Slashdot Mirror


Psychiatrists Cast Doubt On Biomedical Model of Mental Illness

jones_supa writes "British Psychological Society's division of clinical psychology (DCP) will on Monday issue a statement declaring that, given the lack of evidence, it is time for a 'paradigm shift' in how the issues of mental health are understood. According to their claim, there is no scientific evidence that psychiatric diagnoses such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are valid or useful. The statement effectively casts doubt on psychiatry's predominantly biomedical model of mental distress – the idea that people are suffering from illnesses that are treatable by doctors using drugs. The DCP said its decision to speak out 'reflects fundamental concerns about the development, personal impact and core assumptions of the (diagnosis) systems', used by psychiatry. The provocative statement by the DCP has been timed to come out shortly before the release of DSM-5, the fifth edition of the American Psychiatry Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. The manual has been attacked for expanding the range of mental health issues that are classified as disorders."

329 comments

  1. Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by smaddox · · Score: 1

    Would most people be better off undiagnosed? When it comes to mental "illness", often the only (or at least the best) treatments are behavioral therapy, in which the "illness" is trained away.

    1. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      And medications are rarely, or at least are supposed to only be rarely, the only prescribed treatment, usually initially medication and behavioral therapy, medication being largely used to aid behavioral treatment at the start, unless I am mistaken.

    2. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by PNutts · · Score: 4, Funny

      Would most people be better off undiagnosed? When it comes to mental "illness", often the only (or at least the best) treatments are behavioral therapy, in which the "illness" is trained away.

      I agree. And so do I.

    3. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by MatthiasF · · Score: 1

      The problem being that most patients are most likely not being diagnosed accurately and thus being medicated inappropriately or over-medicated instead of another proper treatment, which might be why the Society decided to reverse course. So, with the choice of a majority being mis-diagnosed versus a minority correctly diagnosed, the less harmful answer is to reduce the number of diagnosis being done. And more importantly, limit diagnose under strict situations and conditions, which looks like what they wish to promote.

    4. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Would most people be better off undiagnosed?

      In a word, yes. Since "most people" would not be ill, neither physically nor mentally. This new edition of the DSM risks to change that, as in it provides a convenient way to slap "diagnostic" labels on quite a few people who're today considered pretty much normal.

      Cue the observation occasionally voiced that what today is called "ADD" (and but yesterday called "ADHD") and results in prescriptions of ritalin, only a few short decades ago was called "being a kid". We are going a little bonkers with the mental, yes.

    5. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Phrogman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      But with more people being diagnosed as mentally ill, and thus more people receiving prescription medicines, the profit margins of Big Pharma (tm) will only go up!

      Will no one think of the major pharmaceutical companies?

      I don't think its a vast conspiracy, so much as generations of doctors being educated that drugs are the solution to mental problems, and that all mental illness can be treated by some drug treatment. Also this wacky idea that we all have to match some theoretical norm of some sort. "When all you have is a hammer..." etc.

      --
      "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
    6. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 4, Insightful

      How about another way of looking at things: These are devastating illnesses. Non medical treatment hasn't been shown to be terribly effective. What the hell else do you do?

      While I'm one of the first people to dump on Big Pharma, we've gone to a biopsychosocial model because chaining people up in asylums and beating them just didn't get the job done. The brain is clearly chemical in nature and at some point reductionist medication SHOULD point the way to detailed understanding and treatment. We just aren't there now. Doesn't surprise anyone in the field. We use the SAME drugs for many "different" diseases. How's that supposed to work?

      Yes, by limiting discussion to just a certain framework of diseases you can inappropriately narrow thinking and treatment. You can make it so that it's hard to come up with a different paradigm.

      The DSM was the first attempt to come up with a reasonable framework and language. It's not very accurate but you have to start somewhere. Everyone is open to suggestions.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    7. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by The+Mighty+Buzzard · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Would be nice if true. Fact of the matter is most people get 15 minutes, a prescription, and sent home.

      --
      Violence is like duct tape. If it doesn't solve the problem, you didn't use enough.
    8. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Sarten-X · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a pretty crappy headline. My apologies for the length and tangential nature of this post. This is a very personal subject for me.

      The problem is that we really don't have a decent understanding of the brain (or its abnormalities) at all. We have collections of symptoms appearing in varying severities with varying results, and we have treatments that alter those symptoms. As far as medicine goes, that's really about it.

      The problem with a diagnosis is that it's a label. Someone who says "I'm bipolar" can expect that every action will be judged harshly as to whether it's actually their intended "normal" action, or the manifestation of their depression or mania, whichever happens to be the case that day (or hour). A child who's inattentive in school may just be bored, but the diagnosis of ADD opens the door to differently-structured classes that may help - as well as opening the door to ridicule for being different. Sometimes, yes, it's better to stay undiagnosed, and sometimes it's better to get the diagnosis and do nothing with it.

      On the other hand, diagnosis is necessary for any treatment. Someone can understand "I'm sad all the time, and don't like it", but without the term "depression", it's very difficult to find information about how to improve. I've met several people who, in the 90's when depression was highly stigmatized, had traumatic experiences that they couldn't talk about and couldn't do anything to recover from, partly because they wouldn't consider the possibility of actually being "depressed".

      To make matters worse, there are still an enormous number of people who simply deny the existence of any mental illness. They assume that kids with ADHD are just being active children, or people with depression are just sad, or people with bipolar disorder are just moody. The illness isn't what's visible from the outside, though. The illness is what's happening in the brain to cause the outward symptoms. The ADHD child can't calm down and focus - his mind always jumps to doing something else. The depressed people can't cheer up - even happy times are often plagued by a sadness that's always present in their minds. The bipolar person can't control their mood - the emotions are overwhelming.

      What's happening now, albeit slowly, is that the stigma is being countered by awareness programs. This story is in a similar vein to the one a few days ago decrying DSM-5 for not being valid regarding mental health. As our understanding and openness about mental illness improves, we're starting to recognize that typical Western medicine may have done some serious harm to our society. A recent Broadway musical explored this question well.

      In next to normal, a woman who grieved four months for a dead child was diagnosed as "depressed", and began 16 years of treatment. One of the questions explored is whether her illness was really because of the loss, or whether it was because of the trauma of ongoing treatment. There is no answer. There is no happy ending. There's only the promise of a next-to-normal life, where everything is perfect except for when it isn't, and there's always some new treatment to try.

      That's the ongoing problem with our current handling of mental illness. We have collections of symptoms, and drugs that treat them, but we don't really understand how. The DSM-5 is so vague and imprecise that a particular symptom is painted with a wide brush to be a whole set of disorders. With no testing for suitability, medications are tried that aren't fully understood, in the hope that it's the right drug to set everything right quickly. When it doesn't work, another regimen is proposed, also with little or no testing for suitability. As the patient's treatment drags on, whole classes of drugs are ruled out for their side effects, then brought back be

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    9. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Would most people be better off undiagnosed? When it comes to mental "illness", often the only (or at least the best) treatments are behavioral therapy, in which the "illness" is trained away.

      [anecdote ahead]

      Well, I am currently on lithium, and it has helped me more than the CBT ever did. How do I know? I haven't tried to kill myself in a very long time. I haven't even given it serious thought. IT is the emotional life equivalent of watching widescreen movies on 4:3. The worst ups and worst downs simply are no more. (I blatantly stole this quote from someone)

    10. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by ocamsrazor · · Score: 2

      The principle of first do no harm comes into play. If someone in a position of medical authority is going to offer you a treatment we need good evidence that the benefits of that treatment outweigh the harms.

      This is almost impossible to do if the very definitions you have of mental illness aren't meaningful. And the evidence that backs the DSM is very very weak.

    11. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      There are a few things that should be taken into account, specially regarding other, more physical medicine fields like the placebo and nocebo effects that could be triggered by the treatment or diagnosis, and the tendency on overmedicating that is having medicine now. Probably in overall is doing more damage than good right now as it is being used. As any tool, it should not be misused, only used where really is needed.

    12. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd bet that these new "disorders" in the DSM-5 will allow the government to detain lots more innocent but "undesirable" people.

      American Psychiatry has always been a joke. Why not bring back a list of nonsense questions to determine if someone is sane?

    13. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Znork · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A diagnosis may also be less useful when the problem is a natural reaction to a social environmental situation and lead to attempting to 'cure' the patient rather than fix the problems causing the reaction. Trying to treat of depression or anxiety caused by stress with long term use of medications is likely to lead to eventual failure of the medication or in the case of anti-anxiety drugs lead to addiction and problems from that, leaving the patient in an even worse situation than before.

    14. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You will never train a illness away all by itself. That's not how neural networks work. I've cured illnesses both in humans and in simulated models. Forever. In a matter of days or at most a month So I am one of the experts in the field of modern applied neuropsychology.

      In simple words:

      A behavioral therapy only actually works, if it is preceded by a intensive (primal) depth therapy. As otherwise you don't know the actual causes and are always treating symptoms or intermediate causes, and the deeper mis-associations in the brain just find new outlets. It cannot possibly work. But it can look like it for a few years, until everything becomes much much worse. Because every time you do such a unguided behavioral therapy, you weaken the neural links that enable you to still remember and hence process/fix the old damage. Meaning you will have weird unwanted behavior, without the ability to ever fix it anymore. The mother of all repression. And that is a nightmare scenario. Your behavior therapy... it will do nothing.

      You first need to find the actual causes. And newsflash: You ain't ever gonna do that with just talking to someone. In fact talking actively prevents your emotions (neural feedback loops) from growing. But you absolutely need intense experiences/feelings (the older you are, the more intense), since otherwise the weak neural links to the repressed areas will never be triggered, and so you won't be able to remember them.

      The guided depth (primal) therapy is only there to help you remember. It itself neither can ever fix anything. But it enables to tell the behavioral therapy what to actually fix. Without it, you are blind and do more damage than good.

      Finally: Stop putting "illness" it in quotes as if it's "not real", you asshole, this is not the dark ages, and just because *you* can't "see" physical scars doesn't mean they are not there or not measurable! I worked with people who did show that it triggers the exact same pain centers, and that even some painkillers work against the symptoms! Which was always obvious if you actually understood your neurology.
      Yeah... totally "not real"... It's people like you, stuck in the dark ages, that make (neuro-)psychotherapy such an uphill battle!

    15. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The brain is not just chemical in nature. Many of the important properties of the brain come from the physical arrangement of neurons. If the neurons are connected in the wrong way, you can't fix that by bathing the entire brain in some chemical, so there are almost certainly problems that can occur in the brain that cannot be fixed by just administering a medication.

    16. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The use of quotes around illness suggests you've never experienced it or dealt with those affected. Thanks so much for belittling a serious problem.

    17. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Guppy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      When it comes to mental "illness", often the only (or at least the best) treatments are behavioral therapy, in which the "illness" is trained away.

      For mild forms of mental illness (bearing in mind that what we call "mild" mental illness can be crippling and painful from the perspective of the individual), perhaps. I'm not sure I agree with the way you phrase your position, but it is at least a valid position.

      But behavioral therapy supposes that patient has enough function to engage with the therapist; even in the days before neuroleptics, it was recognized that some forms of mental illness did not respond well to talk therapy. A severely disorganized schizophrenic will turn even the simplest statements into jumbled hash; a catatonic depressive might not have sufficient volition to even reply.

      Therapy is pretty advanced when dealing with patients who can't function enough to take care of their basic survival needs -- I'm not talking about acceptance of particular choices or values (by society or by self), or even whether they fit in well enough to hold a job. Rather, individuals rendered unable to attend to basic functions like "avoid freezing to death in winter" or "obtain and prepare sufficient food to maintain life, without endangering others". In such cases it is often a useful adjunct, but supposes that the patient can improve enough to be establish some level of meaningful communication.

    18. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 2

      Still, seeing a symptom and treating it with a drug, skipping "thinking", probably misses an enormous chunk that needs to be built back into the model.

      Freud-type stuff has been largely shot down, but the brain, when thinking, builds and reinforces thought and memory pathways. If the thinking thinks odd things, it's going to reinforce odd things. What's the mental problem rate of farmers working all day keeping their brain busy vs. poorly-employed people sitting around brooding all day?

      Brooding, thinking, builds and reinforces memories and thinking. Any model of "mental symptom + drugs" completely skips that mechanism.

      BTW, I have no idea if that's what this group of psychologists (not psychiatrists) is suggesting, but that's what I'd suggest.

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    19. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by macraig · · Score: 2

      If you got 15 minutes you were lucky. I got ten, a scrip, and a followup cancelled by the doctor.

    20. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by mrbester · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Psychiatrists take the Hippocratic oath? Considering their treatments and "remedies" they don't seem very good at upholding it.

      --
      "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
    21. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the hell else do you do?

      Perform rain dances, give herbal infusions, whack'em over the head until problem solved. There are so many things to try. And yes, psychiatry has tried quite a few, beyond figuring out the right pill for exactly your condition.

      Note that electroshock, insulin shock, even lobotomy were not exactly subtle, nor were they much based on evidence, even where the patients were patently being used as lab rats. But they're certainly other things that've been tried and shown to be a bad idea, the hard way. Yay for psychiatic advancement!

      The brain is clearly chemical in nature [...]

      Also electrical, and we have devices to look at your thoughts as you're thinking them. Also pretty much terra incognita as to how awareness follows from this and just what the heck is really wrong with you when you're hearing voices or whatever.

      [...] and at some point reductionist medication SHOULD point the way to detailed understanding and treatment.

      Psychiatric medicine is still pretty much in the "poke and see what happens" stage. It may well be that the reductionist approach may prove horribly unable to deal with, or even usefully discern, what is actually going on. Too bad that holistic approaches are still considered witchery or part of the occult or whatever, if they're thinking about that sort of thing at all.

      The a priori and pervasive assumption is that there's something obvious their "science" can "see" and that there is going to be a set answer for each and every enumerable condition. You just gotta enumerate them all.

      That may not be true. Seeing the lack of progress regardless of how they gerrymander their categories..., well, I'm glad I'm not a pshrink and also that I don't need one. *shudder*

      Everyone is open to suggestions.

      If only that were true. Instead, various institutions and insurers are taking this thing and making it their grail. That is not "being open to suggestions". At all.

    22. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Hey, that sounds just like me, me, and me!
      --the Holy Trinity, AKA One God In Three Persons

    23. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >until we can understand and test for the neurological conditions that lead to the symptoms of mental illness

      The Sun will have burned out well before then. If you want to wring your hands and do nothing, that's your problem. I prefer half a loaf (or a tenth or even a hundredth) to nothing.

      CAPTCHA: exorcism. Rather appropriate since it was a treatment for mental illness in a less enlightened era. I suppose you would have been fine with that.

    24. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Did you really write,"What's happening now, albeit slowly, is that the stigma is being countered by awareness programs."?

      All the recent "mass" shootings lately (the last year or so) have sought to stigmatize anyone with any alleged "mental" problem. One fellow had a gun permit (and had no history of violence or gun misuse) and lost his permit, guns, and civil rights (search without a warrant) because the Government had discovered he used an anti-anxiety drug for a short period in the distant past. There is no differentiation of the "types" of bi-poplar. Having any bi-polar disease is a reason to restrict the civil rights of any and all so diagnosed persons. This is done without any awareness that there are different types of bi-polar disease and the ability of a restoration to a normal life style of people diagnosed with a bi-polar disease. I recently read an article that suggested that the entire adult population suffered from Post Traumatic Stress Syndrome. PTSD is a diagnosis that will, if the latest-and-greatest bills are passed into law, restrict a person's civil rights.

      Things were getting better but things are again getting worse for people with any "mental illness" or "mental disease".

    25. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mental problem rate of farmers working all day keeping their brain busy : higher suicide rate, I could cite site with better reputation but even the born again christian admit it:http://www.redeemingthedirt.com/2012/07/03/suicide-rate-for-american-farmers-double-the-average-of-other-occupations/

    26. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      Primal therapy is pseudoscientific hogwash. And you are deluded and/or a charlatan.

      See rebirthing therapy, crystal healing, and pyramid power for additional examples.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    27. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Did you know a diet change can increase the amount of lithium naturally in your body? Eat more things from the sea.

    28. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      That sounds like just like me!

      Jesus, it's past your bedtime!

      Whoooooo!

    29. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I know a couple of people on lithium and it has switched them from attempting suicide to instead kind of just getting on with life.

      I think people are better off diagnosed. Just knowing that you aren't an obnoxious anti-social twat but instead suffering from something that makes you an obnoxious anti-social twat makes it easier to cope with. Behavioural therapies can be targeted and ineffective pharmaceutical treatments can be avoided.

      Being "different" is far easier to deal with if you're medically acknowledged as such, even if it can't be fixed.

    30. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by N_Piper · · Score: 1

      Would be nice if true. Fact of the matter is most people get 15 minutes, a prescription, and sent home.

      I, However, have been seeing my Psychiatrist every 6 months for an hour at a time for the last 22 years.
      Don't assume or generalise, the vast genetic diversity of the human condition really does not allow for it, that is what I've learnt from my doctor.

    31. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by muridae · · Score: 2

      The problem with a diagnosis is that it's a label. Someone who says "I'm bipolar" can expect that every action will be judged harshly as to whether it's actually their intended "normal" action, or the manifestation of their depression or mania, whichever happens to be the case that day (or hour).

      And any person who says that needs some behavior modification anyways. No one walks around saying "I'm heart disease" or "I'm the flu" when they are suffering from those disorders or illnesses. Only mental health and diabetes have that distinction. And it's a bloody stupid one that continues to allow people with mental illnesses to continue to blame their illness for everything, because they treat it as a label. It's stupid for the reason you bring up as well, because it allows others to blame that one thing instead of anything else.

      If people with mental illnesses treat it as an illness, not a defining feature of themself . . . well, there is a reason that's part of behavioral therapy already.

    32. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by tftp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The brain is clearly chemical in nature and at some point reductionist medication SHOULD point the way to detailed understanding and treatment.

      [just an example below]

      I have a problem with my Windows computer. Now and then Firefox crashes when I visit a certain site. Since the computer is clearly electrical in nature, I'm considering taking this here 120V AC wires and sticking them into various places on the motherboard. Random places, actually - because I have no idea how the motherboard works. Will that help with the problem?

      Thinking aloud a bit more now. Will *any* electrical interference with operation of a CPU give me *any* hints how the software works?

    33. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

      As someone on venlafaxine, I concur about the ups and downs being gone more than through CBT. CBT requires such an effort that at least to me it seemed that if I could seriously benefit from CBT, I wouldn't need it in the first place since then I wouldn't have the problems I've had functioning. Venlafaxine is not an ideal medication for me but because I have epilepsy, it reduces the options what doctors can prescribe me. Out of curiosity, I ask if you notice the effects some other way? For me, an unfortunate effect has been a lowered ability to concentrate. At first, I noticed that every time I was getting a bad, depressive thought, I just forgot it and thus didn't end up in my depression cycle. It's, however, not a "precision weapon" so other thoughts are often "collateral damage" so I often forget what I'm thinking of even if I try to concentrate really hard. In the past, I instead associated to something negative in my life from almost anything and thus my productivity was lower not because I forgot thoughts but precisely because I didn't - I was able to constantly make jumps like "I heard this unusual word the first time when I saw movie X and there was a poster for movie X in location Y which was where I met girl Z for the last time" and even much more far-fetched associations to anything that made me feel sad and I just couldn't stop those associations from being constantly formed. Now that i no longer do that, I'm also a lot less angry with myself and that might have harmed my productivity in a different way, I'm more forgiving to myself if I skip exercising, do a shitty job and so on (although I know that prior to my medication, my perfectionism was quite extreme by most peoples' standards). So how has your productivity level changed on lithium?

      And to "normal" people, i.e. those few that have never gone through depression or had to take antidepressants: If you're curious to find out what it can be like, you can first think about what it's like to suddenly be reminded of something by making an association Then imagine that you constantly associate things with something negative - as if you had had e.g. pictures of all bad things you've ever experienced and all people that have hurt you placed all over your room/cubicle/house...

