psychiatric drugging and Teen Screen
You may recall the recent articles across the U.S. where the DSM was exposed as written by psychiatrists funded by pharmaceutical companies. The press is finally getting comfortable attacking the Psychiatric "Bible".
Quote from below article:
Caplan said one doctor is proposing a new diagnosis, relational disorder, which she summarizes as a dysfunctional relationship in which "neither person is mentally ill but the relationship is."
She said she wonders what would happen when an afflicted couple visits the doctor's office for help. "The psychiatrist takes out a pill. ... Where does the psychiatrist put it?" she asked.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nationworld/bal-te.anger17jul17,0,7903653.story
The Baltimore Sun
July 17, 2006 Monday
Behaving badly has disorder to call its own; Ever-growing list of mental illnesses met by skepticism
CHRIS EMERY, SUN REPORTER
When researchers announced that 16 million Americans who fly into occasional fits of unwarranted rage may suffer from a mental illness called "intermittent explosive disorder," the diagnosis drew its share of hoots and howls.
"Your grandmother would say these are bad folks who can't control their temper, and she would be right," said Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, an outspoken schizophrenia expert alarmed by the ever-expanding list of behaviors and attitudes branded as illnesses.
Torrey and other critics point to the volume that doctors use to determine mental illness, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, as evidence that the world is out of control.
When it was first published in 1952, the DSM identified about 100 official mental disorders. Today, it certifies roughly 375.
Intermittent explosive disorder became the latest of those to reach the public consciousness in June, when a study of the syndrome, funded by the National Institutes of Health, was released.
Newspaper columnists and others around the country exploded in skepticism at its conclusions.
"Is it me, or does it seem like good old-fashioned bad behavior - rudeness, obsession, violence - is being increasingly explained away by doctors and pharmaceutical companies as some kind of mental illness du jour?" asked columnist Daniel Vasquez in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.
In Georgia, a headline in The Augusta Chronicle read, "Jerks get disorder of their own."
While many critics echoed the derision historically reserved for mental illness, some mental health experts - including Torrey - are also skeptical.
"It's not a well-defined entity," Torrey said of IED. At the heart of his concern is a question mental health providers have long debated: When does a behavior or emotion cross the line from normal - however eccentric or undesirable - to become an illness?
Read more at the link above.
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Quote from below article:
Caplan said one doctor is proposing a new diagnosis, relational disorder, which she summarizes as a dysfunctional relationship in which "neither person is mentally ill but the relationship is."
She said she wonders what would happen when an afflicted couple visits the doctor's office for help. "The psychiatrist takes out a pill. ... Where does the psychiatrist put it?" she asked.
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nationworld/bal-te.anger17jul17,0,7903653.story
The Baltimore Sun
July 17, 2006 Monday
Behaving badly has disorder to call its own; Ever-growing list of mental illnesses met by skepticism
CHRIS EMERY, SUN REPORTER
When researchers announced that 16 million Americans who fly into occasional fits of unwarranted rage may suffer from a mental illness called "intermittent explosive disorder," the diagnosis drew its share of hoots and howls.
"Your grandmother would say these are bad folks who can't control their temper, and she would be right," said Dr. E. Fuller Torrey, an outspoken schizophrenia expert alarmed by the ever-expanding list of behaviors and attitudes branded as illnesses.
Torrey and other critics point to the volume that doctors use to determine mental illness, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, as evidence that the world is out of control.
When it was first published in 1952, the DSM identified about 100 official mental disorders. Today, it certifies roughly 375.
Intermittent explosive disorder became the latest of those to reach the public consciousness in June, when a study of the syndrome, funded by the National Institutes of Health, was released.
Newspaper columnists and others around the country exploded in skepticism at its conclusions.
"Is it me, or does it seem like good old-fashioned bad behavior - rudeness, obsession, violence - is being increasingly explained away by doctors and pharmaceutical companies as some kind of mental illness du jour?" asked columnist Daniel Vasquez in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.
In Georgia, a headline in The Augusta Chronicle read, "Jerks get disorder of their own."
While many critics echoed the derision historically reserved for mental illness, some mental health experts - including Torrey - are also skeptical.
"It's not a well-defined entity," Torrey said of IED. At the heart of his concern is a question mental health providers have long debated: When does a behavior or emotion cross the line from normal - however eccentric or undesirable - to become an illness?
Read more at the link above.
++
5,465 signatures to date: TeenScreen Sign and forward!

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