Tuesday, January 31, 2006

NYT Reporter

Today the New York Times has an article about a recently deceased (2004) journalist named Lucy Freeman who, in the 1940s and 50s, wrote a great deal about mental illness. Apparently she wrote many articles about how great lobotomy was, though she was actually a psychoanalysis devotee. From the article:

In truth, many psychiatrists were trying to convert such institutions from overcrowded, custodial facilities to state-of-the-art medical centers. Believing that mental illness stemmed from organic problems within the brain, psychiatrists had devised a series of treatments, including electroshock therapy and lobotomy.

It was these advances that Ms. Freeman relentlessly publicized as The Times's reporter on mental health. Writing scores of articles like "Action Now Urged on Mental Cases" and "State Mental Care Entering New Era," she willingly blurred the roles of reporter and advocate.


Ugh, some legacy. I wonder how many people underwent that horror of an operation because of her senseless cheerleading.

Later it says, "'By saving them,' she wrote, 'in some way I also saved myself.'".

Good Lord, who did she think she saved exactly? I bet she never even bothered to meet a lobotomy victim.

The article also includes this gem, "Moreover, recent studies have demonstrated that disorders like schizophrenia have a genetic basis and result from chemical abnormalities in the brain."

Yeah, right. How come whenever Mindfreedom confronts these "studies" head-on, they never turn out to be anywhere near as conclusive as their authors claim?

link

Monday, January 30, 2006

Another doctor who had psychosurgery

Cathy Wield is not the first doctor to have undergone psychosurgery in Britain in recent years. Justine Carr-Brion wrote about her experience in the British Medical Journal in 1995.

"Problems of mental health in the medical profession seem to be a fashionable topic in the BMJ. I am another sufferer, but what worries me most is not my treatment when ill, but the discriminatory label about being a "psychiatric patient" and the effects that this has when I am dealing with non-psychiatric staff.

I have had recurrent attacks of severe depression since 1990. These have usually consisted of rapid descent to a suicidal state, though the physical and mental retardation made attempts to kill myself difficult. I had been on all the antidepressant drugs available in various combinations. My final attempt led to a cardiac arrest, but unfortunately I was in a hospital and I was resuscitated. I am afraid the staff got no praise from me. At this point I was referred for psychosurgery. (No, I did not know it still existed either.) I was on a neurology ward, the operation was performed, and I had no problems.

This, however, gave me one of my first insights as to what a "psychiatric" label meant. The sister was talking to one of the consultant neurologists during his ward round, when she started complaining about having psychiatric patients on a medical ward, and the fact that they did not have the facilities to care for us. What facilities she envisaged I do not know, as we all suffered from affective disorders and were among the quietest patients on the ward, and being a neurology ward it was overflowing with therapists of all types. Treating us as normal human beings undergoing an operation obviously never occurred to her. She obviously also thought that all psychiatric patients were deaf. I felt a strong temptation to leap up and challenge her views, but felt that this might be unwise and might reinforce her prejudices.

I had been well since the operation until the start of 1995, my last suicide attempt having been in the summer of 1993. I returned to work on 3 January to be told that I was no longer wanted."


Justine Carr-Brion goes on to describe how she was detained under the Mental Health Act, and then needed a further admission to hospital.

Read the article here.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Principle 11

Cathy Wield, the British doctor who underwent psychosurgery and wrote about her experience in a recently-published book called “Life after Darkness” was detained under the Mental Health Act when she was operated on. In Britain, as long as the person consents to the operation (Scotland has provision for carrying out psychosurgery on patients who are unable to consent), this is legal but is nevertheless rare. In the fifteen year period between 1984 and 1999, out of over 300 referrals for psychosurgery in England and Wales, only two were for detained patients. At least, this is what the eighth biennial report of the Mental Health Act Commission said; figures from the Royal College of Psychiatrists suggest a somewhat higher number.

The World Health Organisation, has this to say about psychosurgery:

“Psychosurgery and other intrusive and irreversible treatments for mental illness shall never be carried out on a patient who is an involuntary patient in a mental health facility and, to the extent that domestic law permits them to be carried out, they may be carried out on any other patient only where the patient has given informed consent and an independent external body has satisfied itself that there is genuine informed consent and that the treatment best serves the health needs of the patient. Principle 11 (14) MI Principles”

From the WHO Resource Book on Mental Health, Human Rights and Legislation, 2005, page 63.

