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Psychiatry - Social
Hygiene and Mind Control
This
article is written with its practical use value in mind. It is about Psychiatry,
and that means about psychiatric institutions and how people get there and are
kept there, the ideology of 'health' and the class of its administrators, the
doctors; it is also about economic interests: a repair institution for defective
labour power, and the advantages of drug dependency for the pharmaceutical companies;
but given the available space, it is not pretending to be comprehensive, its purpose
is to give some (hopefully) valuable help in dealing practically with situations
where a friend or comrade, or yourself are confronted with psychiatric treatment
or confinement, it is attempting to give some background information about the
system, and helping to break the silence about the topic, a silence that is astonishing
given the fact that every year millions of people are exposed to breakdowns, diagnosis,
medication and confinement... Added is a short list of links and bibliography
for further reading and research, even though some of the books are unfortunately
out of print, having been released at a time (from the mid 60's to the late 70's)
when many facets of capitalist society and the mangement of power in it were under
scrutiny, and the public eye was turned on psychiatry and exposed its often shocking
face. Most people are under the assumption that in the wake of 'Anti-Psychiatry'
the system has been reformed sufficiently to meet the needs of the 'patient'.
Sadly this is hardly the case, and the interest of the labour market and meeting
the demands of 'normality' and 'health' is prioritised over the solutions of the
patients problems. Illness is a result of the conflict of interest of the patient
exactly with these concepts (health, normalcy), and in its present manifestations
a product of Capitalism, but illness, and understanding it, can be used as a weapon,
as the SPK put it. So this is not about denying madness or romanticising it -
it's about politicising it, i.e. making clear that it is a social and collective
phenomenon, without robbing each patient of their individual dimension and dignity.
Psychosis:
A socalled psychosis can be triggered by many things, prolonged lack of sleep,
stress, unresolved contradictions in your standing with society, or, as a short
cut, by drugs like speed, acid or similar. Serotonins and dopamines firing uncontrollably
in your brain, causing a suspension of critical thinking, connecting all outer
signs to a conspiratorial web of cosmic proportions. A 'psychosis' is an extreme
state of emergency. In many ways it could be described as very similar to an acid
trip, but without drugs, and seemingly without end; as you are not on drugs you
lack the knowledge that it's "only a trip" and you'll return sooner
or later (this includes psychoses triggered by drugs), although some seem to experience
them as 'acting' or 'possession'. There are a number of definitions that usually
aren't very satisfying; they range from interpreting it as a mere chemical imbalance
or malfunctioning to experiencing it as 'demonic attack' or a religious experience.
This variety hints at the fact that very little is known about the actual nature
of a psychosis, and therefore everyone is bringing forth their own definitions;
unfortunatly it is the opinion and ideology of the doctors that bear the most,
and the interpretation of the patient of their own experience that bears the least
weight in current society, to a degree where the patient is forced to adapt the
opinion of the doctors in order not to be declared incurably mad. And this is
one point where the real problems start. The other is that it's often impossible
to look after a psychotic person. They don't seem to need sleep and are inaccessible
to "reasoning", they are totally tied up in their world and often turn
hostile or violent against people close to them or to themselves.
Hospitalisation
and Diagnosis:
If you draw the wrong kind of attention in public, or even just in your family,
you may find yourself in a closed psychiatric ward, pumped full of drugs, likely
to be Haldol and Diazepam (see below). Now you won't know what's going on at all
anymore.
It's likely that the doctors will not deal with you except to get, and tick off,
a set of textbook 'symptoms'. What they are interested in is a 'diagnosis' in
order to administer their 'treatment'. The diagnosis will label you according
to the symptoms - essentially your humanity will be removed and you become a 'psychotic',
a 'manic-depressive' or a 'schizophrenic' etc. The Italian psychiatrist Giovanni
Jervis writes in his 'Critical Handbook of Psychiatry': "The psychiatric
diagnosis is a totalitarian judgement; it introduced the image of an individual
who is exclusively programmed and turned into a robot by madness, i.e. of a dangerous
and irresponsible being."
In the following weeks you will be surprised how little they are interested in
you and your story as they stick to their biologistical 'explanations', an ideology
in tune with our time and bankrolled by pharmaceutical companies.
Judgement, Confinement
and 'Insight':
Psychiatrists are not allowed to keep you against your will for very long, so
what's likely to happen next is that a judge will be called who will then sentence
you, based solely on the 'diagnosis' of the doctors who will provide the 'evidence'.
