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Meta
Tag Archives: psychiatric drug research
‘ADHD: A Destructive and Disempowering Label; Not an Illness’ Philip Hickey
http://www.madinamerica.com/2015/07/adhd-a-destructive-and-disempowering-label-not-an-illness/ ‘Psychiatry has created and promoted the self-serving fiction that childhood distractibility/impulsivity and various other human problems are illnesses that need to be “treated” with neurotoxic chemicals and other brain-damaging interventions. Suggesting at this very late stage in the proceedings … Continue reading →
Posted in child development, civil rights, compulsive behaviour, consent, cultural questions, diagnoses of ADHD, Disconnection, diversity, DSM, emotions, ethics, external locus, growing up, Mad in America, medical model, non-conforming, perception, political, power and powerlessness, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, research evidence
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Tagged ADHD, ADHD myth, anti-psychiatry, antipsychiatry, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, Behaviorism and Mental Health, Big Pharma, biomarkers in psychiatry, bureaucratisation of the spirit, challenging DSM, chemical imbalance myth, chemical imbalance theory of depression, child psychiatry, compliance, Concerta, conforming, disease and disorder model, DSM, DSM validity, Erving Goffman, Geography of Childhood, Ilina Singh, Institute of Psychiatry, Mad in America, medicalising childhood, medicalising distress, medicalizing childhood, medicalizing distress, methylphenidate, myth of normal, non-conforming, over prescription of psychiatric drugs, pathologising behaviour, pathologizing behaviour, Philip Hickey, psychiatric diagnosis, psychiatric drug research, psychiatric drugs in children, psychiatric misdiagnosis, psychiatric model, psychiatric research, psychosocial model, Royal College of Psychiatrists, Simon Wessely, social norms, Steven Trimble
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The Council for Evidence-Based Psychiatry
http://cepuk.org/ Follow the link to the website for CEP. In the writer’s view, anyone working in the therapeutic/allied world has an ethical responsibility to be aware of, and evaluate, these arguments. CEP has some seriously intelligent, aware and informed people … Continue reading →
Posted in abuse, accountability, anti-depressants, anti-psychotics, CEP, consent, core conditions, cultural questions, diagnoses of bipolar, DSM, empathy, encounter, ethics, external locus, growth, healing, iatrogenic illness, Joanna Moncrieff, medical model, MHRA, neuroscience, non-directive counselling, Palace Gate Counselling Service, paradigm shift, perception, person centred, political, power and powerlessness, presence, psychiatric abuse, psychiatric drugs, psychiatry, psychosis, regulation, research evidence, Robert Whitaker, schizophrenia, suicide, therapeutic growth, therapeutic relationship, transformation, values & principles, violence, working with clients
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Tagged affordable counselling exeter, antidepressants, antidepressants and placebo, antidepressants research, Big Pharma, burying of psychiatric drug trial data, CEP, CEPUK, challenging DSM, chemical imbalance myth, chemical imbalance theory of depression, core conditions, Council for Evidence Based Psychiatry, counselling exeter, counsellor Exeter, counsellors Exeter, depression, DSM, DSM utility, DSM validity, ICD chapter 5, lack of scientific basis for psychiatry, lack of scientific basis in psychiatry, low cost counselling exeter, Manipulation of psychiatric drug trial data, medicalisation of distress, medicalisation of emotion, medicalisation of feeling, medicalisation of human experience, medicalization of distress, medicalization of emotion, medicalization of feeling, medicalization of human experience, medicating children, mental health disorders, MHRA, MHRA and conflicts of interest, misdiagnoses in psychiatry, misdiagnosis in psychiatry, over prescription of psychiatric drugs, Palace Gate Counselling Service, Palace Gate Counselling Service Exeter, person centred counselling exeter, person-centered, person-centred, personality change, prescribing psychiatric drugs to children, psychiatric diagnosis, psychiatric disorders, psychiatric drug outcomes, psychiatric drug research, psychiatric drug withdrawal, psychiatric drugs and suicide, psychiatric drugs and violence, psychiatric drugs side effects, psychotropic drug withdrawal, psychotropic drugs, therapeutic process, therapeutic relationship, validity of psychiatric diagnostic system, www.palacegatecounselling.org.uk
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