    34. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by gmack · · Score: 1

      Your lucky then, I've had two friends come back from the doctor in worse condition than they were in the first place after they got medicated. In one case my friend got better when the doctor took him back off the meds but in the other they doubled down on the meds and he ended up not being able to function on how own (or even hold a conversation) and in a group home.

    35. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by dcollins117 · · Score: 1

      Would most people be better off undiagnosed?

      In a word, yes.

      In a word, no. The people most likely to benefit from treatment are also the least likely to be able to afford it. Not many companies actively recruiting schizophrenics for high paying jobs these days. Additionally, insurance companies would love to deny medical claims for the mentally ill as psychiatric treatment and medications do not come cheap. Without a diagnosis there is no way in hell any insurance company will honor a claim for treatment.

    36. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by WGFCrafty · · Score: 1

      Would most people be better off undiagnosed? When it comes to mental "illness", often the only (or at least the best) treatments are behavioral therapy, in which the "illness" is trained away.

      You know not what you speak of. I'm not a doctor and know you're wrong. CBT does not work with untreated schizophrenia spectrum disorders, and can make them worse.

    37. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What would be better is to avoid diagnosis labels (or use only more specific labels) until we can understand and test for the neurological conditions that lead to the symptoms of mental illness.

      I can tell you aren't a doctor. The reasons there are diagnoses aren't to comfort the patient, but to try to treat the illness. A diagnosis allows a doctor to review the appropriate literature and use treatment options that have been studied and determined to be at least marginally effective. No diagnosis would mean that every doctor would have to invent a treatment plan for every patient without evidence that it worked.

      I do get where you are coming from, though. The DSM-5 was initially going to include a 'trait' model of personality disorders, since those are the disorders that have the most overlap and confusing boundaries. For example, you could rate a person on traits like being impulsive, self-injuring, mood shifting, dissociative, etc. and then use that to diagnose a disorder more specifically. The problem is that while these traits might give a good model of a person's issues, they don't help with treatment since all research has been on how you treat a disorder only. So as a compromise, the old system for personality disorders was retained while the new trait model is included for research purposes only.

      This is the Catch-22 of the DSM. Researchers try to determine how to effectively treat a disorder, because this is what doctors need to know. But the DSM defines the disorders. And the DSM, the guide for doctors, can't be updated without research supporting it.

    38. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by ColdWetDog · · Score: 0

      If I were you, I'd suggest not going into either medicine or electronics as careers.

      You might, however, give a go at car analogies.

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    39. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1, Informative

      Your example's wrong. Back in the olden days when they still repaired computer boards rather then simply throwing them out, the way they figured out which chip needed to be replaced was by using electrical equipment to test circuits. It took forever even back then, with much simpler circuits, but if you had the right tools you could still do it today. It's not a great way to solve every computer issue, but for some extremely severe problems this is the only solution besides throwing out the hardware.

      This is why using pills to treat mental illness has such great results. Most of the dumb criminals you read about in the news are people who have been diagnosed with major psychiatric issues, but stopped taking their meds. I've been on and off anti-depressants for years, and I can tell you I feel tons better when I'm on the pills. I feel better, I focus better, instead of deciding to sit at home and BS on Slashdot I go to work, etc.

      Yeah there are many issues that could be better handled with therapy, or simple good parenting, that get into the DSM. But that's because all medical specialties have diagnoses that are silly, or obvious, or not that big a deal. If you check out the Wikipedia page on paper cuts you'll note that Paper Cuts have a Medical Billing Code.

    40. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not religious dissociative identity disorder? Schizophrenia isn't the same thing.

    41. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by tftp · · Score: 2

      Back in the olden days when they still repaired computer boards rather then simply throwing them out, the way they figured out which chip needed to be replaced was by using electrical equipment to test circuits. It took forever even back then, with much simpler circuits, but if you had the right tools you could still do it today.

      I'm quite aware of that because when I was studying in university I was also working as a tech, repairing IBM/360 [alike] video terminals, like this and like this - though marginally newer.

      I must tell you, there is nothing you can do, regardless of how many tools and test equipment you pile up, unless you have the detailed schematics of everything in that box, and placement diagrams of all components. And even then you would be completely baffled now and then; for example, when you have a multiple component failure.

      I'm glad that medication helps you and others. Computers sometimes can also be medicated like that. I have a box that, until recently, was crashing randomly when it is cold. Keeping it running 24/7 prevented the crashes. (In the end, it was the HDD that was the cause.)

    42. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      These are devastating illnesses.

      Some of these are devastating problems, certainly. Whether calling them "diseases" is accurate, is part of the question here.

      Non medical treatment hasn't been shown to be terribly effective.

      Medical treatment hasn't been shown to be terribly effective.

      What the hell else do you do?

      How about treating a cognitive and behavioral problem with cognitive and behavioral solutions?

      The brain is clearly chemical in nature

      Computers are electronic in nature, but you don't fix a software bug by rewriting them. (Yes, the computer/brain analogy can be hazardous if carried too far.)

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    43. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they doubled down on the meds and he ended up not being able to function on how own (or even hold a conversation) and in a group home.

      Post hoc, ergo propter hoc.

    44. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi. Aspie here.

      Diagnosis is becoming a "social phenomenon" (a phrase I just cooked up to explore an idea) ... meaning that we have lost some of the true tolerance of foibles that used to just to be just called "eccentric". Now external social forces "want" to diagnose people to make *themselves* feel better.

    45. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Zeroko · · Score: 1
    46. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The trouble with the DSM as a 'starting point' is that no-one has the financial incentive lined up to improve on it. When you can 'treat' people by making them take an arbitrarily-priced pill every day for the rest of their life - what exactly is your motivation to improve on that? As far as Big Pharma is concerned, it's the perfect solution.

      The worst thing that could happen, from their perspective, is that someone invents a treatment that actually helps sufferers to recover and not need to take any more pills.

      I'm not sure when we as a society bought into the idea that it's "normal" for people to pop pills or similar treatments every day, regardless of transient health conditions, but it's happened. It started out with the elderly and chronically ill (e.g. diabetics), but now it's moved way beyond that. From schoolchildren pumped full of "fish oil" (for the supposed magickal properties of omega-3), to basically normal adults prescribed lithium or valium or aspirin or statins on an ongoing basis... And Big Pharma laughing all the way.

    47. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Sulphur · · Score: 1

      If you check out the Wikipedia page on paper cuts you'll note that Paper Cuts have a Medical Billing Code.

      Collision damage caused by a tortoise has a medical billing code too.

    48. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by tftp · · Score: 1

      Yes, but only if you know exactly what you are doing.

      Nobody is going to use this method to extract an HD video, or its key, from a running computer. Even fewer people would be capable of learning the algorithm.

      Though, a computer is an observable system. If you just happen to have a logic analyzer with 10,000 probes that can take multi-GHz readings, then you certainly can capture a lot - and if you have a super-computer nearby then perhaps you can make sense out of what you captured. Not even then, likely - internal CPU caches will destroy your ability to follow jumps, and the state of GP registers will remain a secret.

      We have no such logic analyzer for a brain. The best analogy I can think of is that scientists run various software and then measure how much this or that component on the board heats up. That does reflect its utilization, in a way, but it's far too imprecise.

    49. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps those monks with mental conditions, which forced them to become monks in the first place in order to survive, inspired the theoretical division of definition of Christian god.

    50. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I am currently on lithium, and it has helped me more than the CBT ever did.

      I was very sceptical about CBT at first, especially when my doctor got out a Wartenberg wheel and told me to take my pants off. Granted, the first few treatments were a bit painful but over time I learnt to enjoy the sensation of receding pain in my balls. It really takes your mind off all the usual problems and quirks. Even suicide is not much of option when you're properly tied up.

    51. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will *any* electrical interference with operation of a CPU give me *any* hints how the software works?

      Sure it can: that's exactly how reverse engineering is done. Do your best to send the computer into a state that you know best, then watch it in action while measuring where the charge is flowing, anythings that seems anomalous. It a bit inefficient, so you should probably just read the manual, but if you don't have the manual, and the book is out of print, and the manufacturer is out of business, and no one wants to seed you a copy, ....

    52. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, ADD can be shown on a MRI, and people without ADD that take the same medication, they get hyper while ADD people mellow out.

    53. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Frobnicator · · Score: 1

      The problem with a diagnosis is that it's a label. Someone who says "I'm bipolar" ...

      And any person who says that needs some behavior modification anyways. No one walks around saying "I'm heart disease" or "I'm the flu" when they are suffering from those disorders or illnesses.

      "I'm bipolar" is correct, just like "I'm diabetic", I'm depressed", or "I'm hungry" are all correct.

      --
      //TODO: Think of witty sig statement
    54. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by gd2shoe · · Score: 2

      You're skipping right over numerous known causes of depression, including several endocrinological, nutritional, and even oncological causes.

      Not faulting you. Most doctors overlook them too (to their fault).

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    55. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by gd2shoe · · Score: 2

      That was actually a very good computer analogy. Top notch researchers are almost at the oscilloscope level. They don't really know what's going on in there, but they've found ways to get glimpses. The average doctor treating (for example) depression? Just randomly connecting wires. That doesn't work? Let's put some voltage behind them.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    56. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Sarten-X · · Score: 2

      Yes, I did write that. And yes, the stigma is still pervasive in areas dominated by the old ideology, including law, medicine (sadly), religion, and news media. Fortunately, mental health awareness is indeed spreading through the public. Help agencies are advertising suicide hotlines and informal discussion groups, and hanging up posters saying that "mental illness is an illness", highlighting how it's a condition affecting an otherwise-normal person. Then there are the many more popular artistic works like next to normal that are ever-so-slowly highlighting the fact that mental illness is a daily part of millions of lives, and only very few ever reach the point of seriously considering harming others.

      It took a century after the Civil War for America to recognize that African Americans are regular people, and there's still some holdouts. We're only about 20 years into this fight.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    57. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they doubled down on the meds and he ended up not being able to function on how own (or even hold a conversation) and in a group home.

      Post hoc, ergo propter hoc.

      quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur

    58. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you really believe that, you're an idiot and should immediately stop talking.

    59. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Today's treatments, as frequently used, are as worthless and misguided as those exorcisms.

      I'd rather have no loaf, than have no loaf and pay for it. These drugs have side effects, some of them very bad, and some of them permanent. (and doctors generally won't tell you about them in advance)

      True, honest diagnosis first.THEN treatment.

      What would be better is to avoid diagnosis labels (or use only more specific labels) until we can understand and test for the neurological conditions that lead to the symptoms of mental illness. We could differentiate "depression due to low $HORMONE" from "depression due to physically-damaged $STRUCTURE", and "low levels of $CHEMICAL" from "high levels of $OPPOSITE_CHEMICAL". From there, drug treatment can be centered on solving specific problems, rather than just brutally shoving the mind in a particular direction. Once the underlying neurology is a bit closer to "fixed", therapy can be more effective at helping the patient cope with their chronic condition.

      This isn't academic, when-the-sun-burns-out stuff here. Hormonal, structural, neuro-transmitter (chemical), and opposing neurotransmitter problems can often be diagnosed today. They just frequently aren't because doctors are either too busy, lazy, or ignorant. It is very reasonable to believe we'll have even more of these things that we'll be able to test for in the near future.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    60. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm glad lithium works for you. I wish there was something else - something newer, with less druggy side effects - that would also work. If you tried them all and failed, well, at least lithium works for you. If you haven't tried any of the newer drugs, and feel crushed by the lithium, find a patient doctor willing to work with you and see what else is available. In my non-doctor, non-patient experience, lamotrigine (lamictil) in particular can be very helpful for those suffering from bipolar disorder and has minimal side effects.

    61. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      I've met people like that.

      I've also met people who have gone out of their way to hide their disorder, out of a rational fear of being judged for it.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    62. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by muridae · · Score: 1

      It's become correct, but it shouldn't be. "I suffer from bipolar disorder" should be the correct phrase. Hungry is a state of being, one can be that; as is being depressed, but no one says "I'm depression" (one is a state of being, the other is a illness that causes that state of being more often). One might be having a bipolar episode, in which case the phrase might be correct, but they are not constantly in one state or the other if treatment is working. There is no reason to allow mental illnesses to be a label that defines a characteristic about a person any more than high sodium or high blood pressure does. They are all medical disorders, they are all things one deals with from time of diagnosis and usually before that, but they do not need to be labels.

    63. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah, the first use of "patient" in the above meant "methodical" while the second meant "sufferer". Stupid language.

    64. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      CBT is there to get you out of the rut, once you are rational enough to recognize the rut. It's a very good therapy, but not the only answer.

      The problem is, if your depression is chemical in nature (or physical) rather then just external influences (significant other just died, other life events / catastrophes), you will hardly ever get out of that rut on your own.

      Which is where the medications come in. When they work correctly, they keep you from getting into the rut of irrationality, or at least make it so that the deep rut is only a slight depression.

      Basically, in depression, we're our own worst enemy if untreated. CBT doesn't change that, but it makes it easier to recover.

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    65. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by WindowsWasher · · Score: 1

      Would most people be better off undiagnosed? When it comes to mental "illness", often the only (or at least the best) treatments are behavioral therapy, in which the "illness" is trained away.

      I'm sure you posted the above in good faith so I've deleted my original knee-jerk response to your comment. Instead, let it suffice to say that behavioral therapy is only appropriate, suitable or relevant for a very small percentage of patients that fall under the encompassing umbrella-term of 'mental illness'. One does not train away the illness of what we currently label as Schizophrenia, Major Depression or Bipolar Disorder.

    66. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by mug+funky · · Score: 4, Interesting

      CBT is a wonderful advance in psychology.

      but most honest practitioners of it will concede that a short course of (the correct) meds will make CBT a lot more effective.

      how do you tell someone to calm down when they can't hear you above their own screaming? sometimes people get into a state where they're simply not going to be receptive of any talk-based therapy. if this happens to somebody in your life, you'll be glad that drugs exist, and in enough variety that one of them is quite likely to be just the ticket.

      an analogy i've heard is that the patient is like someone walking through snow wearing nothing but underwear. giving them meds is like handing them a coat and scarf. it'll work, but eventually that person has to get themselves out of the snow because it's pretty damn cold.

    67. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by mug+funky · · Score: 1

      is that you, Mr. Cruise?

    68. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mental illness has an effect on other people, of course. but the way you put it is ridiculous. society is not out to get you. why? because society is a bunch of individuals, all looking out for themselves. it's not an organized front against you.

      why can't people accept that brains can get sick like bodies can get sick. it's just that the pustules are very difficult to find, and even physical medicine has not been at the state of advancement it is in today for very long. people died from scratches not 100 years ago. give psych some time - it's getting better all the time, and the current scientific approach seems to be working.

      if you have a spouse with antenatal/postnatal (or both, like my wife) depression, things can get pretty goddamn hairy. and we're both glad that antidepressants exist and that we lucked out on getting the right one early. the alternative would have been domestic violence, unemployment, possibly 2 dead babies. that's how bad it can get. there's potentially 3 lives saved just from one intervention.

      now go ahead and say it's just society wanting to feel better about itself.

    69. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Z00L00K · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You may not be able to fix the brain, but you can use drugs to put a cap on runaway processes that are the result of a miswired brain.

      The problem with mental illness is that the brain gets caught in a feedback loop which manifests itself in various ways. This is probably the price we have to pay for the level of intelligence we have - our brains are unusually complex. Many very creative persons are also known to have had a history of mental disorder of some kind. The balance between genius and madness is always close.

      Salvador Dalí was from some perspective a bit crazy, but he was also a very smart and creative person. Franz Kafka was riddled with depressions but nevertheless an important author.

      As for experiencing depression/anxiety myself - without the drugs I would be stuck in a bad loop most of the time.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    70. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the AMA stopped using that oath in the 70s sometime, no american doctor is held to that standard

    71. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by arglebargle_xiv · · Score: 3, Funny

      they doubled down on the meds and he ended up not being able to function on how own (or even hold a conversation) and in a group home.

      Post hoc, ergo propter hoc.

      quidquid Latine dictum sit altum videtur

      Every time I see this pointlessy show-offy use of latin, all I can think of is telling the OP is caput tuum revelle tuo e culo.

      (And now we get an endless debate about whether I should have used clunes, and velle rather than revelle, and that's the real reason for the fall of the Roman empire, not the inability to terminate strings but the fact that they spent most of their time arguing over grammar).

    72. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've met people like that.

      I've also met people who have gone out of their way to hide their disorder, out of a rational fear of being judged for it.

      Fear of being judged for it? How about the rest of us who have a fear of being shot by them when they go crazy. The mentally ill should be registered like sex offenders and shouldn't be out without supervision.

    73. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by niftymitch · · Score: 1

      Would most people be better off undiagnosed? When it comes to mental "illness", often the only (or at least the best) treatments are behavioral therapy, in which the "illness" is trained away.

      Sadly most of the comments are confusing classification with diagnosis.

      Mental illness can be reactive to some external event physical or mental or intrinsic. Intrinsic can be developmental, congenital, induced,,,,,

      "Mad as a Hatter" comes to mind as being a model for an external event that requires both short term management and long term treatment. Pb and Hg poisoning is real, physical and has profound impact on behaviour. Lacking heavy metal toxicology testing the root cause will remain undiagnosed but behaviour can be classified and managed.

      Brain trauma from gunshot to stroke can produce astounding behaviour changes. In most cases the damage is real and no intervention can reverse the damage. Some damage will heal but medication to manage problem behaviour is common and necessary. Alzheimer's is a relentless destructive affliction and depending on the region of the brain damage can cause behaviour and physical changes not just memory loss.

      So classification is a lot less interesting early on than a root cause diagnosis. Medications can slow or stop some progressive damage and medications can help prevent clots that result in additional strokes. Dealing with the damage is another process.

      A common and troubling error is blindness to bipolar afflictions. Medication for depression is often the wrong choice for bipolar issues. Commonly the down side, depression, is what brings or sends individuals to seek mental health care. This is impossible to diagnose in 15 min... unless the patient communicates both extremes in the subjective part of a medical assessment (see SOAP) and the doctor knows to listen.

      There is a big gap in the tools that psychiatrists (M.D.) and psychologists have at their disposal. Most referrals from school systems and social workers fall in the camp of paperback psychology and developmental psychology and too often are biased, incomplete, incompetent and damaging. A couple weeks of continuing education and refresher courses in the summer adds credentials and credibility but not ability. There are many very qualified individuals mostly working in isolation. Decades ago I was reminded that a manager that hires a programmer needs to budget for at least one more so the programmer has someone to talk to. Working in isolation is trouble. As a minimum the isolated mental health pro will suffer isolation related mental health issues.

      So back to the subject line but stated differently. Yes, Most people would be better off correctly diagnosed. However correct is rare. Rare enough that too many are so badly diagnosed as to be a serious problem. Theres is hope, do not underestimate the opinion of veteran teachers who can tell that "some/one of these kids are not at all like the others". Do not overvalue the opinion of an overworked bureaucrat and self serving bureaucracy.

      This stuff is difficult...

      --
      Truth is stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to possibilities; Truth isn't. Mark Twain.
    74. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by jandersen · · Score: 2

      Would most people be better off undiagnosed? When it comes to mental "illness", often the only (or at least the best) treatments are behavioral therapy, in which the "illness" is trained away.

      Perhaps not. I think the point they are trying to make is that the traditional diagnoses do not reflect any deep insight into the nature of the disorders - they merely describe a set of symptoms, and trying, like the American manual, to pin it out in ever more specific categories does little to help in that respect.

      There is some research to suggest that the actual underlying disorder in the brain may be essentially the same for at least several of the common diagnoses (like schizophrenia and depression), while some disorders that are considered variants of the same may be caused by different, underlying problems. Current treatments are only directed at the symptomatic diagnosis, really, and it would be a lot better to understand the disorders well enough to treat the underlying conditions.