They will take the judge to have a look at you - the sorry mess that you are after
having been injected with hardcore tranquilisers - and declare that you are a
danger either to yourself and/or to others and have to be locked up and 'treated'
for a number of weeks. There is no court case and no defense.
If you find yourself brought to a psychiatric institution, and if the situation
is such that they would want to keep you there, it can be advantageous to sign
yourself in on your 'free will', simply because that should allow you to sign
yourself out again after a few days. This doesn't save you from the de-humanising
and dangerous treatment that the doctors have in store for you, and if you attacked
other people or hurt yourself you won't have this option. The bigger problem is
that you may be forced or blackmailed to stay there for longer than you wish under
the threat of being committed by the judge. Be fucking careful what you sign!
To this we have to add the dogma that the patient has to show 'insight' into her/his
illness: If someone insists on not being ill this is used as a 'proof' that they
are ill. It functions like the inquisition: If you don't admit your guilt we medicate
you forcibly and declare you insane, if you admit you can be medicated 'voluntarily'
and may be declared 'cured'.
Treatment - Drugs:
Today the ensueing treatment will favour chemical means over physical therapies.
This doesn't mean your chance of survival has become much higher; besides that
both electro shock treatment and brain surgery are still used, despite somewhat
slipping out of fashion.
Once you are diagnosed and judged, the doctor will prescribe you a cocktail of
drugs, and often this is administered whether you agree with the procedure or
not. More likely you are already not in a state where you are able to agree or
not. Legally this is actually a grey zone where it is theoretically often unclear
what the competences of the doctors are. Practically however they will do as they
please as they know that - if it ever comes to that - most courts of law would
accept them as the authorities and would favour them over the diagnosed psychotic
or mad person, and trust them that they "did everything in the patients best
interest". This is how, to this day, you are likely to be treated by means
that are extremely hazardous to your overall health, which is now less visible
since the emphasis has shifted from physical 'therapies' such as electro shocks
and lobotomy to chemical solutions.
Additionally the doctors generally do not inform either the patients nor their
relatives or friends about the possible dangers associated with the drugs. One
(pro-) psychiatry magazine did a poll about this, and not one of the patients
polled felt they had not been mislead about the medication.
Here is a typical
selection of drugs, that will vary a bit in each case:
1. Diazepam (Valium) or Benzodiazepine, or similar heavy downers (or the same
components under different brand names) as tranquilisers and against anxiety.
It can reasonably be argued that a few doses of Valium could help to get someone
down from an acute psychosis, to calm them at a point where talking to them won't
help, and where sleep has become an impossibility. As far as anxiety goes - you
already have good reason to be scared, so partly the substance is already administered
to keep you from freaking out about your confinement.
2. Haloperidol, a.k.a. Haldol, or similar extreme anti-psychotic agents or neuroleptics,
a.k.a. chemical handcuffs/strait-jacket. Severe psychopharmaceuticals (actually
a misleading term, as there are no chemicals working on the psyche/soul, but on
the nervous system) that will inhibit certain serotonin and dopamine processes
and that are extremely dangerous.
Generally neuroleptic drugs (or Butyrophenones) have a truly scary so-called 'side
effects profile'. Even in therapeutic doses Haloperidol and other "typical"
neuroleptics (such as Clopixol et al.)commonly cause extrapyramidal movement disorders,
especially parkinsonism, acute dyskinesias, and akathisia (motorial excitation).
Up to 40% of elderly people who are treated with neuroleptics develop tardive
(often orofacial) dyskinesia in the first year. Tardive Dyskinesia is a disorder
that manifests itself in involuntary movements especially of the facial muscles,
snake-like movements of the tongue and rolling back of the eyes. The danger of
developing this disorder is increased by prolonged treatment and higher age, but
it can appear already after short treatments in young patients as well. Often
it does not subside after the treatment is finished. On average 5% of patients
per year develop TD, i.e. of the ones given this 'medication' for three years
already 15% will have developed incurable TD. Dr. Breggin estimates a million
cases of TD in the US, and tens of millions since neuroleptic treatment began
in the early 50's.s
One web site designed for students of psychiatry and nurses admits regarding the
'therapeutic effect' of Haloperidol that the "precise mechanism (is) not
known", but if you react with Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome and die, you
become another statistic casualty, collateral damage in the war for 'normality'.