Principle 11 was included in Resolution 46/119, adopted by the General Assembly of the United Nations in 1991.

Saturday, January 28, 2006

Life after Darkness

A doctor who underwent psychosurgery has written a book about her experience. After being admitted to hospital several times for depression and undergoing more than 100 electroconvulsive treatments, Cathy Wield had an operation in Dundee, Scotland, and now feels she has been cured of depression. The following article is from The Daily Telegraph, 23 January 2006

'I decided to overdose, slowly'
(Filed: 23/01/2006)

"When nothing could treat her depression, Cathy Wield agreed to brain surgery
It was 1994, I was a junior doctor working in A&E. My husband, Phil, and I had swapped roles, so that I could pursue my career, and he was looking after our four children, an arrangement that we were all happy with.

I admit that my life was far from typical: there were many unusual features to it, but none that could predict the onset of the depression that was to begin that December. I cannot give an accurate picture of how it started, but it was like a mist coming down. A dark mist that clung to every part of my body and mind. I lived it and breathed it. I was off work, "sick", and the memories I have of that time are of long days spent in our bedroom doing very little.

Depression is more than a state of mind, and I felt very unwell. I was continuously tired, exhausted and lacking in energy. I wanted to sleep, but often sleep would not come. Every task was a great effort. Eating was a trial, as I had little appetite and I was constipated. I self-diagnosed, and was of the opinion that with medical assistance, it would soon be over. My GP prescribed medication and I received counselling.

That Christmas holds no memories for me, and as the New Year passed, I remained off work. The depression was gaining momentum. By February, I was desperately suicidal and was admitted to the Old Manor Hospital, Salisbury. I watched from the window as Phil drove away, tears rolling down my cheeks. I felt hopeless, guilty, ashamed and quite convinced that it was my fault.

By now, I had developed psychomotor retardation, when the processes in the brain are slowed, so, in addition to drug treatment, I was started on electro-convulsive therapy - a controversial procedure that applies a jolt of electricity to the head, to induce a seizure. It had some success, and, after six weeks, I was well enough to return home. But the improvement was short-lived, and, after as many weeks, I was re-admitted to hospital.

In the meantime, Phil was left at home with the children, knowing my sick pay would soon stop. He started to look for work, while juggling all the children's activities and wondering how he was going to cope.

A monotonous pattern was starting to emerge. Hospital admission with concomitant ECT was interspersed with periods at home. I was on several drugs, having regular psychotherapy, and, when I was at home, my community psychiatric nurse would visit twice a week.

I was not much of a mother, and Phil had effectively lost his wife. I was quiet and dispirited; nothing of my usual outgoing personality seemed to be left. However, I had not lost my intelligence - even though my thinking was slowed and delusional - and I decided that I had had enough of hospitals, and that my extreme misery was outweighing my desire to be at home with the children. Living had become a kind of hell. The only way out seemed to be suicide.

That September, once the children were back at school, I decided to overdose, slowly, on lithium, knowing that it would eventually poison and kill me. I thought this would go unnoticed. However, somehow, my psychiatric nurse got wind of it; Phil came home one day to find my GP, social worker and psychiatrist applying the Mental Health Act to detain me against my will for up to six months. The children were taken to a friend, and I was forced into the waiting ambulance; I wanted to run, but the ambulance crew dragged me back. I had become a prisoner, for my own good, for my own safety.

I arrived at the NHS psychiatric hospital, a dreary, run-down, understaffed institution. The furniture was old, and the carpet stained, but the physical surroundings were only part of the misery. Verbal aggression occurred on a daily basis, and I witnessed physical violence. Since the ward had very few private rooms, I soon found myself in a dormitory.

I craved privacy. The staff were clearly overstretched, and the nurses had little time to spend with patients. Being listened to was the only comfort I knew; it was the only painkiller for the agony of my mind, but, like any analgesic, it wears off. I required it regularly and frequently - something which could be delivered so easily in hospital, if only the nurses could find the time.

I started to inflict pain on myself: partly as a distraction from the torture of my mind, and partly as an obsessive punishment. I would get up in the night and pour boiling water over myself, and then lie in extreme pain. Two years, three years, four years - they merged into each other. By the time the fifth passed, I had been sectioned on several occasions. The doctors were doing their utmost to get me well enough to be at home, feeling it was important for the family to be together. However, despite the different combinations of drugs, I remained stuck in what, by then, was recognised as a chronic, treatment-resistant depression.