    75. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by mvdwege · · Score: 1

      In my opinion the habit of bringing up guns and 'teh gubernment is taking away muh rights!!11!' should be classified as a form of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder.

      In fact, I advocate heavily medicating it, preferably with HCN.

      --
      "I know I will be modded down for this": where's the option '-1, Asking for it'?
    76. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by terjeber · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You are correct about the diagnosis accuracy. I worked during my studying years, in a mental institution. The reality is that if you send a patient to four different doctors the patient is going to come back with five or more mutually exclusive diagnosis. Psychology is less accurate than astrology.

    77. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by terjeber · · Score: 1

      What the hell else do you do?

      At this point in time - keep them segregated from society if they are dangerous, otherwise, help them live as normally as possible and accept the fact that some people are just different.

    78. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by indeterminator · · Score: 1

      Fear of being judged for it? How about the rest of us who have a fear of being shot by them when they go crazy. The mentally ill should be registered like sex offenders and shouldn't be out without supervision.

      I think we need a disorder classification for people who are obsessively trolling the internet.

    79. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If the neurons are connected in the wrong way, you can't fix that by bathing the entire brain in some chemical

      Actually, you can, to some extent. By inducing chemical changes in the brain, you can exploit neural plasticity and cause growth and rearrangement of neural connections with lasting effects. Better yet, in at least some parts of the brain, flat out neurogenesis (proliferation of neural cells) can be catalyzed by proteins, or their chemical precursors. In fact, this is thought by many to be the very basis of what (relatively little) efficacy SSRIs have. The interesting thing is that no one really knew this when SSRIs were beginning to be prescribed. All they could really say for them was that they seemed to be more efficacious while having less side effects, and that seemed to have something to do with their selective agonism for serotonin. It's far from an ideal situation, but at least they have brought relief to some people in the meantime while researchers work to understand and improve upon current treatments.

      That said, the science is behind this is still incomplete, and I would agree that the excessive prescription of psychiatric drugs with questionable efficacy and side effects is extremely irresponsible. It would seem that this is the spirit behind what the DCP is attempting to change here, but it would be silly to take this to mean that we're chasing a pipe dream by pursuing neurochemical means of treating mental illness. You're right, though, that perhaps not all problems can be solved this way. But we would do well to distinguish between the irresponsible clinical use of psychiatric medication, and the promising research that may well lead to new generations of treatments, drug or otherwise, that can offer better prognoses.

    80. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by aussie_a · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I suffer from major depression. When I go off my mess I feel like crap. I stop being able to concentrate and I feel overwhelming hopelessness. On the wrong medication I was failing basic courses at uni. On the right medication I got credit/distinctions on average and have not only held down a job for 3 years but excelled at it.

      I have gone off my medication in the past because I wasn't convinced that the problem was chemical rather than environmental. When I go off my medication I'm sometimes fine for months. But eventually things get worse. I've been on the same medication for 4 years now, I've yet to have any issues.

      I explored several options before settling on medication. Even then I explored the possibility that the depression was environmental or situational. I've been proven wrong each time.

      Are some people incorrectly medicated? Definitely. But the idea no-one needs this medication to live a fulfilling life is reckless and ill informed.

    81. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this dreck being modded up? It has nothing to do with anything.

    82. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Same story here (uni problems, jobs problems after that), except that I have never found the right medication. Some of it worked for a while, but after that, side-effects became worse than the initial condition.

      I'm currently experiencing some kind of all-time low and my pdoc and me are searching what kind of new medication approach we could try, after a spectacular failure last year. Could I ask you what kind of treatment works with you? Trust me, I'm not stupid enough to blindly try anything that you would answer. But your message gave me what I need more right now: hope. And your answer could be a _basis for discussion_ with my pdoc.

      (Posting anonymous because I have not found any way to contact you privately.)

    83. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Physical arrangement of neurons is chemical in nature, as is in general the human body

    84. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Pah, I got 2 asprin and sent home to bed.

      What is this, the four Yorkshiremen sketch version of mental health?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    85. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Mike+Frett · · Score: 1

      As someone that has been to quite a few quacks, I can tell you that's true. You wait an hour in the lobby, go to the back with a grumpy psychiatrist and his assistant; sit down and answer his questions. His questions are very personal and usually confusing and feel designed to make you upset. After about 10 minutes he writes you some prescriptions, tells you to come back next month but doesn't tell you what's wrong with your Brain.

      You have to take the prescriptions, because next month when you come back, some blood-work will be issued to make sure you're taking the medication. If you're not taking it, the quack will not see you anymore. Unless your problem is extremely severe, I have found that eating right, exercise, social activities and a good Vitamin work just as well.

      You have to understand, unless your case is severe enough for hospitalization, the whole process is designed to extract funds from you. Eighteen years worth of these people, I should know. Yes, I'm a local Slashdot loony, nice to meet you.

    86. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by V!NCENT · · Score: 1

      The DSM is not about diagnosis, but some retards use it that way. The purpose of the DSM is being a psychiatric dictionary. That means if psychiatrist talk about [illness xyz] then they are reffering to the collection of symption [a, b, c, d].

      And yes we needed the DSM, but it has become irrelevant. You see; one can research the brain of a mouse; just scrap this and that away and see what happens. With humans on the other hand, this can't be done in vivo ("while alive"). So people started to gather common collection of symptoms so they could put a label on a person with these symptoms, and ask the 'patient' permission to study the structure of their brain after death.

      Now that brain research has vastly improved, all kinds of overlaps start to appear with common 'components'. Say a person with ADHD has RDS and DAT ("dope transport from here to there in brain") problems.

      Now that the mesolymbic pathway has been found not to be a pleasure centre, but more of a 'conscious intersection' of the brain, using a serotonine feedback loop to modulate dopaminergic release, all these 'illnesses' start to make a lot of sense. Dopamine actualy sort of highlights/projects emotionaly charged 'thoughts' into human consciousness.

      Now all of a sudden check what effects PTSD has on hormone release. Suddenly bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, hallunications, paranoia, anxiety, autism, PDD, psychosocial all make sense. An example:

      Parents neglect child.
      Child doesn't learn coping mechanisms.
      No coping mechanisms for strong emotional experiences result in trauma.
      Trauma means; brain cannot process said experience, resulting in PTSD.
      PTSD effects are less serotonine (depression), thus less oxytocine(autism, thus PDD thus psychosocial leads to "schizophrenia), less dopamine (looks like ADHD, but isn't), more cortisol (stress, self-consciousness skyrockets, anxiety) and more estrogen (hello male, here comes your body dismorphic disorder).
      And so on and so forth...

      --
      Here be signatures
    87. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Just to offer a counter point to a well stated opinion.

      I suffer from schizophrenia (which, for all the ignorants around here, is destinct from multiple personality disorder) and have steadfastly refused medication.

      I took it for the first months of my care but stopped once I left hospital as the medication zombified me in it's attempt to "put a cap on runaway processes".

      My Phsychitrist was not pleased and I fear where I in another country I would have been sectioned. As it was I left his office with a promise from him to see him again within 5 years after I relapsed.

      That was 9 years ago.

      I am now 30, in a well-paid, professional, technical job. Whilst currently single I've formed meaningful intimit relationships as well as becoming a prominant and respected figure within my local community.

      That's all very self-back-slappy until you realise that NONE of that would be possible if I were to take my medication.

      It's only possible because I've chosen to tackle my illness head on and I've only been able to take it head on as I didn't have drugs to obscure my view of the situation.

      I have had near lapses, I won't lie. But in the main I stand by my 9 year plus experiment to prove that psychiatry can go fuck it's self (or at least eat some humble pie).

    88. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      We use the SAME drugs for many "different" diseases. How's that supposed to work?

      Works great in the software industry.

      1. Files corrupted? Reboot. Still corrupted? Reinstall.
      2. Screen wonky? Reboot. Still wonky? Reinstall.

      Works great every time. I don't see any problem with that.

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
    89. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by ebno-10db · · Score: 1

      the real reason for the fall of the Roman empire, not the inability to terminate strings but the fact that they spent most of their time arguing over grammar

      That and the fact that certain terms in Latin sound awfully similar but mean opposite things. I can imagine a 5th century battlefield where the order goes out to use the inter-legion defense, but half the legions heard intra-legion defense. Oops, of such things are barbarian victories made.

    90. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 1

      Why is this dreck being modded up? It has nothing to do with anything.

      And yet I find it resonates loudly with the new DSM 5. Which is dreck that has nothing to do with the actual practice of psychiatry (but will enable so many physicians to justify so many more prescriptions for such devastating psychiatric problems as coping with the grief over the death of your thirteen year old cat).

      --
      Will
    91. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Will.Woodhull · · Score: 1

      At this point in the continuing "evolution" of the practice of psychiatry in America, the first questions should be

      How many psychiatrists in the Society are themselves taking prescription psychoactive drugs? To what extent are these psychoactive agents affecting the collective cognitive capability of the Society?

      In short, how sane is the Society itself at this point?

      With the American NIH and now a British group of similar standing questioning the core validity of the Society's primary product of the last 10 years, these questions seem fully appropriate.

      --
      Will
    92. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ADHD is very much a real thing, and not just "being a kid."

      When literally every activity you do is impossible to focus on, it's like living in hell. You can't get shit done and you just blame yourself as a result.

    93. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by gorzek · · Score: 1

      What your'e talking about already exists. It's called cognitive behavioral therapy. It is, in fact, the only treatment known to work for certain disorders--particularly anything psychosomatic or related to dissociation.

      That said, CBT is sometimes used in tandem with pharmaceuticals, in order to first stabilize the patient, then reshape their thought processes to avoid the patterns that led to treatment in the first place.

    94. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by dhomstad · · Score: 1

      I don't see how your comment received a zero - perhaps commented too late? Regardless, you got right to the point.

      Instead of a "poke an see what happens," I think we've in a frantic period of "spray and pray." I totally agree, the institutions are the ones promoting these things, for example - strict adherence to DSM. When you look at the "improvements" they have made in the past few editions, they are opening up the definitions to become more subjective, which may account for some increases in diagnosis. Right now, it seems all we can ask for is respected professionals to stand up and speak out about the problems. Hopefully this will change into a rational discussion, also known as a heated debate, on what are the steps we need to take to set us in the right direction.

      --
      No trees were killed to send this message, but a great number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
    95. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by dhomstad · · Score: 1

      I'm also glad things are working for you. My mother was diagnosed as bipolar many years back and her situation is like yours. She also had to leave two jobs, relocate, start working at a position which she was overqualified for, and put in a few years of work before getting a position she deserved. Before she started at the group home, she was considering getting a cashier job at Target, and she has a master's degree in education . Now she gets to manage a few group homes, take more than 10 days of vacation a year, and even work from home on occasion.

      On the other hand, my oldest brother has been prescribed relatively large doses of antidepressants, has been taking them religiously, and is still having problems. Perhaps he just needs to go to the psychologist more, but I think that's not the case. His head is in the right place, but he's been out of work so long that it's difficult to get back in. People judge you if you haven't had a job in 7 years - they start asking why, and they will hold prejudice if you tried to explain the situation.

      The way we are treating this issue, or the spectrum of issues, is not adequate. It's damaging my family, and it drives me F*CKING CRAZY. I expect more out of this culture of college education professionals.

      --
      No trees were killed to send this message, but a great number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
    96. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by dhomstad · · Score: 1

      Apparently you're unfamiliar with John Forbes Nash (Source = http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Forbes_Nash,_Jr.)? In no way am I advocating that someone who was prescribed with antidepressants should just stop taking them. Like any drug, there are withdrawals associated (not the same type as opiod or alcohol based withdrawals). However, these medications are allegorical to a long term band-aid. Even if you're taking them and feeling fine for years, this will not ensure you will be fine the next year, or the year after next. To deny that depression is related to the environment/situational, or perhaps CULTURE based is naive. Oh yes, and people who take antipsychotics, or the dubiously advertised "atypical anti-psychotics" have higher instance of brain problems such as dementia. Correlation doesn't imply causation, but it sure does raise some good questions.

      --
      No trees were killed to send this message, but a great number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
    97. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by LienRag · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's quite weird that not one has yet cited John Varley's "The M&M as a low-yield thermonuclear device"...

    98. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by macraig · · Score: 1

      Yes, yes it is. You want we should stop?

    99. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by dhomstad · · Score: 1

      I'm no psychologist, but I have seen the potentially positive benefits from hanging out with old friends, taking up old past times, and just trying to get involved more with the community. Listening or playing music can be a great avenue for letting emotions loose - it seems like all the great artists have shared some of our feelings in the past. In short I would advise to just "keep on moving," keep on grinding, keep the hope up ESPECIALLY when things seem the worst

      If you ever have a night when your mind runs and you aren't able to get asleep, I've had consolation in the thoughts that "tomorrow, everything will be back to where it was before." I realize that may not sound so cheery, especially if you're in a a bad rut, but it is great to learn that your mind can run anywhere and everywhere and you will still be back tomorrow, albeit a little more sleepy.

      And lastly, save the booze for celebrations

      --
      No trees were killed to send this message, but a great number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
    100. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People label themselves as bipolar because it IS a defining characteristic, like I am blonde, smart, funny, or asthmatic, jaundiced, or just plain sick. Go tell the women who underwent double masectomies and chemo to quit defining themselves as survivors. Find an AA meeting and tell them to quit calling themselves alcoholics. Most everyone with a chronic condition defines themselves by it. Except asshats, they don't seem to notice.

    101. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by sjames · · Score: 1

      The problem is that DSM V would give a diagnosis to perfectly normal and healthy reactions. For example, a locved one died yesterday and you're feeling down. In previous versions, that was an explicit exclusion but now it's clinical depression and you should take a pill to feel better.

      Meanwhile, the terrible twos goes from a stage of development to a clinixcal illness in need of treatment.

      LIn too many cases, psychiatry treats doping up the patient until they are no longer capable of an abnormal behavior as a treatment. Imagine if we treated a broken leg by feeding the patient heroine until they were no longer inclined to stand up and called it good.

      The biomedical camp continues to espouse models that are provably broken as if they were the one and only truth. It's no wonder there is a move to marginalize them.

    102. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by sjames · · Score: 1

      Given the employment issues you correctly raise, what insurance?

    103. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by sjames · · Score: 1

      A child who's inattentive in school may just be bored, but the diagnosis of ADD opens the door to differently-structured classes that may help - as well as opening the door to ridicule for being different. Sometimes, yes, it's better to stay undiagnosed, and sometimes it's better to get the diagnosis and do nothing with it.

      The problem is that the child won't likely get a different structured class, he'll get an amphetamine like drug to make the boring, content poor class seem interesting (much like meth addicts can find flicking fuzz for hours at a time to be facsinating). Meanwhile, nobody will question the classroom itself as a potential cause of the problem.

      A diagnosis might be useful IFF there was some sense that it might be correct and if the treatment had some chance of being better than the disease. Sadly, those conditions are only sometimes met and when they aren't, removing the diagnosis (even when there was never an illness) is harder than taking a spit back out of the ocean.

      To compound it, if there wasn't an illness before, the treatment will likely give you an illness and frequentkly a perminent disability.

    104. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ADD abd ADHD are similar but different problems and I believe they are both still in use today. I have had friends diagnosed with both: the ADHD friends are prone to fits of excitement about whatever has just caught their attention; they look like they just drank a pot of coffee all day, everyday. While on the other hand the ADD friends I've known, look and act like they just got out of bed all day.

      I do know there is an over-diagnosis going on as I and pretty much every student I talked to in my grades schools were diagnosed with ADD and/or ADHD as children and turned into more or less normal adults, but I also can't deny there are some people I know (as adults) that have a clear dis-order and need either medication or therapy.

    105. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just it... Until the 1990s, psychiatrists were taught that brains couldn't grow new neurons after childhood. Many in practice still believe this. However, it is not true, and there are even naturally occurring substances that promote this neuroregenration.

    106. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 1

      CBT does not work with untreated schizophrenia spectrum disorders

      The evidence is tiny because there is enormous pressure to treat schizophrenia with drugs; but it disagrees with your assertion. "CBT is a feasible treatment for people with schizophrenia who are not prescribed antipsychotic medication. It may be a valuable alternative to medication in treating symptoms of schizophrenia."

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    107. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by dcollins117 · · Score: 1

      Given the employment issues you correctly raise, what insurance?

      Unfortunately, that's an excellent point. For the unemployed, there's not much. Medicare, Medicaid, and whatever state programs there are. Sadly, none of these offer decent insurance options for the mentally ill until they are hospitalized.

    108. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by muridae · · Score: 1

      Since you bring up AA, you might want to look at the 12 steps? I don't agree with them, but the premise is that you have to admit that you suffer from a disorder and that this disorder doesn't have to be the center definition of your life.

      Survivors did survive something, again, state of being. But those survivors don't walk around saying "I am breast cancer" . . . "I am a breast cancer survivor." sure, they say that.

    109. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are mistaken. Starting in the 1950s, researchers at Johns Hopkins began conducting research indicating that talk therapy -- including CBT/DBT/etc. -- works only due to the placebo effect. Medication is not a placebo and has actual benefits for some patients.

      What's really troubling, IMO, is that the psychological and psychiatric communities took the completely wrong message from the Rosenthal and Frank research. Instead of going "Wow, our therapies are only placebos, sowe need to develop something that's actually effective!" or "All researchers be using valid placebo controls in our research instead of sugar pills to determine which therapies are effective!" they said, "Wow, the doctor-patient relationship is effective!"

      So yeah, the fields of psychology and psychiatry are filled with idiots who couldn't think their way out of a plastic bag -- even at places like JHU.

      http://psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fa=buy.optionToBuy&uid=1958-02987-001
      http://www.amazon.com/Persuasion-Healing-Comparative-Study-Psychotherapy/dp/0801846366

    110. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by mcswell · · Score: 1

      How many of you does it take to change a light bulb, and does it matter whether the light bulb wants to change?

    111. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Panruru · · Score: 1

      The despair yawns under me, a wide black hole in the bottom of my mind, entreating everything above to slip into its cold embrace. There's not much left, now ... and even if there was, what would I do with it? No amount of hope will conjure opportunity from an unattractive job market and societal problems so confounding that apathy is toted as the only healthy solution. Not that I'm blaming everyone else for my problems, the problem is me. I could make more friends, but I wouldn't enjoy spending time with them. I know this from experience, not pessimissm. I just don't enjoy being around most people. I don't enjoy most things.

      I want to die all the time, almost. None of the therapists I've been to understand that. "What sorts of things make you anxious?" they ask, "When you start having these feelings of wanting to die, what are you doing?" When I want to die I am at my shitty job, I am on the bus, I am at the bank, I am talking to friends. I'm smiling as I chat with some co-workers because none of them will understand if I tell them how much I want to cut my hand off with the band saw and watch myself bleed out. Someone I trust is standing behind me, screaming, please kill me please kill me please please please PLEASE please let me die let me die please help me and I have to smile and keep talking because it's always there and most people just won't get it.

      Fuck music. Fuck "talking up old times," what, high school where I spent my afternoons dreaming of torching the place down? Fuck everyone who tells me that we all think basically the same thoughts; you have no idea what it's like in here. No. Fucking. Clue.

      --
      "All statements are true in some sense, false in some sense, and meaningless in another sense."
    112. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by dhomstad · · Score: 1

      Hope can take down a skyscraper if there's enough willpower behind it.

      Find people who you DO like hanging out with, and people that like hanging out with you. There's other pessimistic people out there, and the old adage speaks some truth - misery loves company. Lots of people suck, period. The world needs more satirical, skeptical, pragmatic people. Also, isolation only exacerbates a strong self conscious, and I know this from personal experience.

      Everyone with half a brain and a realistic look on life has contemplated ending it. Don't dwell on it. This society does suck major ass, but offing yourself isn't going to help. It's just going to make things shitty for everyone.