NMS may be relatively rare, but even without these permanent or fatal effects
your metabolism will be severely shaken by the administration of neuroleptics.
Anxiety, drowsiness, extrapyramidal symptoms (uncontrolled tremors and muscle
stiffness), dizziness, constipation, nausea, indigestion, rhinitis (in?ammation
of the mucous membranes in the nose), rash and tachycardia (rapid heartbeat),
lactation or priapism. On any psychiatric station you will find people slobbering,
salivating, unable to concentrate or focus. The main reason for this is that these
results are not 'side effects' that sometimes appear, but they are part of the
effect. Like ghosts patients are slowly walking up and down the corridors, their
hands trembling, their eyes like dead fish.
3. As a consequence another drug such as Akineton (or similar) will be added to
the menu (while the Valium is reduced) with the purpose of counter-acting the
'side effects'.
Akineton is a drug mainly used for treatment of Parkinson disease. It will stop
you trembling, twitching and salivating so much. This is a clear indication as
to the severeness of Haloperidol: Akineton will make you appear more together
again and you may welcome its immediate effect, but it merely masks the extreme
detrimental 'side effects' of Haloperidol. It can also mask the symptoms of developing
Tardive Dyskinesia, i.e. while the patient feels better, because the trembling
and salivating subsides, invisibly a potentially irreversible permanent disorder
could develop. Rather than anti-Parkinson drugs you may be given anti-epilepsy
drugs, also to mask the shaking, slobbering vegetable state your 'medicine' puts
you in. There may also be frequent changes in medication, as one doctor put it:
"It's hit and miss" (he did smile saying that).
If you manage
to 'stabilise' under this highly dangerous cocktail of drugs you are likely to
be changed to another, "a-typical" neuroleptic, such as Risperidone/Risperdal,
Zyprexa or Seroquel.
These are also anti-psychotic agents but with a better 'side effect' profile in
the field of motoric disturbances, i.e. less trembling and muscle spasms, but
essentially the same dangers otherwise. However the occurence of TD is incomparably
rarer than with "typical" neuroleptics. The main reason to put you on
a drug like this is that it's easier to release you into the outside world; however
it's not uncommon that people are released on a cocktail including Haldol and
Risperdal, and an anti-epileptic and an anti-depressive drug...
And with a 'side'-effects catalogue of weight gain, constipation, headaches, tinnitus,
lactation, hair loss and severe tiredness...
While you are
still locked up and drugged, doctors will dedicate maybe 5 minutes a day to you,
there is less and less 'therapy', and a token psychologist might be strolling
around the place, essentially leaving patients to work out their 'problems' on
their own, based on the 'theory' that put into chemical handcuffs, consciousness
will rebuild itself. Other experiences may differ and more 'therapy' or 'dialogue'
may be on offer, but that doesn't necessarily mean you have a better time.
If and when they talk to you you will find that you are a collection of symptoms,
and that what you say is often turned against you or merely used to confirm or
expand the 'diagnosis'.
Without any references, cut off from your personal reality, in a purposefully
debilitated state, it will be held against you as proof that you're ill if you
can't communicate 'normally' with the doctors, while communication between patients
in the closed ward is often on a symbolic/magical level, e.g. swapping items of
clothing and jewellery or cigarettes.
As the doctors, high priests of the god of an imaginary health, put into scene
the spectacle of 'getting better' of the patient (lowering the Valium, adding
the anti-Parkinson drugs that will make you slobber less, so you're 'getting better'),
there is no dealing with the root causes of your situation/breakdown.
Support:
From all this follows that to create a reference for the personal reality of the
patient, support from the outside is essential. The 'reality' of the mental institution
is more likely to be detrimental to the process of finding ground under ones feet
again, and by denying any validity of the psycho-trip as such is additionally
alienating rather than helpful. Only like this, with unconditionnal support from
friends and comrades, it will be possible for the patient to re-create their personality,
as under these medications everything is destroyed, not just the 'psychosis'.
Keep visiting as often as possible, even if the patient is hardly able to communicate.
Talk to the doctors and make it clear that you and others care - it will discourage
them from gratuitious experimentation. Mention that you write a day by day journal,
inquire about medication and dosage, ask why, take notes.
It makes sense to draw up a sheet to be signed by the patient that gives a person
who the patient trusts the power to act on his/her behalf legally. The legal situation
of the patient is different in different countries, and so is the actual 'right'
of the doctors to forcefully administer dangerous drugs. So do get advice from
sympathetic lawyers. (In Germany there exists a legally binding form that will
- or should - protect you from administration of neuroleptics, see antipsychiatrie.de).
