between it and other mental disorders or between it and no mental disorder' [APA, 1987]. " Psychologist Garfinkel, a staff member of the American Psychological Association, said of the DSM-III-R work group: " The low level of intellectual effort was shocking. Diagnoses were developed by majority vote on the level we would use to choose a restaurant. You feel like Italian, I feel like Chinese, so let's go to a cafeteria. Then it's typed into the computer. " Healy, psychiatrist, director of the North Wales Department of Psychological Medicine and author of The Anti-Depressant Era: " There must inevitably be a struggle, or a dialectical process, to determine the meaning of physical symptoms and where the boundaries of health and disease lie. " J. Allan Hobson and A. Leonard, authors of Out of Its Mind, Psychiatry in Crisis, A Call For Reform: " ...DSM-IV's authoritative status and detailed nature tends to promote the idea that rote diagnosis and pill-pushing are acceptable. " Psychiatrist Al Parides: DSM is " a masterpiece of political maneuvering. " He also observed that " what they have done is medicalize many problems that don't have demonstrable, biological causes. " Elliot S. Valenstein, biopsychologist, author of Blaming the Brain: " DSM-IV is not an exciting document. It is purely descriptive and presents no new scientific insights or any theories about what causes the many mental disorders it lists. " Lawrence Diller, M.D., author of Running on Ritalin: " …[The] search for a biological marker is doomed from the outset because of the contradictions and ambiguities of the diagnostic construct of ADHD as defined by the DSM…I liken the efforts to discover a marker…to the search for the Holy Grail. " ] Note: WikiWiki is Hawaiian term meaning " quick " . Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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