      I can't give you an answer for your problems; psychologists are only trying to push YOU to find a solution, but like every other profession, some people suck at their jobs. Think about it for a long time. If it's the country you live in, LEAVE. If it's your current job, LEAVE. Just make sure to plan ahead, approximately 3 months. If it's you, then start to change yourself slowly.

      Also, there's more constructive ways to kill one's "self," as opposed to physically. Read the entry titled "Ego Death Feels as if Everyone Else is Dead" http://www.ahalmaas.com/glossary/ego-death . If you don't believe in that type of stuff, so be it.

      --
      No trees were killed to send this message, but a great number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.
    113. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      For example, a locved one died yesterday and you're feeling down. In previous versions, that was an explicit exclusion but now it's clinical depression and you should take a pill to feel better.

      No, no it wouldn't.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    114. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      Welcome to western medicine. It's descriptions of symptoms all the way down.

      Some people don't understand this because they mistake mechanisms for causes, e.g. stomach ulcers.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    115. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by sjames · · Score: 1

      The berievement exclusion was removed in DSM V. Many in the field disagree strongly.

    116. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      perhaps you missed the 6 months or more part?

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    117. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by sjames · · Score: 1

      You must be from the future where DSM-V is already published! What I know is that people in the field who have seen a preprint have a problem with the removal of the berievement exclusion.

    118. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by smaddox · · Score: 1

      That sounds pretty terrible. I've been depressed before, but it's not my natural state. I can hardly imagine.

      I know it's absolutely none of by business, but may I ask what's actually kept you from committing suicide? There must be something. I know that for me, even if I suddenly became extremely depressed, I would never commit suicide because 1) I refuse to put my family and friends through that, and 2) I'm far too amazed by the universe around me, and I know that eventually I will regain my interest in it and stop being so depressed.

    119. Re:Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by smaddox · · Score: 1

      I apologize. I clearly see now that putting illness in quotes was patronizing and ignorant. In my defense, I didn't mean to suggest that these people are not experiencing very real difficulties. I only meant to distinguish mental illness from physical illness. However, as has been pointed out to me, if there is a distinction, it likely only exists for mild forms of mental illness.

    120. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      It just happens to be very unfortunate that there currently isn't any way to tell if you have the type of disorder (or symptoms) that requires meds or not. Everyone with similar symptoms is lumped into the try med A for x months, try med B for x months, try med C, etc.. until the patient reports 'success'.

      And what ends up happening is a few success stories like yours, but a much larger number of people that just try to cope with their symptoms without ever getting relief. Modern (U.S.) medicine, especially the HMO type systems, have no approved approaches that treat a person's depression holistically (looking for underlying causes, examining the entire lifestyle, diet, sunlight, etc... ). And most people have come to realize that their depression isn't a simple chemical issue, but don't have the time nor expertise to manage all the factors at play.

    121. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Panruru · · Score: 1

      I finally tried once near the end of high school, but I couldn't cut deep enough. The pain shouldn't have been a problem; I'm fine with a little pain, but I guess there are instincts that make self harm a lot harder than one would think. I sat there, splattered in congealing blood, and I thought, "this is disgusting. And it's not going to work."

      As long as I'm still alive, there's a chance that things will get better. I no longer hold any real hope for this; even under optimal circumstances, I think it would be difficult ... and the optimal circumstances will probably never, ever come about. But it's still a possiblity, and it's something I ought to hold on for, because suicide is both final and extremely difficult without the proper motivation.

      Still, every day I pray I'll get cancer. I don't care how terrible the disease is. If it gets me closer to the finish, I'll welcome it with open arms.

      --
      "All statements are true in some sense, false in some sense, and meaningless in another sense."
    122. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Panruru · · Score: 1

      Where could I move that isn't plagued by corruption in the government, global recession, and other complicated socio-economic problems? How do I find people I like hanging out with when I stopped enjoying most social activities of any kind several years ago? What kind of job could I get that I would actually enjoy? I've been trying to find a new job for over a year and I haven't found a thing, even when applying to janitorial and server jobs. When Burger King is getting over 300 responses to their posted ads, what chance do I have?

      I like animals, so I got more pets. I'm trying to find work in that field, but I've had no luck. And even if I did, would I really be much happier? I love the animals, they actually make me smile, but they're not going to make my depression go away. It's heavy and suffocating and it's always there, except when I took ecstasy those two times, but I can't anymore because my current medication renders it useless.

      I took a look at that link you gave me, but I'm not sure what to think of it.

      --
      "All statements are true in some sense, false in some sense, and meaningless in another sense."
    123. Re: Would most people be better off undiagnosed? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Drugs aren't the answer, but sometimes they can help get to the important questions. I'm sure you could abuse opiate derivatives and feel emotionless and fine for a while, but things would catch up.

      Ego death is about killing parts of yourself that are unwanted, unneeded. I've got no answer to what changes you need to make, you've got to ask and push yourself to find the answer.

      Finally, do realize that most people in our society aren't truly happy. Sure they might have a high paying job, a family, or a nice house, but these really only delay the inevitable.

  2. yet another case of... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...if you don't have a clue, what you are talking about, just STFU.

  3. s/Psychiatrists/PSYCHOLOGISTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdot can't even get the title correct.

    1. Re:s/Psychiatrists/PSYCHOLOGISTS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before you jump in to correct someone, you ought to look it up. A psychiatrist is someone who practices medicine and a psychologist studies mental processes. It's analogous to the difference between a doctor and a biologist; while a psychiatrist knows about psychology, a psychologist isn't licensed to treat patients just as a drug researcher can't prescribe medication.

    2. Re:s/Psychiatrists/PSYCHOLOGISTS by mrbester · · Score: 1

      A psychologist can't get you locked up for life with no possibility of release based on a dodgy "assessment" that doesn't require an independent review.

      --
      "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
    3. Re:s/Psychiatrists/PSYCHOLOGISTS by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Psychologists have PhDs. Some of them treat patients, These are called Clinical Psychologists.

      Psychiatrists have MDs. So do general practitioners, and in many cases psychiatric drugs are prescribed by non-specialists.

    4. Re:s/Psychiatrists/PSYCHOLOGISTS by ceoyoyo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Um, he's absolutely correct. The British Psychological Society is the one making the statement. It's the first three words of the summary. The British Psychological Society is full of psychologists. Unlike the Royal Psychiatric Society, which has a lot of psychiatrists as members and is obviously a little peeved.

    5. Re:s/Psychiatrists/PSYCHOLOGISTS by demonlapin · · Score: 2

      Indeed. Psychiatry and the DSM-IV (and soon-to-be DSM V) have issues, but people who insist that schizophrenia is not a disease are, not to put too fine a point on it, absolutely fucking insane. Is it a perfectly defined disease? No, because brains are such complex things that they often go wrong on a continuum (e.g., the high incidence of schizophrenia among artistic types may explain why they are artistic: people whose internal/external boundary is weak may be able to see the world differently, but they're also at risk of losing their grounding in reality). But that doesn't mean that psychosis doesn't exist, or that it isn't amenable to pharmacotherapy. That pharmacotherapy is necessarily blunt, because drugs can't choose to suppress receptors in one part of the brain and not the others, and it's necessarily broad-spectrum, because neurotransmitters affect a lot of things. But antipsychotics do work.

      I'm not a psychiatrist, but I do work at a mental hospital part-time. You should visit one some time and get to see a real schizophrenic in florid psychosis.

    6. Re:s/Psychiatrists/PSYCHOLOGISTS by Moral+Judgement · · Score: 2

      Maybe I'm "absolutely insane" but I don't see how what you wrote proves, or even demonstrates, that schizophrenia is a disease. The whole point is that disease/illness is a paradigm used to understand a collection of behaviors which people suffer from. This paradigm usually involves some kind of pathogen attacking bodily functions. Pharmacology can be used to destroy the pathogens and treat the disease. With mental "illness" this is untrue. Rather we believe that the brain is largely chemical, and that current "illnesses" result from non-harmonious interactions of these brain process. With chemicals we can correct the bad processes, or supplement processes that aren't firing.

      But why call it a disease at all? We could equally look at mental illness more like, say injury. When my ankle is broken, some amount of drugs may ease pain, or possible reduce damage caused by swelling, but no drugs can heal it, because there is no pathogen to be killed. I am not suffering from "cantwalkitis", even if supply of opiates reduces much of my suffering and allows me to hobble along and ignore the pain. The best way to fix the problem is to repair it manually (not an option with the brain I know). Indeed, perhaps mental health problems are caused by psychological "injuries", sometimes the bodies own mental processes may exacerbate these "injuries".

      I know one of the problem of those who criticize models is not supplying their own, which is why I tried my "mental injury" model above as a contrast, but I'm not a psychologist or neuroscientist. Perhaps my model is equally lacking? Someone with more knowledge and insight than me can propose a better one. However, even I can see the theoretical limitations of the mental illness paradigm of disease. As I've said "Where are the pathogens?", but there are equally compelling questions about contagion (almost all diseases are, no mental "diseases" are), or the difference between disease and condition (which exists for physical ailments but not mental ones). The disease model doesn't just allow for us to diagnose something bad and supply drugs to stop it. It also explains various other phenomena, cause, spread, contagion. The model was developed to deal with real world phenomena around diseases, ones that simply do not exist for mental "diseases".

      I understand the appeal of the disease paradigm, which has had great explanatory power for dealing with pathogen induced illnesses. I also understand the desire to remove responsibility for actions that are beyond persons control, which is one reason we moved from the possession model of mental health to the disease model. I am also not claiming that people who suffer from mental "illnesses" aren't really suffering, from real phenomena beyond their control. The question is does the current model put our knowledge in a conceptual schema that aids us understanding and helping those who suffer. I feel the disease model has gotten us as far as is possible, given theoretical limitations

    7. Re:s/Psychiatrists/PSYCHOLOGISTS by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The vast majority of diseases have nothing (directly) to do with pathogens. Your mental model of what a "disease" is is wrong.

      Schizophrenia exists, whether you call it schizophrenia or psychosis or dissociation from reality; the underlying reality is always the important thing, not the word to describe it. The purpose of the DSM is not to be a perfect book of diagnosis; it is to create a technical language for describing various malfunctioning states of the brain. As such, there will always be ambiguous cases, but the problems are quite real.

  4. That's crazy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    Let's just go back to drilling holes.

    1. Re:That's crazy. by PolygamousRanchKid+ · · Score: 0

      Let's just go back to drilling holes.

      That's just being cruel! Modern technology has made drilling holes unnecessary. Newer adhesives can attach the electrodes to the head while you give the electric shock.

      You don't need to drill holes and poke the electrodes into the brain any more before shocking.

      --
      Schroedinger's Brexit: The UK is both in and out of the EU at the same time!
    2. Re:That's crazy. by Macgrrl · · Score: 1

      Trepanning was as much about relieving pressure on the brain as it was about inserting things. Trepanning is still practiced today in extreme cases.

      --
      Sara
      Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
    3. Re:That's crazy. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      ECT works. Not for everyone, and not a first-line treatment. But it works.

  5. What, then, will they call my overwhelming fear... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...of disclosing my identity?!?

  6. Car Analogy by femtobyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If mechanics understood cars as well as we understand brains, then dealing with car problems might work like this:
    After having cut apart and ground up thousands of working and non-working cars, mechanics would know that a lack of gasoline, oil, or water was a common factor in many common car failures. Thus, whenever a broken car was brought into their shop, they'd pop open the hood and pour a bucket of gasoline, oil, or water over everything (depending on the symptoms) to try and fix the problem.

    1. Re:Car Analogy by bkmoore · · Score: 2

      then hook jumper cables to the bonnet and apply voltage until something burns.

    2. Re:Car Analogy by ColdWetDog · · Score: 1

      You forgot WD-40 (although you could argue that it really is a mix of gasoline, oil and water).

      --
      Faster! Faster! Faster would be better!
    3. Re:Car Analogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How can there be water in something designed to repel water?

    4. Re:Car Analogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If mechanics understood cars as well as we understand brains, then psychologists dealing with car problems might work like this:

      Having ridiculed the method where, a broken car had a bucket of gasoline, oil, or water poured over everything (depending on the symptoms), the psychologist would have the car come into the shop twice a week for the rest of its useful life. The psychologist would listen carefully to the rattling and clanking noises the car made and make sympathetic suggestions. If that doesn't resolve the problem, the mechanic will passive-aggressively suggest that until the car really wants to get fixed, they're not going to make any progress. Either way, it's 50$/hour.

    5. Re:Car Analogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Duct tape, rubber bands, paper clips, and WD40 could fix just about any mechanical problem there is.

    6. Re:Car Analogy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're forgetting the many years of randomly removing parts or jamming spikes in to see if it makes things better.

    7. Re:Car Analogy by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      To be fair car manufacturers provide a service manual. God/evolution buggered off and left us to figure it out ourselves. Didn't even provide a bucket of gasoline, we had to discover that one on our own as well.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    8. Re:Car Analogy by ababydingo · · Score: 1

      To add to this, it's been said that ECT is like pounding on the closed hood with a sledgehammer until something happens.

    9. Re:Car Analogy by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      emulsion

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    10. Re:Car Analogy by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      Perhaps god did leave a manual. You know, in spiritual texts all around the world.

      It is not suprising that a society that encourages and allows sin(things which may have negative consequences) has a lot of problems.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    11. Re:Car Analogy by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Problem is all his "manuals" were handed down by worth of mouth to illiterate people who then handed them on to other people who eventually wrote them down. Why choose Mohammed to dictate your book to when he can't even write it down?

      On top of that much of what God is alleged to have said is contradictory, even within a single text. He fails to cover many of the basics of medicine and even basic nutritional advice. At best God provided us with a badly translated and badly photocopied sheet of A5 for a somewhat defective and unreliable product.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    12. Re:Car Analogy by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      I don't know. Why choose Einstein for the theory of relativity if he couldn't work out the math?

      As well, stop religiously spouting stupidities without any understanding of what you are saying. Be careful, you're showing your ignorant bias.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  7. What? by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

    Jesus, and how long ago were predominately PSYCHOLOGICAL models being attacked?

    1. Re:What? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 3, Funny

      About three hours? It's currently 3:30 on the east coast of North America so everybody there is still daydreaming off the lunch stupor. The Europeans are home from work or sleeping, and the west coasters are high so they're not attacking anything.

    2. Re:What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Greetings, my child,
      I'm glad to hear you call out to me in your time of questioning, but I'm unfortunately not an expert on the recent history of debates over the mechanisms for neurological disorders. Not quite sure why this particular question is being addressed to me? Then again, I do get a lot of very strange requests.
      Love,
      --Jesus

  8. DSM-5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That manual of disorders is basically a very long list enumerating "everything" that could be wrong with you, according to psychiatrists. And this latest version is shuffling the boxes and categories around a lot, removing some, adding a bunch, and in the main the whole thing expands to encompass quite a bit of what we consider normal behaviour, too.

    What they base it all on? I have no idea. Apparently someone noticed that the emperor is actually nekkid. A particularly telling blow since that manual governs quite a bit including what does and what does not get paid for by health insurance. In countries with (compulsory) national health insurance, that can have quite the impact.

    Not that I mind much. From relatives in the health industry I had already gathered that DSM-5 was a bad idea done badly.

    1. Re:DSM-5 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That manual of disorders is basically a very long list enumerating "everything" that could be wrong with you, according to psychiatrists.

      "wrong" should be in quotes. Homosexuality was a "mental illness" not too long ago.

      But if someone is hearing voices that aren't there, something is very wrong.

      And if someone feels compelled to harm themselves or others, then something else is very wrong.

      Brain science is in its infancy and I think the medical community should really look at its assumptions and beliefs. For decades we were told that whatever brain cells you have, that's it for the rest of your life. That's what the medical community believed based upon very little evidence.Then neurogenesis was discovered not too long ago - in adult humans.

      I think it's about time the psychiatry started some examination of their own profession and their own beliefs.

      I hope they can figure out what are true illnesses and what are just labels for folks that are considered "odd".

      When your poor, you're are nutty: when you're rich; it's called "eccentric".

      When you're poor, you're called an asshole. When you're rich; you're called forceful and driven.

    2. Re:DSM-5 by muridae · · Score: 2

      When your poor, you're are nutty: when you're rich; it's called "eccentric".

      When you're poor, you're called an asshole. When you're rich; you're called forceful and driven.

      Actually, in both cases if your behavior is causing you harm, you are not nutty or eccentric, you are mentally ill. The qualifier of the DSM has, and remains, that the behavior is causing harm. Hear voices that aren't there, but they just are normal conversations or Jesus/Batman telling you to do good deeds? Not a problem unless you want it to go away. Same voices telling you that people are after you and that you need to hurt other people? That's a mental illness. Same for behavioral problems, like narcissistic personality disorder. Someone poor might be called an asshole, someone rich might be called driven, but a good psychiatrist wouldn't care about that. If it is causing harm in relationships with other people or to the patient, it's a disorder and illness.

      As for who gets to determine whether it's causing harm, that's still not an issue. The patient, 99% of the time. The doctor has input, and can overrule with 72-hour holds if they feel someone is a danger to themself or others but that is the only time that a doctor gets to determine whether it's a treatable illness or just a personality trait.

    3. Re:DSM-5 by sjames · · Score: 1

      But if someone is hearing voices that aren't there, something is very wrong.

      Oddly enough, not necessarily. Some people just hear voices. They might well go a lifetime that way with no outward signs. They might assume that's how everyone experiances their "inner voice". For others, that voice carries an element of compulsion that makes it a real problem for them. Or it is a constant source of derision and discouragement that becomes a problem. It's the latter two cases that need treatment.

  9. Replacement needed by cold+fjord · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If they want a replacement they will need to provide one. Until then, people are being treated, with varying degrees of success, with the current model. Even if the model isn't actually an accurate description of what is going on, it is still a fairly useful guide to approaching the problems. Sort of like classical physics versus relativity. A real breakthrough in understanding would be great - and maybe with all of the brain imaging and various other things going on, that will emerge. But so far it seems to mainly be individual studies that aren't producing a cohesive theory or useful guide to treatment. They will need to find their equivalents of Einstein and Dirac.

    Another problem with the recent releases of the DSM is that what is considered a disorder sometimes seems to be a question of politics or political correctness.

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    1. Re:Replacement needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If they want a replacement they will need to provide one.

      Pardon me for pointing out that DSM-5 is the replacement. Currently they're using DSM-IV, which is a lot smaller.

      The larger point, exposed by this "update", is that the categories are essentially arbitrary and apparently not based on anything falsifiable, ie not anything resembling science.

      Another problem with the recent releases of the DSM is that what is considered a disorder sometimes seems to be a question of politics or political correctness.

      That would seem to be a bit of a problem, no?

    2. Re:Replacement needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "people are being treated, with varying degrees of success"

      Lobotomy, shock therapy, LSD... varying degrees to be sure.

    3. Re:Replacement needed by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      Which model? After all we wouldn't want to break the psychiatrist's business model, would we.

    4. Re:Replacement needed by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      Even if the model isn't actually an accurate description of what is going on, it is still a fairly useful guide to approaching the problems.

      Some operating thetans might disagree.

    5. Re:Replacement needed by cold+fjord · · Score: 4, Informative

      Pardon me for pointing out that DSM-5 is the replacement. Currently they're using DSM-IV, which is a lot smaller.

      The larger point, exposed by this "update", is that the categories are essentially arbitrary and apparently not based on anything falsifiable, ie not anything resembling science.

      Yes, I know. That is why it need to be replaced, preferably with something systematic, as indicated above.

      As it stands, brain imaging can identify psychopaths , and is showing useful things about Post Traumatic Stress Disorder . I expect there will be more to come in that regard. Then there is also the fascinating feedback that can occur between behavior and brain function and activity. Good and bad behavior can become self-reinforcing. Then there is the role of nutrition in various aspects of brain function and behavior. Biochemistry is continuing to provide new insights, and new approaches. We are continuing to learn important lessons about something so seemingly common as sleep and its disorders that effect people's memory, attention, and behavior. Even classic psychology and psychiatry have insights that will have to be considered. It all plays a part. On the other hand, in a lot of ways it seems like we are still groping in the dark there is so much to learn. One thing seems likely to me is we are likely to find more conditions that will end up requiring a multidisciplinary approach to treat.