It will initially be difficult to take the doctors to court over e.g. human rights
abuses or false imprisonment, and court proceedings can easily take longer than
it takes to get the patient released anyways (and may aggravate the situation).
However it's good to make preparations immediately if only to be ready when it
turns out that the psychiatrists are trying to prolong the time of involuntary
sectioning set by the judge, by calling the judge again, drugging the patient
a bit more and claiming they 'need more time'... If the patient is for example
classed as 'suicidal' it will be hard to charge false imprisonment, but prepare
nevertheless.
The logic of this
imprisonment is such that all dissidence expressing itself as 'madness' must be
exterminated, but this is by itself directed against the patient. If you are on
his/her side, do not trust the doctors, do everything in your power to get the
patient out as quickly as possible (this can be difficult to impossible if the
patient himself has turned against you or thinks you're part of a conspiracy to
lock him up). There are many cases where the refusal to take medication and the
refusal to even talk to the doctors has resulted in the patient getting released
quicker, but often medication will be forcibly and violently administered. Support
from the outside will be of great help here: Psychiatry is most of all hidden
social engeneering, it only works if the spotlight isn't too bright, if it's undisturbed
by critical intrusion... if the outer world collaborates with the authority that
the doctors represent.
+++++++++++++++++++++
Some History:
The Case of Adalgisa Conti
It is impossible here to give a systematic account of the development of the psychiatric
ideology and the system of incarceration and treatment. There exists a large body
of literature, some of which is listed below. 'In the Madhouse - Dear Mr. Doctor,
this is my Life' is the title of an amazing autobiographical text by a young Italian
woman named Adalgisa Conti which I will briefly examine instead.
In 1914 she is writing down the story of her life. She's in the 'madhouse' where
she is going to spend the rest of her life, another 65 years. How exactly she
came to write down her autobiography is unknown, possibly encouraged by a doctor
hopeful to be provided with material for a case study.
Writing about her youth it soon springs to attention that she is denouncing her
own sexuality as 'corrupt', as she must have been told. She masturbates which
is used as a 'proof' of her 'illness' then and later. Since age 16 she feels affection
for a guy but doesn't let him touch her, but some time later they marry rather
suddenly. She describes the journey to the new home like a dream sequence ("I
felt like I was advancing one step and retreating two", "The bedroom
was more beautiful than mine at home, more beautiful than I deserved", "When
I undressed I had an unpleasant feeling, because I was, as I said, neither innocent
nor seductive", and other self-depreciating views); in fact her husband doesn't
manage to give her an orgasm, a fact she isn't able to communicate to him, or
admit to him. She despairs from her new familiar environment, develops a passion
for a music teacher which again remains a fantasy. About her marriage she concludes:
"We were too different: he was too good, I was too bad".
She's in a lose-lose situation without a perspective, no way out. 'Illness' is
bound to hit: She doesn't know what's going on with her, she cries for 20 days,
feels no passion for anything, loses her equilibrium, believes she has become
a saint...
She starts preparations for her suicide, puts up a picture of a saint, lights
candles. She kisses her sleeping husband, but when he gets up to go hunting he
doesn't deal with her. Later that day she is taken to the hospital.
"Life is
not beautiful at all, to be honest, but nevertheless I will struggle and bear
what fate has reserved for me and what you, Mr. Doctor, have decided. You can
decide about me (...) because you are a god, and if you want to, you can do anything."
She also says,
"It would be better if you put me in a straight jacket and lock me up",
and starts adapting stereotypes of 'madness': "Sometimes I think I am Garibaldi
or his wife (which is truly a big difference)", but at the same time she
says:
"I want to fight, but I am too worn down", "I want to love, but
I'm unable". It turns out that the key is that she has a irregular menstruation
cycle, and that she is convinced this was caused by masturbation...
One of her nurses
notes in the 70's:
"From the story of Adalgisa it transpires that she believed herself to be
abnormal, to be mad and to be weird, because she suffered from the situation at
home. She describes her relationship to her husband, to his mother and to her
father in law like normal things. The abnormal seemed to be that she felt bad.
She recounts the things in a way that they are as they are, she doesn't like them,
and therefore she must be mad." Adalgisa Conti died in the 'madhouse'.
