| The
Editors |
Dan
Stradford, Editor
Alan Graham, Assistant Editor
Gloria McTaggart, Assistant Editor
SafeHarborProj@aol.com
www.AlternativeMentalHealth.com
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| About
Safe Harbor |
| Safe
Harbor was founded in 1998 in the wake of growing
public dissatisfaction with the unwanted effects of
orthodox psychiatric treatments such as medication and
shock therapy. Seeking to satisfy the desire for
safer, more effective treatments, Safe Harbor is
dedicated to educating the public, the medical
profession, and government officials on research and
treatments that, minimally, do no harm and, optimally,
cure the causes of severe mental symptoms. Our primary
thrust is education on the medical causes of severe
mental symptoms and the use of nutritional and other
natural treatments.
|
| About
AlternativeMentalHealth.com |
| ALTERNATIVEMENTALHEALTH.COM
IS THE WORLD'S LARGEST WEB SITE DEVOTED exclusively to
alternative mental health treatments. It includes a
directory of over 240 physicians, nutritionists,
experts, organizations, and facilities around the U.S.
that offer or promote safe, alternative treatments for
severe mental symptoms. Many of the physicians listed
do in-depth examinations to find the physical causes
behind mental problems.
Also included on the site is an array of articles
on topics ranging from the medical causes of
schizophrenia to the effects of toxic metals on mental
health.
Special AlternativeMentalHealth.com T-shirts and
bumper stickers are available at our online store.
A bookstore page lists top books that cover many
areas of alternative treatments with titles like
Natural Healing for Schizophrenia and Other Common
Mental Disorders and No More Ritalin.
AlternativeMentalHealth.com has been created to
educate the public, practitioners, and government
officials on the medical conditions that create
"mental illness" and the many safe resources
available for addressing and often curing severe
mental symptoms.
|
| WE
WELCOME YOUR DONATIONS. AS A NONPROFIT ORGANIZATION,
SAFE HARBOR IS SUPPORTED SOLELY THROUGH THE
GENEROSITY OF THE PUBLIC. DONATIONS CAN BE MADE
ONLINE AT OUR WEB SITE OR MAILED TO THE ABOVE
ADDRESS. WE ALSO ACCEPT VISA/MASTERCARD BY PHONE.
THANK YOU. |
|
| Editor's
Comment |
| In October, Safe Harbor
is holding its annual fundraising event. (See article
below.) This is the one time of the year when we ask
our supporters for the financial input we need to
continue to carry out our work.
Rather than give editorial comment in this and the
next couple issues, we've decided to share with you a
few comments from the many calls, letters, and emails
we receive.
- "I get a patient calling me every few weeks
from your directory. One man had been on drugs
several years and no doctors would help him come
off of them. He had been told he had to stay on
them, even though he thought they were
unnecessary. After a number of visits to my
office, he was weaned off the medication.
Recently, in his final visit, I told him we were
done. He cried and thanked me profusely." -
Psychiatrist listed on AlternativeMentalHealth.com
directory
- "After attending your conference (June
2002), I changed my practice and my website.
Something had been missing in my work and you
showed me what it was. The conference was
outstanding - and you can quote me on that."
- California psychologist
- "I learned a completely new perspective to
mental health issues at your conference. The
quality of the program was excellent. I am really
looking forward to a longer and more comprehensive
course." B.D., Ph.D.
- "Your conference has stimulated my desire
to learn much more about this subject. I will
start doing lab testing that I learned and try to
incorporate these values in my treatment of
patients." California M.D.
- "I can't begin to thank you for the
conference. What an absolutely amazing weekend it
was for me. The conference far surpassed my
expectations which were very high. It was a thrill
to be involved in an event of this
magnitude." Family Therapy student
- "I will not forget your kindness in talking
to me so patiently over the phone. In this
sometimes uncaring world, you really show
up." - San Diego caller
|
| Safe
Harbor Honors Dr. William Walsh Oct. 24 In L.A. |
|
 |
| Dr.
Willam Walsh, Ph.D. |
On Thursday, October 24, 2002, at 7:30 PM, at the
Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles, California, Safe
Harbor will have its annual fundraising event,
honoring William Walsh, Ph.D., chief scientist of the
Health Research Institute and the Pfeiffer Treatment
Center in Naperville, Illinois. Dr. Walsh's work has
not only impacted the thousands of people who have
been treated at the Pfeiffer Treatment Center, but
thousands more through his writings and appearances.
Also honored will be Palm Springs holistic
psychiatrist Dr. Priscilla Slagle, author of The Way
Up from Down and a pioneer in the field of alternative
psychiatry.
Others will be recognized as well.
Psychiatrist Stuart Shipko, one of the nation's
leading experts on the adverse effects of SSRIs, will
speak on the hazards of psychiatric drugs. According
to Dr. Shipko, "Psychiatric drugs are the leading
cause of psychiatric symptoms in the United
States."
Other speakers will include two individuals who
have recovered without drugs from debilitating mental
symptoms and who now lead full lives.