      Another interesting question will come when various aberrant behaviors are scientifically identified as such, but they end up being politically protected in either the scientific community, or the political establishment.

      Choices, choices.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    6. Re:Replacement needed by Dishevel · · Score: 0

      Funny.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    7. Re:Replacement needed by ocamsrazor · · Score: 1

      Psychopathy is a complicated social phenomena. It's not something that can be reduced to a simple correlation with the shapes of the structure of someone's brain.

      Not to mention that brain imaging is incredibly limited in what it can tell you and a huge amount of the published science that uses it is pretty terrible quality.

      I'll really never understand the appeal of this reductive nonsense.

    8. Re:Replacement needed by Cederic · · Score: 2

      Why are people (including you) so incapable of differentiating between classification and treatment.

      Classification of mental abnormalities: Good. For so many different reasons.

      Abusively using that classification to extort money from potentially vulnerable people through application of potentially unnecessary treatment: Bad.

      So your comment on psychiatrists' business models is totally fucking irrelevant to the efficacy of DSM-V

    9. Re:Replacement needed by stenvar · · Score: 1

      Even if the model isn't actually an accurate description of what is going on, it is still a fairly useful guide to approaching the problems

      But in many cases, it doesn't solve the problems. Psychiatry is even less effective at treating disease than other forms of medicine.

    10. Re:Replacement needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they want a replacement they will need to provide one. Until then, people are being treated, with varying degrees of success, with the current model.

      I fully support this notion and say we go back to electro-shock therapy for any mental "disorder". We can't deny people from being treated!

    11. Re:Replacement needed by Macgrrl · · Score: 1

      As someone who has suffered migraines for nearly 30 years, I was sent to a neurologist last year who started me on medication and a diet. In the intervening 6 months I haven't had a single migraine - which is an extraordinary long period between events for me (they were previously every 4-6 weeks on average).

      The medication is two fold, anti inflammatories to manage vascular causes and Epilium & Endep to treat the electrical misfiring. He's hoping to wean me off the medication in the not to distant future. I am also supposed to be doing meditation exercises which I don't do nearly often enough but do occasionally.

      The diet is about avoiding trigger foods, certain hormones and preservatives are high probability triggers. The usual suspects include caffeine, wine and fermented foods, aged cheeses, preserved meats, dried fruits and nuts - you know, all the good stuff.

      --
      Sara
      Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
    12. Re:Replacement needed by nightcats · · Score: 1

      My response to all this was written a month ago, so I wouldn't call it a "replacement," just a statement of principles that could form part of a fresh foundation. What I focus on in that piece is probably what's really driving the complaints of these psychologists -- that Big Pharma is being allowed to shape the biomedical model to fatten its own purse rather than support any forward movement toward mental health in western society.

      --
      Development is programmable; Discovery is not programmable. (Fuller)
    13. Re:Replacement needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When some thing is re-classified it effects patients options. In many cases it means insurance no longer covers some of the most effective medical treatment options.

    14. Re:Replacement needed by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      is there a place somebody can download the DSM 5 as a PDF for free (no login either)??

      otherwise could somebody with access to the FINAL version (or most current version) please confirm the lack of a diagnosis of NORMAL in said volume??

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    15. Re:Replacement needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    16. Re:Replacement needed by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      Not sure what your point is, or what exactly you are responding to in the parent.

      Anyways, most of the foods you listed aren't bad. It's the sulfites and preservatives. Fermented food is actually one of the best things you could be eating, also one of the hardest to actually find since the US food industry did away with most fermented foods and replaced them with food with chemical additives to give the flavour and texture of fermented foods.

      As an aside, I used to suffer from weekly migraines my whole life. Fixed it up solely through diet and meditation, the doctors were just quacks prescribing random medications.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    17. Re:Replacement needed by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      DSM isn't for lay people. Those in the know all know what normal is.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  10. Could be by UK+Boz · · Score: 1

    Some people are just evil..

    --
    www.boznz.com Simple solutions to complex problems.
    1. Re:Could be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why we beat or bleed or burn the evil spirits out of them, right?

    2. Re:Could be by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

      I heard if you hold a person under water long enough the evil spirits will leave them. I don't know where they go, maybe into a fish?

      --
      “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
    3. Re: Could be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he is trying to say that we often want to "find" a reason why people do bad things as if there is something wrong with them. But in fact that they are perfectly healthy

    4. Re:Could be by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which means they get back into people by them eating the fish...

      Therefore eating FISH is the cause of Human evil!

  11. Unscientific psychiatry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Some history of the profession:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eOScYBwMyAA

    And just an aside, when Freud was just starting out his work, he did a lot of research into the problems of children among the aristocrats in Vienna. He found and reported a high level of sexual abuse among the children of such families where children were literally pimped out to aunts and uncles and all manner of wretched stuff. The back lash from guilty rich families threatened to drive him into poverty or possibly even jail. He immediately changed his tune and came up with the rationalization for all the sexual trauma children displayed by creating a new theory that we are all very familiar with today. To be clear, Freud lied and in doing so, created a bullshit school of thought which all the guilty abusers and stockholm victims could latch onto in order to hide the abuse. The entire profession en masse abandoned reason(and the poor tortured children) to placate themselves and child molesters.

    So, while there is valid science possible in this realm of study, the field is incredibly corrupt.

  12. Psychology VS Psychiatry by comp.sci · · Score: 5, Informative

    It is worth noting that the central distinction between psychiatrists and psychologists is that generally psychiatrists can prescribe medications (they are doctors). It's therefore not surprising that some psychologists would issue a statement like this. Honestly, this single statement by what appears to be a spokesperson discredits their entire ramblings: "it was unhelpful to see mental health issues as illnesses with biological causes". It's quite shocking to see professionals show such ignorance of their own field, just because they specialize in one aspect of it. While we are certainly still in the dark ages of neuroscience and psychiatry, there is a reason why we can control a ton of psychiatric illnesses with medications. We have many decades worth of research that specifically shows you what goes wrong in a person's brain with many psychiatric illnesses.

    1. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      I was going to post something very similar, but you shouldn't be surprised at the ignorance. My neurologist(who's been treating me for chronic headache, cluster headaches, and chronic migraines for a decade), is also a licensed psychiatrist has nothing but scorn for those "who couldn't cut the coursework." I wouldn't say we're in the dark ages in regards to it. But we're not to the enlightenment period yet either, we understand a hell of a lot more about the brain including how to treat issues then 20 years ago. She's pretty famous for her rants against psychiatrists who believe that "patients should be left to their own devices, instead of being treated as needed to keep them from harming themselves or others."

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    2. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by BasilBrush · · Score: 5, Insightful

      An interesting point. However I wonder about this part:

      While we are certainly still in the dark ages of neuroscience and psychiatry, there is a reason why we can control a ton of psychiatric illnesses with medications.

      Now here's the thing. We can alter the behaviour and mood of ANYONE with drugs. Give them more can-do spirit with caffeine, coke or speed. Relax them with cannabinoids. Make them stupid and overconfident with alcohol. Friendly/loving/empathic with Ecstasy etc.

      So of course with drugs we can change the behaviour of people diagnosed with a mental illness to better suit societies expectations, or to lift their mood. But that doesn't mean that their problem was biomedical. There's no theoretical reason why a person whose mental problem has an experiential cause, such as childhood abuse, wouldn't benefit from treatment with drugs.

      Successful bio-chemical treatment doesn't prove bio-chemical cause.

      My own layman's opinion, for the nothing it is worth, is that there's a mixed bag of biomedical and experiential causes, together with a bunch of people that just don't buy into societies current norms, and are wrongly diagnosed as ill. And that you can change anyone, ill or not, temporarily or permanently, with both drugs and experiences.

    3. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is worth noting that the central distinction between psychiatrists and psychologists is that generally psychiatrists can prescribe medications (they are doctors). It's therefore not surprising that some psychologists would issue a statement like this.

      Honestly, this single statement by what appears to be a spokesperson discredits their entire ramblings:
      "it was unhelpful to see mental health issues as illnesses with biological causes".

      It's quite shocking to see professionals show such ignorance of their own field, just because they specialize in one aspect of it. While we are certainly still in the dark ages of neuroscience and psychiatry, there is a reason why we can control a ton of psychiatric illnesses with medications. We have many decades worth of research that specifically shows you what goes wrong in a person's brain with many psychiatric illnesses.

      That's as stupid as a nurse practioner saying they don't agree with what doctors do simply because they cant write scripts for narcotics. Or a nurse saying nurse practioners generally do something wrong because they cant write scripts at all. Your argument of "They are just jealous" is really dumb.

      And yes we do have decades worth of research, but we have decades worth of research that is also not true at all or based on opinion and not fact. You act as if we have a map of psychiatry that is infallible or something.

      And just drugging someone isn't control at all because it doesn't control the problem at all, it just renders the person unable to do anything. That's like saying "Well mr johns you have a serious termite infestation in your home. So our solution is go live someplace else" because the house is still infested, nothing has been done to solve the infestation, they just made it so the people living there cant go home. Its like having swept a pile of dirt under the rug and walking away. Or another example being "This guy beats his wife. So just make him drink so much every night when he gets home that he passes out and the problem is solved"

      Sure occasionally some drugs can solve problems by effecting like dopamine reuptake inhibitors or whatnot, but most times its just used to dull the person down so much the symptoms cease to show despite still being there.

      I put more faith in psychologists as I being a nurse have worked with dozens of them and psychiatrists. From my viewpoint psychologists tend to care more about patients and are more about getting to the root of the problem while psychiatrists tend to want to medicate the problem. Same thing with a doctor if you are having major pain in your back they will write you a script for pain meds and say to rest, a physical therapist will solve the problem with exercises and stretches. From a non medication approach there is nothing a psychiatrist cant do a psychologist can do, except charge you triple the rate.

    4. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by BasilBrush · · Score: 2

      My neurologist(who's been treating me for chronic headache, cluster headaches, and chronic migraines for a decade)

      I used to have a car mechanic that I thought was great. Always very pleasant, always explained what needed doing and why. Car was always good when I got it back. Used him for years. Recommended him to my brother. My brother used him once, but didn't go back. I asked him why. He said he replaces parts that don't need replacing. I didn't believe it. Then my brother said, OK, when did you have the car in when it didn't need some parts. And I realised I hadn't a leg to stand on. He may have been gouging me, and I wouldn't know. It never occurred to me that other people were getting their cars serviced elsewhere without always needing these extra repairs.

      How do you know you've been getting the best treatment from this neurologist you respect? How do you know you wouldn't have got better results elsewhere. And why is the opinion of the neurologist you happen to have superior to that of some other professionals she despises?

      Of course she might be a great neurologist. But are you in a position to know? Or is it really just a "Love the one you're with" situation? Like my old mechanic.

    5. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      To put it in computer terms then,

      Software debugger/programmer declares there's no such thing as hardware faults or poor hardware design.

    6. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      How do you know you've been getting the best treatment from this neurologist you respect? How do you know you wouldn't have got better results elsewhere.

      8 neurologists later...

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    7. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by ceoyoyo · · Score: 4, Informative

      Many mental illnesses are at least partly heritable (including the two examples in the summary) and many are associated with measurable physical (as well as chemical) changes in the brain (including the two examples in the summary). At least some mental illness does have biological causes.

    8. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both is tricky, you don't know whether the illness itself is inherited or a predisposition to it. The predisposition could be a biologically founded tendency to interpret bad events as being your fault rather than the environment's, the illness you likely get from that would be depression (according to Martin Seligman's theories about explanatory style in learned helplessness). I.e. the biological factor just makes you different, it's how people with light skin are just different, and yet more prone to sunburns - doesn't mean they inherited the sunburn.

      And the argument about the physical changes in the brain proves nothing, either - see the concept of Neuroplasticity. Our brain changes as we learn. While an SSD may only hold a different charge when its contents change, our brain is probably more like a CD-RW in that a physical shape is altered to store information/connections. So we'd have to talk about the nature of the change, i.e. the equivalent of breaking the CD-RW in half or punching holes into it. That, then, would be biological. But a CD-RW storing a computer virus with a 0% error rate while reading is not.

    9. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Jeez... I wish more people understood basic concepts as well as you (seriously). Speaking as someone in the field, it's amazing to me how much people oversimplify things one way or the other.

      If you give an antidepressant to anyone, they will feel less negative and more emotionally stable (as well as sleepy sometimes, etc. etc.). If you give them attention meds, they will concentrate better, etc. (thus the rampant abuse of them everywhere). These drugs, moreover, are very nonselective in their effects.

      It's clear they work, but the treatment doesn't mean the cause was best explained that way in the first place. E.g., think about you getting in a knifefight with someone at a bar, and you get cut. At some level, you could put a bandaid on it, and that would help things, but how would you describe the cause of your bleeding? In terms of clotting molecules? Blood circulation? The tissue injury? The knife? The person swiping the knife at you? Getting into those situations in bars to begin with?

      Mental illness is much more like obesity or high blood pressure than anything else. Just like weight varies from too thin to grossly overweight, and has all sorts of molecular, physiological, cognitive, relational, cultural, socioeconomic, geographic, etc. causes, so does mental illness. Mood varies from too controlled and unresponsive to radically sensitive and labile, and can be caused by all sorts of factors at all sorts of levels. Even the same "mental injury" can be understood at all sorts of levels.

      Statements like those of the BPS have to be understood in context--they're commenting on the whole model as a whole--the idea that there's clear cutoffs between mental illness and mental wellness, and that there are discrete biological causes to things. It is really a failure.

      Just to follow up on one of the other posts about "psychiatrists focusing on biology and prescribing meds" and "psychologists not"--sorry, but it's outdated. Psychologists can prescribe in various places, and are involved in just as much--if not more--neurobiological research than psychiatrists in many settings.

    10. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      OK, when did you have the car in when it didn't need some parts.

      That's not exactly stunning proof, unless you used the guy for oil changes and it always needed more than just the filter and oil. I generally don't take my car to the mechanic when it's working just fine.

    11. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a VS situation.

      A couple of years ago I was diagnosed with Bipolar 2 - the milder form. To give you an idea of what it's like, think of the Star Wars movie where Jabba was going to dump the good guys into a sand pit with a huge mouth at the bottom of it, where they would be slowly digested over 100 years. That's what depression is like. You try to climb out of the pit, but the sand just keeps sliding down. If you make some headway, a tentacle wraps around you and drags you down. You know that if you slide to the bottom you'll go through agony and die.

      Along comes the tornado from the Wizard of Oz. It grabs you up out of the pit and whirls you around. You see images, have fantastic ideas, can't sleep because too many ideas are running through your mind and you forget to eat. You start projects with great enthusiasm. Suddenly, for no apparent reason, the tornado drops you - right back into the sand pit. There is no time where you are standing on firm ground.

      With medication, (which required several changes of drugs and dosages), I am spending more time standing. I have ups and downs, but they're normal reactions to what is happening in my life, not an unpredictable and uncontrollable roller coaster. I now understand that part of this is chemical and that I have inherited it - my Father had several bouts of extreme depression and was hospitalized. My Grandmother got to where she didn't want to leave the house - not even to sit on the deck.

      With my Psychologist I now understand that the way I was raised was abusive, both physically and emotionally. Not a horror story, but enough that I grew up in fear and lived my life trying to please everyone and being terrified of authority figures (like my boss). A raised voice makes me panic. Headphones scare me because I can't hear what's going on around me and for me that is frightening because someone could sneak up on me and hurt me. I felt panic and dread every time my husband came home for the first few years. Just hearing the door open triggered a moment of terror because he might be upset or angry about something. The classic flight or fight response.

      Slowly, over the past 3 years, I've learned to understand my feelings. I've been able to learn new ways of dealing with things and I no longer live in fear. I have strength and I'm able to stand up for myself and be myself. I don't blame relationship issues on my husband any more. We work them out, and when I think he's being a jerk I can honestly tell him that, instead of keeping it to myself and crying about it later. And I can't imagine why I wanted to kill myself.

      The combination of the medication and my talk therapy has made a huge difference for me. I don't believe that either one can do the job alone.

    12. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by khairephon · · Score: 1

      That's psychology all over. It is a weird mixture of science and philosophy corrupted by arrogance. So many of their conclusions are purely subjective nonsense or brought about because of students' desire to please the god-like professors which they hold in awe. If only psychology courses would teach rigorous scientific methodology, it would produce something of note.

    13. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      That's not exactly stunning proof, unless you used the guy for oil changes and it always needed more than just the filter and oil. I generally don't take my car to the mechanic when it's working just fine.

      I don't know what it's like where you are, but here, in addition to regular services (filter and oil changes etc.) we have an annual MOT test, which checks for roadworthiness.

      And if you read carefully I didn't say or imply it was proof. I said:
      "And I realised I hadn't a leg to stand on. He may have been gouging me, and I wouldn't know."
      I didn't say "I then knew he had been gouging me".

      The point being made is that if you have a supplier of services that you always use and like, you probably don't know whether you are actually getting good service. That you need to actually try other service suppliers sometimes.

      And to take it back from the analogy to the topic, that guy has a lot of faith in the opinion of a neurologist that's been treating him for 10 years. How does he know that another practitioner, perhaps one that his neurologist has been speaking ill of, wouldn't have alleviated his symptoms 5 years ago. He doesn't.

      That doesn't mean that his neurologist is no good. Only that she might be no good. This possibility is why asking for a second opinion is accepted practice.

    14. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Honestly, this single statement by what appears to be a spokesperson discredits their entire ramblings: "it was unhelpful to see mental health issues as illnesses with biological causes".

      I'm not sure why. I would definitely say it's unhelpful at times to see them as "illness with biological causes", though I wouldn't go as far as to say generalize and say it's always unhelpful. I also wouldn't go as far as to say that biology doesn't factor in on some level in all cases, but that's not really the point.

      I think the point being made, rather, is that something happens when you start labeling all these things as "illnesses" and setting the expectation that they will be "cured". The truth is that many of these psychological processes and behaviors are within the range of what "normal people" experience. Nobody goes through life being happy, functional, and productive at all times, but we've gotten into treating every moment of dysfunction and unhappiness as a distinct disease. Taking these huge lumps of people and labeling them as suffering from depression, bipolar disorder, AD&D, OCD, and schizophrenia might be a bit like taking everyone over 6' tall and saying that they have hyper-tallness syndrome and treating that as a disease, and then everyone under 6' as suffering from the disease of hypo-tallness syndrome.

      At some level, these things may not be diseases to be cured, but different personalities and ways of thinking that could be understood and granted some space for expression. Of course in very extreme cases where there's some kind of danger, some kinds of medical intervention may be necessary. However, there seems to be a very real danger of us creating a Procrustean bed of "mental health", trying to stretch and chop everyone to fit.

    15. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by sjames · · Score: 1

      Certainly, there is a biological componant, but there are plenty of cases where life experience alters the brain in measurable ways. So we have corelation, but cannot actually prove cause and effect. I suspect there is cause and effect but which is which is up for grabs.

    16. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by comp.sci · · Score: 1

      If you actually read my argument instead of instantly feeling threatened as a "non prescribing" healthcare provider, you would have noticed that I simply stated the difference between professions, never made the "argument of "They are just jealous"". What I *did* do was show how outlandish their actual claims were and people replying to me posted great evidence for that. You saying "I put more faith in psychologists" really shows your ignorance of how they work. Psychology and psychiatry are not two mutually-exclusive options, they are both part of the healthcare team. You say that doctors will always prescribe, well that's pretty much the point to be fair. A patient that requires medication is more likely to see a psychiatrist than a psychologist. Many times they are referred to a psychiatrist by their psychologist - precisely as it should work as we all pull together to help the patient.