What's exceptional
about her story is not that she was locked up because she couldn't deal with a
social situation that seemed to offer no way out, but that she happened to write
it down. Countless others just disappeared into the asylums silently and forever.
A 'double bind',
an lose-lose situation is often what precipitates a psychosis, this radical break
with reason and functioning. From vagrants rounded up, to women encarcerated in
abusive matrimony, to workers caught in a life-long trap of exploitation or 'redundancy',
having no language and no chance, to kids taking too much drugs, throughout the
last century the situation has gotten worse: People are freaking out, are losing
the plot, left right and centre. Fuses blow in introverted dissidence, with good
reason.
I am here not talking about the rather few cases of 'real' madness, the few cases
of actual biological malfunction of the senses, due to brain damage or whatever
else, but about the millions of cases each year in the west (the United States
alone have one and a half million cases a year and an estimated total of 40m people
"affected by mental illness"!) that people have their encounter with
psychiatry, and how psychiatry performs a 'social hygiene', silencing the individualised
uproar into an ant-like functioning, collectivised in conformity, and therefore
alone again.
This is now more than ever happening under the veneer of strict scientificality.
Modern psychiatry adheres to the ideological dogma of biologism and health. It
claims all disturbances from 'psychosis' to 'madness' are due to biological causes
or chemical imbalance in the brain. This can then - supposedly - be rectified
with chemical agents, electro-shocks, or surgery.
Throughout the
whole period that Adalgisa Conti was incarcerated there were a number of developments
in psychiatry. Psychoanalysis was used and then more or less ditched as a method.
So was frontal lobotomy. Nazi doctors send 'mad' people to the gas chambers, just
like other dissidents. The most important developments against these 'optimisations'
of normalisation were the beginning of patient's self-organisation, most notably
the SPK/ Patient's Front/ SPK/PF(H). I won't in this article go further into their
history, theory and praxis since there are 2 articles by themselves in this issue
of datacide, except to emphasise the importance of their radical critique of the
prevalent (Nazi-)concept of 'health', the recognition of one's own illness as
a power and the struggle against doctors as a class struggle.
Another development was the various movements of so-called Anti-Psychiatry (mainly
in England) and Democratic Psychiatry (mainly in Italy), especially from about
the early-mid 60's to the late 70's. This strain developed out of the critique
of the post-war official psychiatry that lobotomised, electro-shocked and drugged
people without having much of a clue what these 'methods' actually did, because
they didn't have much of a clue what they were 'treating' at all.
The main proponents of 'Anti-Psychiatry' were Thomas Szasz, Ronald Laing and David
Cooper, who varied a lot in their individual outlooks; the term had been coined
by Cooper in his 1967 book 'Psychiatry and Anti-Psychiatry', while Laing felt
uncomfortable to be associated with the new label. Szasz was a political liberal/libertarian,
while Cooper gradually developed from a practicing psychiatrist to a sort of revolutionary
communism with an acid consciousness.
He essentially argues that 'mental illness' (or 'schizophrenia') does not exist
except as a description of a social problem. These are political labels designed
to "illegitimize radical non-conformity in a conformist society". Michel
Foucault argues that rationality and irrationality are merely other words for
conventionality and dissent.
It is Cooper who speaks out against a romantisation of madness, in favour of its
politisation, which he sees as necessary to create a future for humanity. "The
future of madness is its end, its transformation into universal creativity, and
this is also its lost point of origin": At the very least it is a chance,
but not as a tragic personal crisis, but a renewal of ourselves in a way that
breaks with all compulsive rules, how and what we are supposed to be, and without
hurting anyone else; madness as a deconstitution of our selves with the implicit
hope and aim to return to a world more real. Like orgasm, like revolution.
The Democratic
Psychiatry in Italy with Franco Basaglia its most prominent figure (another important
author being Giovanni Jervis), on the other hand did not deny the existence of
mental illness, but still based their approach on a positive acknowledgement of
dissident states of mind and behaviour, and based their view on the institutions
in society that cause illness like family, school, work, especially in the factory,
home, prison... Naturally an institution like psychiatry with its asylums would
not cure, but produce more mental suffering: illness needed to be de-psychiatrised.
In fact, despite a lot of resistance by more conservative forces, the movement
of democratic psychiatry was successful enough (for a few years) to get the Legge
180 (law 180) ratified that proposed a program of dismantlement of psychiatric
institutions in Italy.