Hors d'oeuvres will be served with fine jazz music.
Tickets are $65 in advance and $80 at the door.
For those who can't attend, donations are welcome
for those wanting to provide tickets for others or who
wish to help underwrite the event. This is Safe
Harbor's only fundraising event for the year so all
donations are appreciated.
Tickets or donations may be paid for at https://nt7.corpsite.com/secure_alternative/donation.htm
or by phone at (818)890-1862. Checks can be mailed to
Safe Harbor, 1718 Colorado Blvd., Los Angeles, CA
90041.
|
| Chat
Rooms Dramatically Reduce Hospital Re-Admission Rate |
|
A project in Germany revealed that people with
mental problems have been able to avoid returning to
hospital by using support groups on an internet chat
room. The usual 30% re-admission rate for patients
during the critical first 3 months after
hospitalization is practically eliminated for those
taking part.
In November of 2001, approximately 100 patients
started to participate in 90-minute chat sessions on
one of three chat rooms. Before and after each
session, patients were asked to complete
questionnaires about how they feel.
Psychotherapy Research Unit in Stuttgart is
evaluating the information from the project on a
long-term basis, but initial results were released the
week of June 13, 2002.
Dr. Thomas Wangemann, registrar at the
"Panorama specialist clinic for psychosomatic,
psychotherapeutic medicine, alternative and
traditional Chinese medicine" in Scheidegg,
Germany, has been acting as a therapist
"host" in one room. Dr. Wangemann says that
the former patients help each other, sharing strength
and determination.
"This has surpassed my wildest dreams,"
Wangemann told Reuters Health. "I could not have
hoped for better results for the individuals
concerned. I have been astonished at how competent
some of the patients are at helping each other. We are
calling the project The Bridge, and it is limited to a
15-week running time as that is the critical period
for the patients."
"All power to them," Wangemann said.
"They really seem to be helping each other. Of
the 15 patients who recently finished their critical
period, only one has come back to the hospital and she
was deeply psychotic."
|
| Psychiatrist
Challenges "Chemical Imbalance" Theory |
|
Simon Sobo, M.D., a regular contributor to The Yale
Review, The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, and
Psychiatric Times, has challenged one of the most
fundamental assumptions of orthodox psychiatry - that
brain chemical imbalances cause mental disorders - in
a long article published on the Internet in 2001 and
revised in early 2002.
In his abstract of the article, Dr. Sobo writes:
"Instead of correcting imbalances, it is
argued that pharmacological agents may be viewed as
inducing particular psychological states which though
not specifically related to diagnosis, are nonetheless
the basis for the usefulness of the medication... A
case is made against the widespread use of medications
by non-psychiatrists as well as the 15-minute,
once-a-month medication visits that have become
standard psychiatric practice, both the product of the
chemical imbalance model...
"In the United States, the chemical imbalance
argument has proven to be important in winning
legislative support for improved insurance coverage
that gives psychiatry parity with other medical
conditions. One other byproduct of the chemical
imbalance model: its simplicity has led to a great
deal of comfort, on the part of physicians other than
psychiatrists, to dispense psychotropic medications.
Believing that they are operating within the logic of
cause and effect, they merely have to focus on the
improvement of the symptoms of the disorder in
question and watch for side effects from the
medication. A majority of psychiatrists also work
within these parameters. They typically see patients
for med checks and that is all.
"There are fundamental crucial problems with
this perspective that need to be aired. First and
foremost is that, while some day we may accumulate the
knowledge to demonstrate the particulars of the
chemical imbalance model, no such imbalances have been
unequivocally demonstrated for any disorder. We are
offered interesting conjectures, educated guesses that
are forever shifting as the latest data is
accumulated. The continual construction of new
hypotheses is how science should proceed. But good
science is normally modest. It clearly distinguishes
between soft knowledge and what is known. It does not
trumpet a few pieces of a jigsaw puzzle that have been
brilliantly put in place, as the solution to the
entire puzzle. The public (including practitioners)
and the media are being misinformed about the state of
our knowledge.
"It isn't that researchers are unaware of the
difficulties of integrating current knowledge with
theory. Frustration with the 'chemical imbalance'
neurotransmitter model has, for instance, led certain
authors (e.g. Duman, Henninger, Nestler (1997)) to
propose an intracellular hypothesis to explain the
effectiveness of various medications. Even more to the
point, despite the widespread respectability of the
chemical imbalance hypothesis it has all along been
met with skepticism in some very important places.
Thus, the 1992 edition of The Pharmacological
Basis of Therapeutics states flatly regarding the
'neurotransmitter hypothesis of mood disorder' that
'the data are inconclusive and have not been
consistently useful either diagnostically or
therapeutically.'