    17. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      Except of course, that your neurologist is 'treating' some that is entirely curable without drugs.

      Sometimes I think psychiatrists prescribe drugs simply because they know that the majority of people are too lazy to change the way they eat, sleep, and interact with the world and the US mindset of 'it's not my fault, let's blame it on X'.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    18. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      Do not confuse mechanisms for causes. Do you not think that an entity that functions through biological process would not show a change in those processes anytime the function changes?

      Also, heritable? Science doesn't even know what that means.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  13. Er by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    Psychologists != Psychiatrists. Derp slashdot, just derp.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:Er by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      Derp slashdot, just derp.

      Is derp a verb now?

      And is slashdot the direct object, or are you telling slashdot to derp?

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    2. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Derp slashdot, just derp.

      Is derp a verb now?

      And is slashdot the direct object, or are you telling slashdot to derp?

      Great Caesar's ghost, man. It's an interjection. Oy.

    3. Re:Er by femtobyte · · Score: 1

      Clearly, "derp" is a plural noun, while "slashdot" is the verb, and "just" an adjective. The first clause ("Derp slashdot") has a parallel structure to "Sheep graze". The second clause ("just derp") more narrowly specifies which derp are said to slashdot: the just ones (as opposed to the unjust ones) --- so the overall sentence structure is parallel to "Sheep graze, hungry sheep."

    4. Re:Er by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Walk up to the person you suspect is a psychiatrist or a psychologist at a party and say "I hate my parents." The psychiatrist will say, "Why did you say that?" and the psychologist will say, "Thank you for sharing."

      Alternatively, you can just ask the person if he is a psychiatrist. The psychologist will answer, "No, but I wish I was." The psychiatrist will answer "Why did you ask me that?"

      Neither psychiatrists nor psychologists are any fun at parties.

        - Dr. Science

    5. Re:Er by Macgrrl · · Score: 1

      I wonder what happens if you reply to everything they say with "Interesting..."

      --
      Sara
      Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
  14. Re:What, then, will they call my overwhelming fear by game+kid · · Score: 1

    If I was in the doctor's chair I'd call it an unfortunate case of "justified".

    --
    You can hold down the "B" button for continuous firing.
  15. Re:What, then, will they call my overwhelming fear by colinrichardday · · Score: 2

    Slashdotitis?

  16. Scientology is proved correct yet again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Join today: www.scientology.org

    1. Re:Scientology is proved correct yet again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Scientology is "proved correct" in the same sense that the Theory of Seven-Legged Space Unicorns In Your Underpants Make Everything Happen is "proved correct" by the failure of Luminiferous Aether Theory to explain the Michelson-Morley interferometer experiments. Only Scientology is slightly less plausible.

    2. Re:Scientology is proved correct yet again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seven-Legged Space Unicorns In Your Underpants Make Everything Happen

      Seven-Legged Space Unicorns In My Underpants make only one thing happen, but for that brief period, it feels like everything.

    3. Re:Scientology is proved correct yet again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You peed your pants *again*? Sheesh, some Mother's Day this is turning out to be.

    4. Re:Scientology is proved correct yet again! by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      Yes. I will certainly consider joining, should I ever be interested in becoming a slave.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  17. Psychiatry created by Pharma by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The entire field of Psychiatry was created by the pharmaceutical industry with the express purpose of selling more drugs.

    1. Re:Psychiatry created by Pharma by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Those pharmaceutical guys are evil. They also were behind the fake moon landing and kept an open tab for the 9/11 attackers to buy any boner pills and anti-depressives they wanted.

    2. Re:Psychiatry created by Pharma by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

      The entire field of Psychiatry was created by the pharmaceutical industry with the express purpose of selling more drugs.

      Actually, psychiatry was created by people who wanted to explain everything as the consequence of feeling guilty about jacking off. The pharmaceuticals came along later.

      And pace the whiners, drugs *do* help a lot of people. It's hit-and-miss, and not much more scientific than "let's try this and see if it works", but at least that's an approach based on evidence rather than theories about wanking off.

      Also, we've made a *lot* of progress in finding effective drugs over the past decades. If you think our methods are sloppy now, turn back the clock 30, 40, or 50 years, and see how well we were treating mental problems then.

      Hopefully someday we'll actually understand mental/brain disorders and know how (and whether) to treat them. But we're not there yet.

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  18. why so negative? better to focus on the positives by mostlywibbly · · Score: 1
  19. Turf war. by bmo · · Score: 3, Funny

    British Psychological Society's division of clinical psychology says "Psychiatry is bogus"

    How much do you want to bet that this is a turf war?

    --
    BMO

  20. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by girlinatrainingbra · · Score: 5, Informative
    Re: It's therefore not surprising that some psychologists would issue a statement like this.
    .
    I completely agree with you. In fact, the rambling statement by these psychologists (which does not appear to be scientific) is readily disproven by the biggest and most successful example of medical treatment of a mental health disorder: schizophrenia ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schizophrenia#Medication ) and the 1950's discovery of an antipsychotic medication which greatly improved the hallucinations and psychotic breaks undergone by schizophrenic patients: chlorpromazine was found while looking for anti-histamines (for allergies).
    .
    The wikipedia article on chlorpromazine points out: In 1955 it was approved in the United States for the treatment of emesis (vomiting). The effect of this drug in emptying psychiatric hospitals has been compared to that of penicillin and infectious diseases.[50] But the popularity of the drug fell from the late 1960s as newer drugs came on the scene. From chlorpromazine a number of other similar antipsychotics were developed. It also led to the discovery of antidepressants.[53]

    Chlorpromazine largely replaced electroconvulsive therapy, psychosurgery, and insulin shock therapy.

    In other words, chlorpromazine actually worked so well that the psychiatrists no longer had to resort to ECT, brain surgery, or screwing with the patient's sugar and insulin levels.
    .
    You'd have to be a complete moron to claim that there is no evidence for medical and pharmacologic treatment of schizophrenia: the evidence is almost 60 years old. The only conclusion to draw from this is that the British Psychological Society is, in fact, composed of vast groups of complete morons who do not believe in science or the scientific method.

  21. Unfortunate examples by ceoyoyo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Those are some unfortunate examples, considering both schizophrenia and bipolar disorder are at least partially heritable and there's other good evidence both have a big biological component.

    Psychologists have a good point that considering all mental illnesses to be biologically caused and solely pharmaceutically treatable is not a good thing, but these ones seem to have gone overboard the other way.

  22. quackery by another name by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    all of it is fraud

    people go into "mental health" because its like religion, an easy job with no expected results -- and like religious workers at some point in their careers they realize it is all bullshit but keep going because what else are they are going to do?

  23. Probabilities by hawks5999 · · Score: 1

    Studies havefound that if you have emotional problems, the probability that you will be well in 1 year if you go to see a psychoanalyst is 44%; psychotherapist is 53%; Psychiatrist is 61%; no one at all is 73%

    1. Re:Probabilities by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      Do you have a link to any such studies? Not doubting - in fact it sounds all too believable - but it'd be good to have a source.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    2. Re:Probabilities by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      "Emotional problems" light enough that someone doesn't need help can be easily handled alone, thus the 73% stat (assuming it's true). Once someone feels bad enough that they seem help, it probably is harder to handle even with the help.

    3. Re:Probabilities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Your statistic is selectively biased, since only those with bigger problems actually go seek professional help, and those who don't do no because their problem is not as bad.

      Also: I AM a neuropsychologist, and fact is: It doesn't matter how you are after $x time. The question is how you are THE WHOLE REST OF YOUR LIFE. As in: *Actually cured*? Or will it pop out somewhere else in another year... this time unfixable by any of your "solutions"...?

      With all "standard" psychotherapies and psychiatric meds I can *guarantee* you (and I'll bet money on that without even blinking), that it is *absolutely impossible* to ever cure somebody. *Ever*. Every case of somebody saying he's "cured, is a delusion. It will pop out again. Or it already has popped out some place else, and he's in denial about it. I have yet to see a single case contradicting that.

      What's required for it to *actually* work:
      1. You find the actual causes. The neural links (=experiences) that cause all the unwanted behavior/reactions. For this they have to be triggered and trigger other stuff too. This is done by having intense signals flow through the neurons closest to them. (Because the repressed links are very weak connections.) And that is done with intense sensory input of a pattern as close to the original experience as possible. Which obviously is a feedback loop process, where you get closer with every iteration of input, triggers, remembering, readjusting of input patterns. And you need to get to the bottom of it. To help the patient from drifting off, a *lot* of comfort has to be given, linking this with positive experiences, as the old memories will of course by definition be *extremely* frightening to them. This technique is a simple ultra-deep therapy, comparable to what was one primal therapy, but much more scientific and clear. But pretty much all therapists simply don't have the balls to go that deep. You *have* to be able to deal with destruction of the room, aggression, nudity, intense sexual instincts, and all kinds of bodily fluids being spread all around the room, like an animal or little child. I can. But who else can do that? You? *Definitely* not the emotionally crippled psychotherapists, let alone the emotionally dead/psychopathic psychiatrists.
      2. Now that you know the actual causes, you know what neural associations/links to re-train. So you do that, by creating very intense neutral input targeted at those wrong links, re-associating them with the correct triggers/memories/behaviors/feelings. So you could call it a behavioral therapy, but it should be much much more intense. 24/7 "holy shit" trip (of mostly positive emotions) intense. The more intense, and the mentally younger you are, the quicker it will be fixed. Yes, certain drugs could definitely *help* there. But absolutely not our current crap with its heroine-like withdrawal syndromes and at best questionable effects, and of course never just by themselves without doing all the rest.

    4. Re:Probabilities by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 1

      No more benefit of the doubt--you're a charlatan.

      Please go away.

      --
      Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    5. Re:Probabilities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Studies have found that if you have a leg injury, the probability you will be able to walk normally in 1 year if you go to a reconstructive surgeon is 20%, if you go to the ER is 40%, if you go to a family doctor is 90% and if you walk it off is 99%. Therefore, surgery is useless.

  24. re: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't worry...psychiatry and big pharma are dedicated to the maintenance of your mental disorders. Our people are hard at work digging up dirt on these renegade psychologists. C'mon, trust us, we're doctors for pete's sake, not like these wanna-be's. We haven't made any real advances in 50 years or so but we're *really* close. If only we had a a few more measly billions we could really get things moving.

  25. Here come the Scientologists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    This story will be like honey to them.

  26. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

    You'd have to be a complete moron to claim that there is no evidence for medical and pharmacologic treatment of schizophrenia: the evidence is almost 60 years old. The only conclusion to draw from this is that the British Psychological Society is, in fact, composed of vast groups of complete morons who do not believe in science or the scientific method.

    You can only draw that conclusion if the BPS were claiming such a thing; are they?

    --
    systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  27. There is no "chemical imbalance" by bitrex · · Score: 0

    There is no "chemical imbalance" other than what the psychiatric drugs create, and the issue of drug dependence and withdrawal is systematically ignored by psychiatry. It has been shown that long-term use of the medications prescribed by psychiatrists can cause significant changes in brain structure and function that may be difficult or impossible to reverse, and that in susceptible populations attempts to discontinue certain medications can lead to withdrawal reactions that far exceed the severity of the original illness, even with slow tapering. For these people, there is virtually no assistance from the psychiatric community available (aside from a few "renegade" practitioners), and certainly none available from the pharmaceutical industry. Nobody really knows exactly how the drugs work, or what's happening when one tries to withdraw and things begin to go wrong. Keep in mind that in all likelihood you will be blamed for the withdrawal symptoms, not the drug, because acknowledging a withdrawal reaction would force the profession to admit that they have no idea what to do in such a situation.

  28. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by ocamsrazor · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, your rambling statement doesn't appear to be scientific.

    "In other words, chlorpromazine actually worked so well that the psychiatrists no longer had to resort to ECT, brain surgery, or screwing with the patient's sugar and insulin levels."
    You'd have to be a complete moron to claim that that is proof chlorpromazine works.

    The problem with the mental health field is that it's almost impossible to rigorously define an actual illness the way we can with physical illness. This makes diagnosis and measuring the efficacy of treatment incredibly difficult. Hell even defining what it means for a schizophrenic to be "well" is hard.

    It's undeniable that people suffer from mental illness and the psychologists in the article are just as guilty of terrible science as the psychiatrists they criticise, but there are huge problems in this entire field and we're going to see spats like this go on and on until someone can produce some coherent scientific evidence that tells us anything at all about mental health.

  29. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we have a cure why are there three times more mentally ill people than there were 60 years ago?

  30. Here's the shortcut to understanding. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Depression Cured at Last" by Sherry A. Rogers

    Ignore at your own risk.

  31. confessions of a pharma rep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    http://youtu.be/AazObF_pHSU

    1. Re:confessions of a pharma rep by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Goatze, is that you? (AC posting a NOT youtube video with no explanation? I'm not clicking on that.)

  32. I call bunk by msobkow · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I was diagnosed as bi-polar about 6-7 years ago after suffering a serious manic episode with full scale hallucinations. While it was not the first time this had happened to me, it was "the final straw" that led to me being diagnosed.

    Since then I've been on Resperidone to control the manic phases, and Effexor to limit the depressive phases. I've had no hallucinations, breakdowns, suicidal thoughts, or any other problems since being put on the medication, except when I've run out of medication, thinking "Maybe I don't need it any more."

    But the return of symptoms after 2-3 weeks without medication has me convinced that the diagnosis is valid and the medication effective.

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:I call bunk by Hartree · · Score: 2

      Your experience sounds similar to that of many who've been treated by reputable mental health professionals, including myself.

      But, since you admitted that you're a diagnosed manic depressive, anyone who doesn't want to believe that the meds helped can simply discount what you say as coming from someone who has a mental problem.

      And, of course, they can then proceed to "if he only did my particular favored combination of Reiki, homeopathy and an all blueberry diet, he'd really get better, and then wouldn't imagine that he got better from the meds."

      At the root, mental illness is a process that depends on both environment and genetics, but the effects are from disruptions in the functioning of the cells of the central nervous system and or how they communicate with each other. That can be at many levels, from genetic mistakes, to poorly learned coping skills, to brain alterations from stress that can be seen in imaging, to the aftermath of a stroke, etc, etc.

      If it was simple, our brains would be too simple to understand it.

      As such, sometime pharmacological means will help. Sometimes talk therapies, or cognitive/learning therapies will help. Sometimes, nothing seems to help.

      The best hope for improvement in being able to better help these often devastating conditions is in better understanding of the operations and biochemical basis of the brain and nervous system. But, it's going to take a long time. Until then , we have to do a lot of cut and try and see what works.

    2. Re:I call bunk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      How do you know you're not going through withdraw symptoms? Anti-depressants do have them. The problem is that the withdraw symptoms match the disease. Historically before anti-depressants, depression on average lasted around 1 year then suddenly went away. Today it's a life long struggle full of meds then more meds to counter the side effects, then a full swap when the first meds stop working and you need something stronger (just like a drug addiction).

      -From someone who's attempted suicide twice and has been depressed for over 14 years since he was 10 (but didn't realize it until a few years ago). There are many things to try (food, exercise, better sleep habits, ways of thinking, quality friends, etc...) before taking drugs when looking for the quick fix.

    3. Re:I call bunk by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

      If you're experiencing a true manic episode, including hearing voices, as the OP was, addiction to anti-depressants is definitely an improvement. Yeah your drug company has it's $talons in your for life, but that's a lot better then working 80 hours a week for three months because the voices in your head tell you to, and then disappearing into your man-cave for three weeks because you can't stop crying.

    4. Re:I call bunk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I concur. I may be an outlier, but after _years_ of trying to deal with depression with cognitive methods while rejecting medication, a competent psychiatrist dealt with the problem in 2-3 sessions of 15 minutes. Finding the right SSRI took a while. But after just two weeks on it, it was as if a lifetime veil had been lifted off me. It gave me the leeway I needed to make the cognitive methods work. A year later, my mood and outlook on life has settled at a higher level, even after the meds were discontinued.

    5. Re:I call bunk by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should change the way you live your life and not take drugs to support your lifestyle?

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  33. Read carefully before you post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Psychologists are casting doubt, not psychiatrists.

  34. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by girlinatrainingbra · · Score: 1

    For the same reason that there was a surge in "autistic" children, or "autism spectrum" disorder kids in the last decade: more people being diagnosed. Do you know that in the 1700s nobody was labeled with having Parkinson's disease? Or Lou Gehrig's disease? Of course, there were probably people who had those diseases, but those disease names or the recognition of those syndromes as specific diseases did not even exist at that time!
    .
    So of course once something has been defined there's a greater likelihood of it being recognized as existing in a patient as more doctors are trained about the knowledge and existence of the disease.
    .
    And that's not even going into the secondary gain that people get from having kids labelled as "autism spectrum" disorder kids: extra time on tests, extra help in school, some people like these diagnoses (like "Aspergers's") because it makes their kids or them "special" and eligible for aid or benefits. So sometimes there's also fraudulent labeling for secondary gain.

  35. Replacement available by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Mental health is a large subject, let's take a smaller slice for discussion: depression.

    Depression meds work no better than placebo. Depression meds have lots of unpleasant side-effects, so being treated for depression is - on average - worse than going undiagnosed.

    Depression is a symptom of many diseases - at least 18 of them commonplace. Many cases of depression are the result of 1) underactive thyroid (40% by one accounting), 2) Low levels of vitamin D, and 3) sleep apnea.

    And yet, the symptom is treated as a disease in and of itself. Prescription meds which do more harm than good are commonly prescribed under the flimsiest of circumstances:

    Patient: "doctor, I feel tired and run down"

    Doctor: "It sounds like depression. Try this and see if it goes away".

    After all is said and done, a casual reading of the research would suggest that the scientific method used in psychology research is crap. That's a strong statement, but not completely without merit.

    Psychiatrists need to stop worrying about publishing the next trivial follow-on paper, and need to stop theorizing by making up stories. Get your evidence first, make theories to explain the evidence, and then throw out theories which have no testable predictions.

    Go back to basics, and stop making money from giving people false hope through increased suffering.

    (Grrr! A close friend got chewed up and spit out by the medical profession because of depression.)

    1. Re:Replacement available by ceoyoyo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Depression meds work no better than placebo [thedailybeast.com]."

      Beware the weasel words. What your link actually says, and what the research shows, is that antidepressants in general have about a 25% effect over and above placebo. They do work. However, you can get 75% of the effect by taking a sugar pill, without all the side effects.

      Antidepressants are undoubtedly overprescribed, but they do work.

      "the scientific method used in psychology research is crap."

      You've shown no evidence for that. Psychiatrists have gotten pill happy, probably at the behest of their patients, just like antibiotics get overprescribed, but that has no bearing on whether antidepressants or antibiotics actually work (both do). It also isn't relevant to whether biologists, psychologists and pharmacologists are doing good science or not.

    2. Re:Replacement available by muridae · · Score: 1

      Depression meds work no better than placebo.

      Since they don't cite which study they are talking about, I can't begin to pick apart it's actual problems. In 2010, there was a study (damned if Scholar isn't finding it right now) about SSRI treatment of 'mild to moderate depression'. It showed, and was widely quoted at the time, that placebos were as effective as SSRI and tricyclics. Sure, sounds damning, except that the definition of 'mild depression' is as vague as the rest of your post makes it sound.

      Severe depression, on the other hand, is not vague and "I'm feeling run down". It's "I can't get out of bed, and a general practitioner has ruled out other issues, and I just want to die so can someone hand me that gun because I don't feel like getting up to get it." Yes, JAMA published research has shown that placebos need to be given in studies to see that antidepressants are actually working. Other studies show that, in meta-analysis, TCAs and SSRIs do work; though by narrow margins. And if the article in 2010 was the Kirsch one, you can read the abstract here on what the data says when corrected for what the patients reported or doctor measured (i can't read the article from here) their depression symptoms to be.

