| |||||||||||||||
Product Details
|
Tag this product(What's this?)Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items. |
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
Amazing!,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America (Paperback)
This book exposes the shocking misuse of faulty diagnosis and bad science by Big Pharma to create both a crisis and also, sell us a whole raft of very expensive, very harmful, useless pharmaceuticals.Strong words, I know, but it is clear that our system of managing mental illness is broken and in need of repair. Why is it that people in less developed countries have a lower incidence of mental illness, and a higher degree of success? Is it true, as the author indicates, that vested interests are not working for effective treatment, but only opearting with a view to the bottom line of their financial statements? A must read.
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Best Antidote to the "Mental Illness Epidemic": brilliant investigative reporting,
This review is from: Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America (Paperback)
Did you know that there's no scientific evidence that a schizophrenic's brain, untreated by psychiatric drugs, electrocution (ECT), or psychosurgery (such as the now-banned lobotomy) is different than the brain of a "normal person"? That 60% of people with schizophrenia, when NOT treated with so-called antipsychotics, get better and stay better? That antipsychotics aren't drugs specially formulated to combat psychosis the way antibiotics zap dangerous bacteria? That the brain of a depressed person, untreated by psychotropic drugs, is also "normal"? That the vast array of psychotropic drugs--from antidepressants to anti-anxiety pills to antipsychotics--actually change brain chemistry, often causing more harm than good, and sometimes irreparable damage? That, rather than fixing mental health problems, psychotropic drugs create them? That there is NO test for any "mental illness"? That the diagnoses in the psychiatric bible, the DSM, are arbitrary, not scientific?"Anatomy of an Epidemic" concerns the bad science and outright fibs behind much psychotropic drug testing. It describes the devastating long-term effects of these drugs--all chronicled in literature available to psychiatrists. It exposes the greed of the pharmaceutical companies and the psychiatrists who collude with them. I trust Whitaker because I came to his conclusions on my own. I've witnessed the effects of brain-disabling drugs, the ruined lives. I've seen up close the subculture of chronic disability that we all pay for. And I've listened to the psychiatrists who talk as if their profession is now the equivalent of any other branch of medicine, treating physical illnesses with precise drugs. As Whitaker reports, those psychiatrists who don't toe the party line (biological psychiatry) find themselves on the outside. This book is a must-read for anyone on these drugs or contemplating taking them. Still unsure? Want the opinion of a real doctor? I recommend Marcia Angell's two-part essay, "The Epidemic of Mental Illness," published in the New York Review of Books in 2011. Marcia Angell is a distinguished doctor and critic of the pharmaceutical industry. Her essays are easily found on Google. Warning: she doesn't much respect psychiatry. And, like Whitaker, Angell doesn't flinch from describing the greatest tragedy of the so-called mental illness epidemic: the children prescribed these drugs who grow up with altered brain chemistry and little chance for a normal life.
4.0 out of 5 stars
The high cost of mass drugging,
This review is from: Anatomy of an Epidemic: Magic Bullets, Psychiatric Drugs, and the Astonishing Rise of Mental Illness in America (Hardcover)
Finally someone is speaking out about the consequences of massive psychiatric drugging. Ever more people are being lured into the drug trap. Once started, very few people ever succeed at quitting them. Those who stay on the drugs suffer irreversible, disabling damage to their central nervous systems. With one in eight people on these drugs, the word "epidemic" in this respect is an understatement.Not only is psychiatric meddling catastrophic for its victims, but it takes a terrible economic toll on all of society which is first forced to fund disabling so many people, and subsequently continues to be forced to fund the lifelong support and care of the so disabled. Whitaker has done his homework well. He presents his case by confronting medical science with its own research results, which can lead to no other conclusion than that psychiatry's bag of chemical tricks is only endlessly harmful. Unfortunately, in the final chapter he makes the two mistakes that he avoided so well in his book Mad in America. The first is that he tries to sound moderate by claiming that "there is a place for drugs in psychiatry's toolbox" thereby invalidating everything he wrote in all the previous chapters. The only possible valid use of psychiatric drugs is in tempering a withdrawal delirium, which would not be necessary if the drugs had never been administered in the first place. His second mistake is that he tries to propose an alternative in the example of psychiatric practice in Lapland, where, according to his description, the approach is more psychosocial with fewer drugs. But the evidence he himself presents indicates that fewer drugs is not enough, only no drugs is enough, and the efficacy of psychobabble remains unpersuasive. The book would have been better without the last chapter, except for the well-deserved tribute to attorney Jim Gottstein. Nevertheless, if you're thinking of taking a psychiatric drug or giving one to your child, please read this book first. Copyright © MeTZelf
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Want to see more reviews on this item?
|
Most recent customer reviews |
|