Sadly in the period
of restauration that followed the 70's these developments were countered by a
more reactionary approach just like in most other segments of society. Psychiatry
has again slipped back into obscurity. The stigma and humiliation that is attached
to the diagnosis of 'madness' was upheld and so was the unique 'professional'
competence of the doctors to deal with it. The opening of the asylums that some
anti-psychiatrists propagated was of course not 'the answer' to the 'problem'
of mental disturbances in the modern world, indeed it wasn't supposed to be -
it could only work as a small part of the revolutionary struggle; everything else
would be reformism that would keep the system running.
Not only are now most 'anti-psychiatry'- initiatives reformist, but there is also
an attempt by the pharmaceutical corporations to bank-roll harmless interest groups
to mute criticism. Just one example: The (US) National Alliance for the Mentally
Ill (NAMI) received $11.72 million from the pharma corporations (in only 2 1/2
years) and consequently put their weight behind 'medication compliance' programs!
The clearest antipode to this are the SPK/PF(H) who are not anti-psychiatric,
but pro-illness.
The barbaric practices
of lobotomy and EST are only taking place behind very closed doors, where patients
are also subjected to 'deep sleep therapy' whereby the victim is literally put
to sleep for weeks at a time (with short daily breaks for food intake and a visit
to the toilet) - and many tragically never wake up (which led to this practice
being banned in Australia recently).
Brain-altering neuroleptics are administered much more publicly - both in the
US and in the UK there are efforts to force people to stay on medication ('compliance')
once they have been released by putting them under de facto house-arrest for an
hour or so a day, in order for a nurse or social worker to come around and make
them take their cocktail of drugs, or alternatively they are shot up with a 'depot'
of slow-release neuroleptics that will slowly seep into the brain over the span
of several weeks. Besides the already described effects of these drugs, there
is another serious catch: To suddenly stop the medication can directly lead to
a psychotic breakdown, a so-called withdrawal psychosis whereby the effect of
the drugs in the brain is reversed. Clearly said: This is not a re-emergence of
the 'old' psychosis, but the merciless expression of the dependency developed
by the 'treatment'.
All this unspeakable
violence takes place every day all over the world under a 'scientific' biologistical
gloss that is in the end about as 'scientific' as Phrenology.
The 'mentally ill' is a defective proletarian who needs to be made useful to the
economy again, be it as labour power, be it as a consumer of drugs, and why not
as both. The doctor class who manages this today is so much more economically
efficient than in previous times!
Michel Foucault begins his
book 'The Birth of the Clinic' with a description of the treatment of a female
'hysteric' by the doctor P.Pomme in 1769 who proceeds to 'cure' her by making
her take baths of 10-12 hours length each day for 10 months. The reasoning behind
this is that the illness is assumed to originate from dried out nerves. As the
patient starts to shed skin from her intestines the healing success commences:
Lumps are shed through every orifice.
As absurd as this sounds like, at the end of the day disturbingly little has changed,
except that the torture methods that are supposed to exorcise the disease have
been modernised. Doctors have since cut open the brains of living patients, have
shocked them with electricity and insulin, and continue to do so. As you are reading
this millions of people have their brains dimmed, are silenced and brought to
conformity with "psycho"-pharmaceuticals.
At the beginning of the 'age of reason' there was considerable experimentation
with the newfound incompatibilities between private and public reason. The reason
of the State of course was declared supreme. With the industrial revolution and
the occupation of the world by the logic of Capital, the reason of economy has
added itself and since then penetrated every aspect of life including medicine
and society's view of madness. Psychiatry after the first world war and especially
- but not exclusively - under the Nazi regime, saw itself as a science that was
supposed to purge society from disease and 'inferior' minds. Consequently tens
of thousands of patients were gassed in Germany and after the gassing-stop 1941
were killed by 'medication' or starvation. Even after the end of the Nazi regime
tens of thousands of patients were starved to death in the asylums under allied
occupation.
While there is still a certain death toll, with the advent of more 'advanced'
medication and the unstoppable rise of large pharmaceutical companies the situation
has somewhat shifted to suit the demonic aspirations of capital to instrumentalise
every last aspect of life and being for its reproduction.