      In total, you remain wrong in thinking that the statement of "the use of the scientific method in psychology is crap" has any merit. Reading a pop-psy article of course skims over the actual details and avoids bringing up what the statistical values were; that would confuse readers who want it condensed into bite sized bits to throw around. But for gods sake, don't cite wiki in an article complaining about the scientific method.

    3. Re:Replacement available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err, as someone on depression meds, I can say they DO work. I've tried going off, and after a few weeks, I again get crippling anxiety issues and almost can't do my work any more.

      That doesn't mean they're not overprescribed, but there do exist people for whom cognitive therapy and lifestyle changes ain't enough.

    4. Re:Replacement available by NicBenjamin · · Score: 3, Informative

      I can confirm anti-depressants work fine if you're correctly diagnosed with depression. I can feel the pills wear off. And if you read your link, you'll note the actual paper you quote says they work better then placebo, too. Only 33% better, but better is better.

      Being misdiagnosed is not unusual. Strokes also have the same symptoms as many other diseases. Women having heart attacks are frequently told they're having a panic attack. That doesn't mean that the numerous diseases that look like strokes are complete BS made up by some idiot, it just means that you have to have a Doctor whose smart enough to tell a stroke from a migraine.

    5. Re:Replacement available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would be curious to know what anti-depressant they used in their study. Because recently some off brand 'anti-depressants' were taken off the shelf. They were assumed to be anti-depressants, and were used for almost a decade on the assumption that similar drug compounds are anti-depressants.

    6. Re:Replacement available by WuphonsReach · · Score: 1

      I can confirm anti-depressants work fine if you're correctly diagnosed with depression.

      I can tell the difference too. Mostly in what I think about at night while falling asleep. Taking the Lexapro? I have normal levels of anxiety about current and upcoming tasks and the usual stuff. Things that pretty much everybody tosses and turns over. Off the Lexapro for more then a few weeks? Thoughts of suicide and constant dwelling on past mistakes (going back to childhood, teen and early adut years).

      When I get to the point where I'm starting to consider planning a way out, it's time to ring up my doctor and yell for help. It's like any other disease, know your symptoms, know when you're getting worse, don't be afraid to get your doctor's attention. The trick is to do that before you become too irrational to do so...

      --
      Wolde you bothe eate your cake, and have your cake?
    7. Re:Replacement available by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Depression? Depression is real, but it's a drop in the psychiatric bucket. Depressed people kill themselves. Psychotic people kill everyone else and then themselves. This is a bunch of psychologists who want to come up with some more reasons why they ought to be treating depression with counseling, and are willing to throw the seriously mentally ill under the bus in order to do so.

    8. Re:Replacement available by Macgrrl · · Score: 3, Insightful

      My husband has suffered from severe chronic obstructive sleep aponea for a number of years. It initially presented as hallucinations, nightmares and mood swings - he was diagnosed as bi-polar and put on lithium. When that didn't help, in fact he got worse and start to have fits and seizures (both convulsive and vacant) he was diagnosed as epileptic and put on high doses of epilium which did nothing but cause him to massively gain weight due to the way it messed with his satiation triggers and he felt constantly hungry.

      Unsurprisingly this led to severe depression.

      Due to a serendipity we ended up seeing a different specialist because his regular doctor was off sick which led to him getting a real diagnosis, effective treatment (firstly a CPAP machine and more recently surgery to open up the airways further) and for the first time in years he is feeling better and is nearly off all the medication.

      Ironically I just had my thyroid out due to thyroid cancer and am on heavy doses of Vitamin D.

      We're generally a happier household than the previous paragraphs would suggest.

      --
      Sara
      Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
    9. Re:Replacement available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh yeah that study. The upshot of that study is they compare the effectiveness of new antidepressants by comparing them to other anti-depressants, but not placebo's. (And by inference they have no control groups either). So if standard anti-depressants are no better than a placebo then pretty much anything that produces just the right amounts of minimal side effects will 'work' as an anti-depressant.

    10. Re:Replacement available by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      Define "work". If they allow you to sleep a little better and thus keep your job and maintain some kind of life without actually lifting your mood then they have failed to treat the depression but still made a valuable improvement to your life.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    11. Re:Replacement available by Reziac · · Score: 1

      And give the prevalence of hypothyroid-associated depression and that hypothyroidism functionally starves the body and brain, one wonders if it's literally the "spoonful of sugar", the brief lift from the energy input.

      Incidentally depression with rage-events has some association with inadequate T4-to-t# conversion; per one doctor's private studies, about 90% of such patients benefited from supplementation with either T3 or NDT, even if they were not classically hypothyroid (low TSH).

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    12. Re:Replacement available by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was clinically depressed back in '85 stemming from abusive parents. Suffering from chronic depression, I could not get better on my own. I spend a year in therapy before I was willing to try drugs. Tricyclic Antidepressants, the took three weeks to kick in. Then I felt better than I had ever felt before in my entire life.

      You are going to find me very hard to convince that drugs are bad. While they did not solve my problems, they allowed me to function in school, society, and life while I worked through my many problems in therapy.

      On the other hand, nowadays I have problems with fatigue. I can't count the number of doctors who've said "It might be a physical manifestation of depression." Idiots, the lot of 'em! For crying out loud, I *know* what depression is like!

      I dug into it on my own, learned about metabolic disorders like myoadenylate deaminase deficiency (strikes 1 in 50), started self-treating with Ribose, and got better without their help. Again, drugs are useful. Quacks with egos the size of planets are commonplace.

    13. Re:Replacement available by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

      Welcome to allopathic medicine! This stupidity doesn't only apply to mental 'illness'.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
    14. Re:Replacement available by Jmc23 · · Score: 1
      You could, you know, try meditation.

      Taking a pill isn't a cure for having no control over your thoughts. The problem is still there, you're just hiding the symptoms. Perhaps, maybe, just maybe, those thoughts are a direct result of what YOU are doing with your life.

      --
      Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  36. F U Psychiatrists. by Cammi · · Score: 2

    Here is a scenario that happens daily in Alaska. I do not know if other states have this issue: 1. Kid goes to school and have a school breakfast. 2. That breakfast is full of sugar (pancakes w/ syrup). 3. Kid cannot sit still in class due to being full of sugar. 4. Teacher reports this to the school counselor who talks to a Psychiatrist. 5. Psychiatrist recommend drugs for the kid. 6. Government steps in telling the parent that the kid must have drugs or they will be kidnapped (stolen by "Family Services"). 7. (If parent chooses to fight back against this crime, the kid will be kidnapped) 8. Kid gets doped up on drugs, which causes side effects. 9. Kid gets other drugs to negate side effects, causing more side effects. 10. Kid is stuck on drugs for life. This literally happens all the time in Alaska. F U Psychiatrists.

    1. Re:F U Psychiatrists. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. Psychiatrists are the most neurotic, fucked up, sociopathic shits you could ever meet - and because they can't FEEL, they can only stop others from feeling. Psychiatrists are power crazed nutters, the absolute scum of the earth. The whole 'psychiatry' scam is about selling DRUGS, and making a fortune doing so. They haven't helped ONE person cure themselves of 'mental illness'. The petty bureaucrats who run our countries are just as sociopathic as the psychiatrists, which is why they love them so much.

    2. Re:F U Psychiatrists. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      I always love this one. Psychiatrists are among the lowest-paid physicians. You'd make more money over the course of your life by being a retail pharmacist.

  37. "Schizophrenia Experiences and Suggestions?" by Trax3001BBS · · Score: 1

    There was an article on /. "Schizophrenia Experiences and Suggestions?",
    I bookmarked the link as it's such a good read, the experiences of those with, had, or knew others with Schizophrenia.
    http://ask.slashdot.org/story/04/05/21/0140239/schizophrenia-experiences-and-suggestions

    Yes, find out more (Score:5, Insightful)
    by spellraiser (764337) on Friday May 21, 2004 @01:04PM (#9217287)

    "Wow, who would have thought I'd see this on slashdot? It makes little sense to post this question here, but yet, it was posted. And I am reading it. Which is ... interesting, since my brother too was diagnosed with schizophrenia, a little over two years ago now. This thread shouts out to me to say something about it, but I find now that it is harder than it seems...." then continues a story of his twin brother.

    I can't paste all the post yet few venture to another link, I can say you will have a different outlook on Schizophrenia.

    One of the threads does address the DSM so on topic :}
    by HBI (604924) on Friday May 21, 2004 @01:16PM (#9217475)
    "Homosexuality was in the DSM as a treatable psychological disorder up till 1973."

    ----
    Yep I've read /. from it's first days yet didn't register until just recently.
    Never felt knowledgeable enough to post, still don't just said the heck with it :}

  38. So you replace it with .... what? by gestalt_n_pepper · · Score: 1

    OK, I'm more than willing to admit we don't have a clue about many neurological disease processes. Schizophrenia and Bipolar disorders may be dozens of different specific diseases that happen to present in a similar way. I get that.

    But until we *know* what those diseases are, schizophrenia is useful in that it describes a set of symptoms that commonly occur together, that we can treat.

    Theoretical models are never "right" or "wrong." These are meaningless terms. They are only more or less useful in that they provide some predictive and/or manipulative power. Period. End of story.

    --
    Please do not read this sig. Thank you.
  39. Public Insanity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody wants to believe they are nuts. Families usually want to think of a family member having a little problem or being just a bit different rather than confronting the fact that a family member has a major mental illness. And families have a huge financial motive to believe their family member is not "that bad". Admitting that a family member has a serious problem can be economic death for the entire family. Many states have no decent, public, mental health treatment at all. That means it is going to be out of pocket, probably very long term, and hugely expensive. Insurance companies do little to cover mental illness and it gets worse. If the person is unable to work or off enough to be unemployable then the family will be in perpetual financial support for all of the person's needs. What would a family with four children do? Three need college and the stuff that all kids need growing up. The sick child will consume the entire family income. To spend $250,000 per year, every year, trying to restore a mental patient to functional status is a reality. And it can get a lot worse. many mentally ill people feel such agony that illegal narcotics give them a moment of peace. You end up with a mentally ill drug addict who has almost zero chance of cure who will steal and do every trick known to man to get dope. Sate programs are worthless as a rule as budget restraints make real treatment in effective. Yet funding of mental health research is so low that it is a sick joke.. The US spends more money every year researching lipstick than insanity.
                        And just to completely screw the pooch who is already staggering and about to drop we frequently put addicts and the mentally ill into jails and prisons. Mental illness in a prison will always become worse. Treating mental illness in a depressing environment can not work. Drug addiction and alcoholism can not happen unless the person is mentally ill.
                          To do much with mental illness one must change the entire society and society hates change.

    1. Re:Public Insanity by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Drug addiction and alcoholism can not happen unless the person is mentally ill.

      You've said a lot of interesting things... But I have no idea where you got this. Drug addiction can be viewed as a mental illness (if you squint just right), and the mentally ill may be more susceptible than most (unsubstantiated conjecture), but addiction can and does exist independent of any other condition. Most of the time, it is independent of any other mental condition.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  40. This is simple competition for profit. by macraig · · Score: 1

    The psychiatrists are angry about this statement because it threatens their ability to bilk patients and healthcare systems out of money for pills that cost nothing to produce. The psychologists issued the statement because they're butthurt that the psychiatrists have been edging them out of their own turf and their ability to charge people $100 an hour for a service that guarantees no results at all. The pills carry no guarantee of success either, but at least they don't cost $100 per hour.

    The statement has a political and financial motive, not an objective medical one. It's medical mafia turf wars, nothing more.

  41. Don't need no DSM, we got brain scans now. by Trax3001BBS · · Score: 1

    And can read genes.

    "How to spot a murderer's brain"
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2013/may/12/how-to-spot-a-murderers-brain

    Yep, just scan everybody's brain, then jail those who fit the pattern, or are the carrier of one particular set of genes.

    Crime prevention at it's best.

  42. Stating the obvious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..that if you willingly go to a British doctor then you need your head examined.

  43. Psych, Feynmann and Cargo Cults by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Stuff that isn't science that is sure it "knows" is prejudice. By pretending to be science such "stuff" gets to deprive you of you liberty in a court based on prejudice because you're a bit socially eccentric and someone else doesn't like that for "moral" reasons or whatever and wants to "straighten you out" whatever that means to them. Do you dress funny? Have sex? The wrong skin colour? These kinds of things...

    Stuff that isn't science that pretends to be so usually results in evil of the worst, most uncivilised kind. It should always be called for what it is, ie unscientific. Psychology and psychiatry have a history of being right there in the middle of the absolute worst of it, in all our countries. If they want to be treated with any more respect than the utter garbage that is Scientology they need to prove each piece of research is actual science and, as a "discipline", publicly and loudly call out pseudo-science and bs-prejudice masquerading as something more. Starting with their own history ripping everything down that does not make the grade. They have earned themselves the right as a "discipline" to be treated with extreme suspicion.

    Dick Feynman is popular around here and rightly so. His commencement address from 1974 on what he calls "Cargo Cult Science" one of the great speeches and worth 5 minutes of your time if you haven't happened to have encountered it yet.
    http://neurotheory.columbia.edu/~ken/cargo_cult.html

    "So I have just one wish for you--the good luck to be somewhere where you are free to maintain the kind of integrity I have described, and where you do not feel forced by a need to maintain your position in the organization, or financial support, or so on, to lose your integrity."

    What follows is not an argument from authority or even an argument at all, just some well phrased thoughts, you'll make up your own mind.

    "Incidentally, psycho-analysis is not a science: it is at best a medical process, and perhaps even more like witch-doctoring. It has a theory as to what causes disease - lots of different "spirits" etc. The witch doctor has a theory that a disease like malaria is caused by a spirit which comes into the air ; it is not cured by shaking a snake over it, but quinine does help malaria. So, if you are sick, I would advise that you go to the witch doctor because he is the man in the tribe who knows the most about the disease; on the other hand his knowledge is not science. Psychoanalysis has not been checked carefully by experiment... " --Richard Feynamn, Six Easy Pieces

    "It's a great game to look at the past, at an unscientific era, look at something there, and say have we got the same thing now, and where is it? So I would like to amuse myself with this game. First, we take witch doctors. The witch doctor says he knows how to cure. There are spirits inside which are trying to get out. ... Put a snakeskin on and take quinine from the bark of a tree. The quinine works. He doesn't know he's got the wrong theory of what happens. If I'm in the tribe and I'm sick, I go to the witch doctor. He knows more about it than anyone else. But I keep trying to tell him he doesn't know what he's doing and that someday when people investigate the thing freely and get free of all his complicated ideas they'll learn much better ways of doing it. Who are the witch doctors? Psychoanalysts and psychiatrists, of course."
    Third lecture. David Goodstein reports that the entire Psychology department walked out in a huff at this point [7]. -- The Meaning of it All

    1. Re:Psych, Feynmann and Cargo Cults by Chowderbags · · Score: 1

      Stuff that isn't science that is sure it "knows" is prejudice. By pretending to be science such "stuff" gets to deprive you of you liberty in a court based on prejudice because you're a bit socially eccentric and someone else doesn't like that for "moral" reasons or whatever and wants to "straighten you out" whatever that means to them. Do you dress funny? Have sex? The wrong skin colour? These kinds of things...

      To my knowledge, the only way to be forced into any kind of treatment at all (at least in America) is to threaten the life of yourself or of others or if you use insanity as a defense in a crime. The latter one is pretty obviously following due process. The former one is often a pretty high bar to meet and emergency psychiatric beds are in short supply so they tend to be reserved for people who are a real danger. No one in America is getting sent to a padded room for dressing funny, sleeping around too much, or being the wrong skin color (though if you match those criteria, you can get a spot on the Maury to find out who's your baby daddy).

      Psychoanalysis has not been checked carefully by experiment

      Basically no one does psychoanalysis anymore. Drawing conclusions about the field of psychology based on an outdated model would be like drawing conclusions about physics based on the theory of luminiferous aether or the phlogiston theory.

  44. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL. Taking heroine or cocaine would also doubtless 'help' the behaviours that YOU call 'schizophrenia'. There is still no such thing as a 'neurological' cause of this problem - it is a NATURAL reaction to painful life events, normally being brought up by abusive parents.

    I expect you're the sort of cretin who believes that there is a 'brain disorder' called 'dyslexia' too, and that being a poor reader is nothing to do with having learnt to read the wrong way, because your 'teachers' didn't have a clue what they were doing... you cretin.

  45. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by NeoMorphy · · Score: 1

    When properly used in the right cases, Thorazine was great! Unfortunately, you have too many idiots over prescribing it and you have issues like Tardive dyskinesia and the "Thorazine shuffle". And the newer atypical anti-psychotics are dangerous as well(ie: Abilify). I swear they get kickbacks on prescribing these newer and very expensive medications.

    I'm not knocking the meds, I think they are great when properly prescribed for the right people, but most of these quacks haven't a clue and the repercussions are making people afraid of using medication.

  46. you guys really miss the point... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the article is specifically about treating the psychological/environmental issues rather than treating mental illness through chemicals. while psychology is mirrored neurochemically, neurochemistry is also mirrored psychologically; if you shape one, you shape the other. now, realizing this, think about the long-term advantages of dealing with the actual underlying causes of the symptoms that turn out to be primarily epigenetic rather giving a chemical bandaid and never addressing the underlying causes which typically leads to life-long chemical dependence.

    right now both psychiatry and psychology are ridiculously primitive and border on barbaric. most "mental illness" appears to be an appropriate biological resposne to environmental and psychological stressors.

    "if you could treat the symptoms without affecting the cause, it's quite a bit like trying to heal a gunshot wound with gauze.."

    1. Re:you guys really miss the point... by germansausage · · Score: 1

      "most "mental illness" appears to be an appropriate biological response to environmental and psychological stressors."

      You obviously have never known a schizophrenic person. Please tell me how exactly are hallucinations, paranoid delusions and a complete inability to make rational decisions an appropriate biological response to environmental and psychological stressors?

  47. Re:why so negative? better to focus on the positiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.salon.com/2010/10/14/army_contract_seligman/

    Better to focus on the whole truth as much as is humanly possible. This is the goal of real science, after all.

  48. Re:You cretins by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    Are you off your meds?

  49. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LOL. Taking heroine or cocaine would also doubtless 'help' the behaviours that YOU call 'schizophrenia'. There is still no such thing as a 'neurological' cause of this problem - it is a NATURAL reaction to painful life events, normally being brought up by abusive parents.

    You do realize that there is a higher concordance of schizophrenia with identical twins (40-60%) than there is with fraternal twins (10-20%), right? That alone suggests that there is a genetic component to it (and also that environmental factors play a role, or the concordance would be higher).

  50. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by muridae · · Score: 1

    Because there are roughly 3 times more people than there were 60 years ago?

  51. nope by WGFCrafty · · Score: 1

    The summary says psychiatrist when it is clearly the: British Psychological Society's.

    Funny most people in here are whining about big pharma and psychiatry. There is another field which in most states cannot prescribe drugs.

  52. Mod UP by muridae · · Score: 1

    Someone with some mod points throw them at this AC. The stats posted, uncited, by the OP are vague and, if true, self selected as the AC points out.

  53. The sutitle for this article should read: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Completely understandable, considering no one likes to be made obsolete"

    I feel for you psychologists - years of studying and/or practice and suddenly you're told that you're no longer needed? That ought to touch a nerve.

    1. Re:The sutitle for this article should read: by PPH · · Score: 1

      I feel for you psychologists - years of studying and/or practice and suddenly you're told that you're no longer needed

      I've got my EMACS psychologist. What do I need with a real-life one?

      --
      Have gnu, will travel.
  54. and all this time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I though it was Psychology that was bogus without any reliable experimental basis?

  55. Wait a sec...Scien...tology! by Moppusan · · Score: 2

    It's Scientology's elusive parasitic division. There's a scientape worm in these peoples' brains, causing inflammation and rendering them useless. It's the only logical reason I can think of for that kind of statement.

    --
    You can dance if you want to.
  56. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by NicBenjamin · · Score: 1

    You what's interesting?