Finally, in 1999, Professor Chris Thompson, of the Mood Disorders Service at the Royal South Hants Hospital, suggested brain surgery. I felt as if I'd been struck by lightning, such was my surprise. I had never heard of an operation for depression, and I was scared. He described how, in an anterior cingulotomy, a discrete lesion could be placed, to interrupt the abnormal neural pathway that is thought to be responsible for this type of depression. I would be left with two very small scars on my scalp, a very small risk of fits and it might not work (as is the case for 33 per cent of patients) - but that was all.

Neurosurgery for mental disorders, he explained, is reserved for those patients with severe, life-threatening depression. In my case, it was predicted that I would either kill myself or die as a result of the self-harm. My most significant concern was whether it would affect my personality, but I was assured that the risks were extremely low. I was also worried that it would be done against my will, but it is never done without the patient's full consent.

By 2001, I was in a desperate way. Whatever the risks, I was living in torment and the only other option was death. I wanted this operation. Still on Section, I was transferred to the Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, for surgery - the only place in Britain where it was offered. [A similar form of psychosurgery, anterior capsulotomy, is done at the University Hospital of Wales in Cardiff - Sue K]

After the operation, I woke up with a turban on my head, and the worst headache I have ever had; I cannot recall anything else. For the first few weeks, I was not expected to do anything more than recover from the physical effects, but eight days later, the most remarkable thing happened: a light switched on in my head. It was as though the power cables had been connected, and, in an instant, my depressive symptoms lifted. It took several days before the ward staff were convinced that my experience was genuine. Phil came to visit me, and he knew immediately that he had his wife back.

I was still on Section, though, and was transferred to Southampton General Hospital. In the car, I cried at the prospect of having to stay in the hospital when I felt well; I realised, however, that to walk in with tear stains would not help my cause.
The following day, I met my psychiatrist. He was "flabbergasted" at the change he saw, and, within a short time, I was discharged from hospital. I almost danced out - such was my exhilaration and happiness.

Then came the reality of restoring my relationships with the children; I had missed seven years of their lives, they were so grown-up. I had not realised how hard it had been for my dedicated family, and Phil was exhausted. We had a turbulent year, but came through it in one piece. I returned to work in A&E, at Southampton General, which - since I had to face staff who had treated me as a patient - was a challenge.
It was then that I realised I needed to work against the stigma that mental illness brings. I hope that by publishing my diary of these years, understanding of this misunderstood illness will increase, and that conditions for patients suffering with mental illness will improve. I lost seven years to depression: seven years of being a prisoner - not just of my mind, but of a rundown healthcare system, which, according to the recent Mental Health Act Commission report, In Place of Fear, is still largely in existence."

Life After Darkness (Radcliffe Publishing) is available for £16.95, plus £1.25 p&p. To order, call Telegraph Books on 0870 428 4112

The first chapter of Cathy Wield’s book can be read here:

Tuesday, January 24, 2006

Nude Therapy?

While perusing the news I found this odd article about a couple who ran a group home for mentally ill people. I'll let the article tell the rest of the story:

Therapist for Mentally Ill gets 30 Years

A therapist who ran a group home for the mentally ill was sentenced to 30 years in prison for enslaving its residents, forcing them to work naked and making them perform sex acts. His wife received seven years behind bars.

Arlan Kaufman, 69, and his wife, Linda, were convicted in November on charges that included health care fraud, forced labor and involuntary servitude.
...

Prosecutors contended the Kaufmans controlled the lives of their residents, including deciding who could wear clothes and forcing them to masturbate, fondle each other and shave each other's genitals — activities Arlan Kaufman videotaped.

Arlan Kaufman insisted the residents' behavior was voluntary. He testified that he videotaped them so they could see themselves more objectively later when their judgment was not clouded.


Wow. What freaks. Here are more articles I found about the case:

More about the charges

Out on bond

The Defense including the charming assertion that residents were locked in isolation rooms for "only a few days", not weeks or months as the prosecution alleged.

Interesting article about how consent was an issue - patients testify that they did consent, then talk about how they had clothes taken away as punishment and felt compelled to attend a group masturbation session called "massage group".

Finally the inevitable "How we're going to reform everything so this never happens again" article.

Thursday, January 19, 2006

Downtime

As you may have noticed, we have suffered some downtime as we changed over to a new host. There are some functions on the website that still need repair, but we are back online and ready for an exciting new year!