While the use of psychiatry was racist, ideological and exterminist in Nazi Germany,
in the USSR Haldol was used to silence dissidents many of whom disappeared and
withered away in chemical strait-jackets. History has shown both these systems
to be no match for the 'free-market' economies where patients are kept alive,
turned into long-term or life-long consumers of dangerous (expensive) drugs and
are both silenced and profitable at once, all in their own - and society's - best
interest of course
Christoph Fringeli
Bibliography,
Sources, Links
Books:
Franco Basaglia:
Psychiatry Inside Out - Selected Writings (Columbia University Press 1987)
David Cooper:
Psychiatry and Anti-Psychiatry (1967)
(Psychiatrie und Anti-Psychiatrie, Suhrkamp 1971)
David Cooper:
The Grammar of Living (1974)
(Die Notwendigkeit der Freiheit, Verlag Roter Stern 1976)
David Cooper:
The Language of Madness (1978)
(Die Sprache der Verr?cktheit, Rotbuch 1978)
Giovanni Jervis:
Manuale Critico di Psichiatria (Feltrinelli 1975)(Critical Handbook of Psychiatry)
(Kritisches Handbuch der Psychiatrie, Syndikat 1978)
Ronald D. Laing:
The politics of Experience (1967)
(Ph?nomenologie der Erfahrung, Suhrkamp 1969)
Michel Foucault:
The Birth of the Clinic (1963)
(edition I used: Die Geburt der Klinik, Fischer 1999)
Mad Pride: A Celebration
of Mad Culture (Spare Change Books 2000)
Patientenfront:
Krankheit - Die Ganzheit mit Zukunft (KRRIM 1988)
Patientenfront:
zum HEILsfall Landeskrankenhaus (hier:Wiesloch) (KRRIM 1991)
Patientenfront:
Festschrift - 25 jahre SPK/PF(H), 60 jahre Huber, 10 Jahre Krankheit im Recht
(KRRIM 1995)
SPK: Aus der Krankheit
eine Waffe machen (Trikont Texte 1972) rereleased by KRRIM in German, English
(Turn Illness Into A Weapon), French, Greek and partly in Italian.
SPK: Krankheit
im Recht (KRRIM 1995)
Sil Schmid: Freiheit
Heilt - Bericht ?ber die demokratische Psychiatrie in Italien (Wagenbach 1977)
other recommended
writings include everything else by Cooper, Deleuze/Guattari, Foucault, and SPK/PF(H)
Magazines:
Dendron - Human
Rights in Mental health
Die Irren-Offensive
Nr.9: Das Ende des Alptraums (2000) (Mad People's Offensive: The End of the Nightmare)
Kursbuch 28: Das
Elend mit der Psyche I - Psychiatrie (Kursbuch/Rotbuch1972)
Patientenstimme
(SPK/PF(H))
Links:
http://www.spkpfh.de/
Official SPK/Patient Front site, includes english texts.
http://www.disinfo.com/pages/dossier/id235/pg1.html
contains a number of useful links
http://www.geocities.com/greenliberal/psychlinksglobal.html
more links!
http://www.thefoucauldian.co.uk/
Foucault and more
http://www.critpsynet.freeuk.com/criticalpsychiatry.htm
Against biological bias...
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/5214/laing.html
Unofficial R.D.Laing website
http://www.cchr.org/rape/toc.htm
Dedicated to psychiatric rape
http://www.futurepsychiatry.com/
Critique of biologism and current psychiatry: "psychiatry is the only medical
discipline which lacks a proper scientific basis"
http://www.ctono.freeserve.co.uk/
Mad Pride web site (British)
http://www.MindFreedom.org
Dendron magazine/ US-Mad Pride
http://www.antipsychiatrie.de/
Irrenoffensive (German), also irren-offensive.de
http://www.antipsychiatry.org/index.htm
http://www.breggin.com/
Practical experience
visiting a friend during two separate psychotic episodes and the countless conversations
with doctors, nurses and patients have greatly contributed to this article. Other's
experiences may differ in different countries or hospitals but prevailing biologist
ideology will be more or less guiding the current treatments, even if some doctors
will claim how interested they are in the content of somebody's psychosis. They
will do almost anything to convince you and the patient to keep taking neuroleptics
for long periods of time.
Important: If
you are on neuroleptics and wish to stop, DO NOT stop taking the medication from
one day to the other. This must be done gradually, roughly in steps of reduction
of 10% of the initial dose per week. Stopping medication apruptly can lead to
a socalled withdrawal psychosis caused by the sudden change in brain chemistry,
i.e. by the medication. Tragically often people end up going back to the hospital
and receive even more of the poison that got them in there. Seek professional
supervision by a critical psychiatrist. There's not many of them, but they are
out there! |