    I had the exact same teachers as my sister. She ended up being diagnosed with Dyslexia, I didn't.

  57. Infections by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    According to Wikipedia about 1/4 th of the world's population is infected with some sort of parasitic infection (ie: worms). IIRC, some estimates are as high as 1/3. Doctors are terrible at detecting these things (doctors are also terrible at detecting malnutrition, ie: a lack of a certain vitamin. They don't really ask diet related questions, for example, doing a simple analysis comparing your symptoms to the symptoms of any deficiencies you may have based on your diet. So many health problems can be fixed by this). If your read the symptoms of these parasites many of them seem to be similar to the symptoms of depression, ADHD, and other mental disorders ( "Delayed intellectual development" ).

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parasitic_worm

    (the entire article is worth reading).
    Studies have shown that a good percentage of people who get medication for these infections benefit from it.

    It stands to reason that if such a high percentage of people in general have these sorts of infections a much higher percentage of people with health or mental or other problems, especially symptoms known to have a high correlation with those infected, have these problems. Why is it that animals and dogs get regularly treated for these things but not humans. I suspect that if these things are regularly screened for and doctors did more to ensure people didn't have these infections and to regularly treat and screen them we would all generally be much better off.

  58. Division by zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My favorite analogy is a problem that occurred when running old Turbo Pascal programs on fast computers: the initialization routine for the delay function would run so quickly that essentially 0ms had passed, causing any program to crash due to a division by 0.

    The "fix" was to run a program like "SlowDown" which would occupy the CPU enough for the initialization routine to take 1ms or longer.

    This was a biological fix to a psychological problem - had the bad thought patterns (the code) been fixed, the brain (CPU) would not have needed to be tricked into physically behaving differently through a drug (SlowDown).

    1. Re:Division by zero by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is like one type of drug that basically makes your brain release more of a certain hormon.

      An analogy for the other type would be beefing up the cooler/fan on your CPU if a program is stuck in an infinite loop. Sure, the CPU will still produce a lot of heat, but enough of it is taken away again to prevent damage.

  59. Thank you for sharing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    My wife and I adopted four siblings who were later diagnosed with Bipolar, all before they were six years old. But only after the state transfeered them to our insurance. County Mental health counselors, school behaviorist, school psychologists and school nurses have continually given us misinformation, refused to make basic accommodations, and denied them a 504 plan because there was no evidence of the medication being helpful, despite a doctors report. This isn't because they are evil, but more so because they are un-exposed, lack knowledge, and never see the cycle (euphoric, dysphoric, depressed) from start to finish.

    So I asked them, sarcastically, would it help if we took them off medication for two weeks of the data collections. They then threatened to call Child protective services if they found we weren't giving our children doctor suggested medication. They spent next four months every time there was a hiccup in my child's life calling us asking us if the kids got their medication. My response was it doesn't matter the school has not found there to be any medical benefit in providing it.

    Medication has been the saving grace for our kids and they will tell you they don't like life without it, or even getting late.

  60. Talk therapists bashing real scientists by JDG1980 · · Score: 2

    According to Wikipedia, "Clinical psychology is an integration of science, theory and clinical knowledge for the purpose of understanding, preventing, and relieving psychologically-based distress or dysfunction and to promote subjective well-being and personal development. Central to its practice are psychological assessment and psychotherapy."

    In other words, clinical psychologists focus on the "soft" stuff – talk therapy, Rorschach test, Myers-Briggs and all that crap. So it's not surprising that they would consider the efforts of real scientists to be an intrusion on their turf. We don't use talk therapy to treat depression any more; SSRIs are far more effective (not to mention much cheaper). The only type of talk therapy that has been shown to have any positive effects is cognitive behavioral therapy. All the rest is just crap, and most insurance companies won't pay for it any more because it's basically unproven pseudoscience.

    1. Re:Talk therapists bashing real scientists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IME psychiatrists focus on non CBT talk therapy if they want more money (more sessions), or just drugs if not.. Psychologists focus almost exclusively on CBT.. That was my experience anyway and the CBT alone had by far the best long term effect, though that was because the drugs made me worse..

      If drugs do help someone then they should be used along with CBT as the two together have been shown in numerous studies to be the best approach for at least anxiety/depression type disorders.

  61. Doctors and depression by gd2shoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It may be that diagnosis and treatment would be theoretically beneficial... IF THEY IDENTIFIED THE ACTUAL CAUSE! I don't know about anxiety, but a typical doctor dealing with depression will just throw SSRIs, SNRIs, TCAs, or even MAOIs at the problem. They don't think, they just prescribe. They make no attempt to understand the underlying pathology.

    You brought up stress induced depression. The average doctor won't consider stress related disorders when dealing with depression, even if you ask him to. Tell a doctor you have depression and fatigue, and most of them wont even think about hypothyroidism. Tell a doctor you have depression and have trouble sleeping, and they'll tell you that it is a symptom of your depression*. They won't wonder about sleep apnea.

    *(This is from the "depression is a disease not a symptom" philosophy. At the very least, there's a high chance of co-morbidity, or that the depression has been exacerbated by a sleep disorder.)

    The medical profession really needs to wake up and understand that depression is not a disease. It is a symptom. There are many known causes, and probably many that are unknown. When dealing with a chronic condition, you can't just assume that it is idiopathic and treat the symptom, hoping that it will go away. That's unethical.

    (You must make a true, good-faith effort to show that it really is ideopathic first. Just because you don't know what it is off the top of your head is no excuse to slack off.)

    The problem seems to be made worse because doctors seem to like depression. Depression, as a diagnosis, is popular. It's almost as if doctors are hoping you'll be a depression patient.

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
    1. Re:Doctors and depression by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See this and then talk: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zYl13Relzbs

    2. Re:Doctors and depression by stymy · · Score: 2

      Depression can strike people who don't really have any reasons for it. It can absolutely be just caused by a random shift in the levels of some brain chemicals.

      Also, in many cases medication can really help people. Sometimes the reason doesn't matter so much as the end result. A good example of this is medication for schizophrenia. It was discovered by accident, but it can be incredibly effective, so why not give it to people, even if we don't know how or why it works? It works, which is the most important part.

    3. Re:Doctors and depression by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

      Also, in many cases medication can really help people. Sometimes the reason doesn't matter so much as the end result. A good example of this is medication for schizophrenia. It was discovered by accident, but it can be incredibly effective, so why not give it to people, even if we don't know how or why it works? It works, which is the most important part.

      My post was a side comment on a related topic, specifically tied to depression. I don't know enough about schizophrenia (for example) to refute the general case. It is not true for depression. You shouldn't reach straight for the meds before you know what you're dealing with, or have at least ruled everything known as reasonably unlikely.

      Depression can strike people who don't really have any reasons for it. It can absolutely be just caused by a random shift in the levels of some brain chemicals.

      There is a reason for it, even if we don't know what it is. The cause can vary wildly from case to case, but there is one. And I'm not arguing against SSRIs, SNRIs, TCAs, and MAOIs in each and every case. There are many, many patients that we (society) cannot otherwise help. They should simply NOT be the first thing the doctor thinks of.

      There are so many "depression" patients with undiagnosed, treatable illness that it is simply not funny. They're living with less depression than they would if they weren't pilled up, but it won't go away until they're actually treated for what is actually wrong with them.

      --
      I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  62. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by hawkingradiation · · Score: 1

    Right. Has anyone every been talked out of being gay? How about talking or counselling to try to get a person to grow in height? Change your skin colour? Sorry but these people are not bringing the right tool for the job. The proof is already in the pudding with regards to medication and will be when the true treatment (probably genetic) of people with mental illnesses is known. Comparing it to "NP-Hard" and then letting us believe that it cannot be solved is also wrong as it is not provable that we cannot solve mental illness. Constant discovery is required.

    --
    Society use your Sciences
  63. Psychologists vs Psychiatrists by khb · · Score: 1

    The folks without MDs and who can't prescribe drugs are asserting that those who are, can and do are wrong and they (the nonMDs) should lead.

    They might be right but it would seem to be pretty much a non-story.

    Psychologists understandably have *always* held such positions. Either because that's what *their* training says or because its their economic advantage to believe so (or fundamental bias ... If they didn't feel that way they'd have trained in the other camp.

    1. Re:Psychologists vs Psychiatrists by obtuse · · Score: 1

      The other thing clinical psychologists sometimes assert is that they should be able to prescribe drugs. It's the converse argument in this turf war.

      Incidentally, I was speaking with someone who identified themselves as a psychologist, and mentioned that my father was an experimental (as opposed to clinical) psychologist. Her response "Ah, he's a scientist!" Yup.

      --
      Assembly is the reverse of disassembly.
  64. Strawman on the play by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strawman.

    He didn't say schizophrenia could be treated with CBT. Nor is schizophrenia the vast majority of "mental illness" cases.

  65. Tom Cruise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    May be right, after all :-)

  66. Re:What, then, will they call my overwhelming fear by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

    Anonopathy? Dansnomatophobia?

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  67. obligatory by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

    "Verbing weirds language."
    (Calvin and Hobbes--Bill Watson)

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  68. Parents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What this means is that all your issues are still your parents fault.

  69. SSRI withdrawal by AlejoHausner · · Score: 1

    We won't know the exact position of the British Psychological Association until Monday, but I can offer one example of how a psychiatric diagnosis can cause harm. Look up "SSRI withdrawal". SSRIs like Prozac slow down the reabsorption of serotonin, leaving more serotonin available in the brain. The body isn't static, and it reacts to the drug by overstimulating serotonin absorption. The body and the drug eventually reach a balance, and the overall amount of serotonin returns to the original levels. The problem occurs when SSRIs are stopped abruptly. The body's compensation mechanism continues for a while, and your serotonin levels drop dramatically. You get VERY depressed. You may feel like killing yourself. Some people do commit suicide at this point. Seen from the outside, it looks like you were very ill, and stopping the drug unmasked the illness. But the opposite is true. Stopping the drug CAUSED the illness. In fact, studies have shown that depressed people's serotonin levels are no different from those of normal people. Taking SSRIs doesn't change your levels because your body compensates and returns your serotonin to pre- treatment levels. The SSRIs don't do anything. Except that if you stop taking them you might die. Better off not taking them. And better off not being diagnosed in the first place. Diagnosis can kill.

  70. Trade Union, maybe? by GerryHattrick · · Score: 1

    So an association of shrinks wants more 'analysis' and less meds? Hey, book some sessions soon!

  71. Re:You cretins by gd2shoe · · Score: 1

    Makes sense.

    Either that, or on a psychedelic trip (etc).

    --
    I won't join Slashcott. OTOH, If Beta goes live, I just won't be back until it's fixed. Sorry Dice.
  72. Geeks vs the mind. by Imaman · · Score: 1

    There are many billions of neurons in our brain. Alot of them are specialized towards maintaining balance, generate speech, interpretation of visual and auditory stimuli and so on ("the easy stuff"), but not most. Each neuron holds a part of a memory and/or function, and the wiring (axons and synapses) together with the limbic system, a shitload of other stimuli and some errors in communication generates thoughts and behaviour. Every brain is unique. Every person is unique. No two minds has ever occupied the same body in the same period of time. Every. Person. Is. Unique. This is not assembler, where mnemonics are limited in number and errors are few (if you're good at it). This is not C/C++. This is not Java. This will never be Visual Basic (I know, I'm old). Until we can run simulations on the data and network generated by every neuron, axon and synapse in an individual we will not have a quick fix (aka "fo' shizza" real scientific approach to mental illness, which some geeks or Big Pharma trolls here "believe" exists today) without drawbacks. The current (ideal) model of psychiatry (Medication if other methods doesn't work) is not practiced mostly because of Big Pharma but also because MDs are in need of a quick fix and may lack a holistic approach to mental illnesses (like many, many geeks, apparently). If you can't understand the value of what I've just explained (you don't have to agree with the last part), you REALLY NEED TO STFU!

  73. This is not news. by Thumper_SVX · · Score: 2

    Well... I have to say it's not news to me, but maybe I've just been lucky. My son was diagnosed as bipolar (which didn't exactly come as a surprise to me considering his mother is schizophrenic) last year. Combined with his behavioural issues as well, this was actually a bit of a relief. As far as treatment I have not encountered the "turf war" between psychologists and psychiatrists at all. In fact, my son has sessions with both a psychiatrist (monthly) and a psychologist (weekly) and the two of them talk once or twice a week about his case and work together to try to figure out an holistic solution to his issues.

    The psychiatrist has also been really clear from the outset that the medications aren't to treat the problems, rather to make the problems and perceptions of the problems more manageable so that behavioural modification can be developed to combat the issues long term. She has been fantastic in helping us deal with his issues.

    Maybe I've just been really fortunate with the group I have been working with here. While his medication is still a bit "hit or miss" there is no doubt in my mind that it has made it a lot easier for him to cope with his issues and put focus into working on his problems that would otherwise be focused elsewhere. While it's still incredibly difficult, it's definitely made things better.

    While I agree with the article in that psychiatric drugs do not fix any problems, I think it's a little inflammatory in the way it approaches the statement. Then again, it's "newsworthy" when it's inflammatory I suppose.

  74. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by nine-times · · Score: 1

    You'd have to be a complete moron to claim that there is no evidence for medical and pharmacologic treatment of schizophrenia: the evidence is almost 60 years old. The only conclusion to draw from this is that the British Psychological Society is, in fact, composed of vast groups of complete morons who do not believe in science or the scientific method.

    Why should one have to "believe in" science? I thought the deal with science is that it was a process of constantly questioning, developing, and attempting to disprove poor theories. I'm not sure I'm interested in your faith-based reasoning.

    More directly to the point, science itself comes up short on determining what "mental health" is. Once we classify a set of symptoms and label it as an "illness", we can test whether a particular medication seems to improve the "illness" by whether it diminishes the symptoms, but that's just about the limit of science. So once you assume that hallucinations are "illness", then science can be used to determine whether a given medication diminishes hallucinations.

    But it's not quite science that tells us that the medication "cures schizophrenia". It's like if you go hit by a car and your leg hurt afterwards. You could call that pain an "illness" and then science can determine that morphine is effective at treating the "illness". You can run thousands of studies that prove that morphine will remove the "illness" of leg pain, but it won't ever tell you whether that's an appropriate treatment until you redefine the illness to downplay the pain and focus instead on the broken leg.

  75. Surprise! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a shocking turn of events, psychologists accuse their rivals of being irrelevant.

    Psychologists have always had an inferiority complex when it comes to psychiatry. Psychiatrists attend medical school as a part of their schooling whereas psychologists do not. As a result, psychiatrists tend to look at mental illness as a physical defect just as a disease of any other organ would be. Psychologists are much more "touchy-feely" about mental illness, preferring to think of all people as having the same brain at birth with their subsequent experiences molding and shaping that brain's development.

    Summary: Psychologists are idiots.

  76. And YET.... by Stubbyfingers · · Score: 1

    Some people are still koo-koo for Co-co Puffs.

    Just because you don't believe in something and can't figure out why it exists does not mean that it DOESN'T exist when evidence of it can be found right before your eyes.

    I know some people who are honestly nutters. Sweet people. Good people. When they're on their meds and under treatment. If they miss some meds, OTOH, you don't want to be around them.

  77. Re:You cretins by Stubbyfingers · · Score: 1

    NO. I stay on them and I periodically go see a shrink. Do you mind?

    I grew up with a dad who thought all problems children had could be solved by beating them out of them.

    If he couldn't see it bleeding or bent at a funny angle...if it wasn't running a fever or projectile vomiting--beat the kid until it feels better.

    Kid doesn't need glasses--he just needs his face smacked until he sees better. Didn't need to go to the dentist--just reach in with a pair of pliers and pull out the offending tooth.

    Dad also didn't believe in such illnesses as schizophrenia...when my cousin got diagnosed, it was OBVIOUSLY because his mother let him get by with too much as a child and didn't keep him in line. He offered to cure him--HONESTLY DID--by getting a couple of guys together and beat the hell out of him until he quit he "hearing voices". My aunt didn't talk to our family for a long time. Dad was confused as to why. BTW, the cousin--is pretty well managed with meds. He holds a job and lives in a group home....And I've visited him and his roomies and they're a great bunch of sweet people.

  78. Aha! Alex Jones Vindicated! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Plant false flag ops and attribute to mentally ill persons
    2. Bipartisan efforts to take away 2nd amendment FREEDOMS!! of the mentally different
    3. Reclassify daily life as mental illness
    4. Collect guns
    5. Institute new world order (burrito declared national food / insert your own personal nightmare scenario)

    Well done, Mr. President.

  79. ...who can write prescriptions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am seeing a lot of railing against psychiatrists, but I would be interested to know how often psychiatric medications are prescribed by good old general practitioners?

  80. look at your diet ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Did you try to change your diet or talk to a nutrionist that is experienced with your type of problem ? in particular if you managed to simplify your diet in time or gone into a rut of eating the same stuff, you may have removed something that you need. Your blood chemistry may be within parameters but individual elements may be lower/higher than you need even if still within range.

    Did you know over 90% of your body's serotonin is in the gut ?

  81. Re:You cretins by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    So by insisting that no mental illnesses have physical causes, you're buying into your father's uninformed worldview?

  82. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Considering how many couch-and-therapy shrinks are really looking for validation and enablement themselves, it doesn't really surprise me that they'd reject biochemical evidence -- after all that means there's something wrong with themselves and their patients, not something that was inflicted upon 'em.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  83. Re: You cretins by Stubbyfingers · · Score: 1

    Actually, I wasn't asserting anything of the sort

  84. Re: You cretins by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    So your reply was completely off topic? Did you bother to read the message I replied to? Or did you just want to tell us your colourful anecdote about your father?

  85. Re: You cretins by Stubbyfingers · · Score: 1

    No. I think our threads got crossed.

  86. since i'm a jailbird and and an ex-nut by KingBenny · · Score: 1

    who spent a few months in depression clinic after an abortion (by my ex ofcourse since i have a hard time being pregnant) while losing jobs and piled up debts and fines were crushing, i dare say a few words.
    i had a few psychologists and a few shrinks pass by until i found the place where i could find some rest (in Eeklo, belgium, highly recommended from the few places i 'visited')
    the guys both were more into listening than diagnosing. The psychiatrist even had this thing where it's not the best tactic to diagnose and share since the patient (in some cases) tends to adapt to the diagnosis and will possibly ab- and use it as an excuse to slip into what is considered un-acceptable or deviant behaviour.
    whereas the others more like judged or tried to fix by prescribing ... i strongly feel suppression of symptoms with chemicals (to 'balance' an imbalance so to speak) leads not to a cure even if it's necessary for people to get into a state of mind where they can think clearly in a lot of cases, it's not the solution to the problem
    whereas the abovementioned psychologist got my respect by never suggesting but letting me associate everything together myself. It might not work for everyone but those two really deserve an honourable mention imo
    is this off-topic, or is this half-topic ?
    nut signing off ...
    does this warrant a sub-sig?
    every label you stuck on me, i can use now ... all of them are part of me, you said so after all ...

    --
    Free speech was meant to be free for all... how can anyone grow up in a nanny state ?
  87. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by sjames · · Score: 1
    p>Treatment, perhaps. However, the treatment seems to achieve partial relief of SOME symptoms at best. It seems to be treatment in the sense that vicodin treats a broken leg (the patient still doesn't walk right but he screams a lot less).

    The problem is that psychiatry doesn't seem to be very good at applying the scientific method. Admittedly, it's a hard problem, but that doesn't excuse the failure to recognize that pharmocological treatments available today are just a bandaid.

    Meanwhile, the only tghing that seems to help at all with the negative symptoms is nicotine, but rather than getting patients on the patch or gum, they try to get patients to abstain.

  88. Medication by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'd probably be locked up if i didn't have my medication

  89. Re:Psychology VS Psychiatry and BPS==morons! by Jmc23 · · Score: 1

    Hiding symptoms is not the same as eradicating bacteria/viruses.

    --
    Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.