"I will try to show later in this article that
despite the ad nauseam use of the term 'expert' to
refer to treatment protocols and the like, (which in
itself should arouse suspicions that we are dealing
with a 'Wizard of Oz' phenomenon) adherence to this
model in what has become standard psychiatric
practice, the once-a-month, 15-minute med check, is
not only not 'expert' care, but is grossly inadequate
care. And, if this is the case, even if one shares a
distaste for the hype and psychobabble, 'the therapy
cures all' excesses that once characterized the worst
of psychiatry, the current cursory lip service given
in training programs to the role of psychological and
social factors in mental illness, is producing
psychiatrists unequipped to properly treat patients.
That is true even when medications are justifiably the
main treatment strategy. Moreover, despite insistence
on empirical data, and infatuation with the toys of
science, the technological wonders available in modern
laboratories, there has not been enough of the most
crucial hallmark of 'science,' rigorous critical
thinking about the basic model."
Dr. Sobo lists what he considers the four most
glaring difficulties with the chemical imbalance
model:
- Medications such as the Selective Serotonin
Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs) are finding usefulness
in so many disorders that "to consider all of
these forms of misery part of the same biological
spectrum is stretching credulity."
- Medications that work in completely different
ways are comparably effective for the same
disorder. For example, antidepressants such as
desipramine and bupoprion have little serotonin
effect yet are just as effective agents for
depression as SSRIs.
- "With all that is unknown about the
chemistry of mental illness, using the chemical
imbalance model, researchers are not shy about
concluding that a given disorder is 'really'
something else on the basis of the effectiveness
of a medication. Thus Donovan, SJ, 1998 proposed
that a new diagnosis, 'Explosive Mood Disorder,'
be created and replace Conduct Disorder and
Oppositional Defiant Disorder, for 'children with
irritable mood swings' because Depakote helped his
cohort of inner city, out of control, kids.
Similarly all kinds of problems with impulse
control (called compulsions by laymen) such as
overeating, gambling, paraphilias, various
patterns of alcohol and drug abuse, and so forth
have been labeled Obsessive Compulsive spectrum
disorders because SSRIs are sometimes effective.
The reason these "compulsions' were
originally excluded from OCD was that they
revolved around giving in to temptation, over
indulgence of a forbidden pleasurable
activity."
- "The chemical imbalance model is not an
important part of the basic (animal) research
being done to test new potential anxiolytics
[anxiety relievers] and anti-depressant
agents."
|
| Anorexia
Linked to Brain Lesions |
|
The June 27, 2002, issue of Acta Neurochirugica
reports on the cases of three patients with anorexia
nervosa found to have lesions in the frontal lobe of
the right hemisphere of the brain. All had
associated partial seizures.
Eating disorders are known to sometimes occur in
association with tumors involving the temporal cortex,
in temporal lobe epilepsy, or in the advanced stage of
degenerative diseases involving temporal structures.
They can also be triggered by other physical sources
such as nutritional imbalances and Lyme Disease.
In this review, one female and two males were found
to have intra cerebral (within the cerebrum) lesions.
Two of the patients were found to be operable and were
seizure-free and gained weight after surgery.
The authors "recommend performing a cranial
MRI in all patients with suspected eating disorders,
especially if they occur in combination with focal
(partial) seizures."
|
| Placebo
Scores High in St. Louis "ADHD" Study |
|
Tenenbaum et al, of the Attention Deficit Center in
St. Louis, MO, recently conducted "An
experimental comparison of Pycnogenol [an herb] and
methylphenidate [Ritalin] in adults with
Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)"
and published the results in the Journal of Attention
Disorders, August 2002.
Methylphenidate is a standard pharmaceutical
intervention for ADHD. Pycnogenol is an antioxidant
derived from the bark of the French maritime pine
tree. Anecdotal reports suggest that Pycnogenol
improves concentration in adults with ADHD without
adverse side effects.
Twenty-four adults, ages 24 to 53, who had been
diagnosed with "Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity
Disorder (ADHD), Combined Type," were studied in
a double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study of
Pycnogenol and methylphenidate.
The research subjects received Pycnogenol,
methylphenidate, and placebo, each for three weeks, in
a randomized and counterbalanced order. As measured by
self-report rating scales, rating scales completed by
the individual's significant other, and a computerized
continuous performance test, the ADHD symptoms
improved during treatment. Neither methylphenidate nor
Pycnogenol outperformed the placebo control, however.
The authors note, "The conservative dosage
levels and relatively brief length of treatment may
have contributed to the absence of significant
differences among treatment conditions. Implications
for future research are noted."
|
| "My
Choice" Campaign Promotes Treatment Alternatives |
|
On February 27, 2002, Mind, the leading mental
health charity in England and Wales, launched MY
CHOICE -- a campaign aimed at increasing the level of
choice available to mental health service users at
primary care level.
Mind believes that too many people visiting their
GPs for mental health problems are offered medication
as the only option.
Prescribing of anti-depressants has more than
doubled in the last ten years, Mind noted in a press
release inviting journalists and Members of Parliament
to try out the benefits of therapies including
massage, exercise and reflexology at the campaign's
launch event.
Timed to coincide with the restructuring of primary
health services in England and Wales, including the
creation of the new NHS Primary Care Trusts across
England, MY CHOICE highlights the benefits of a whole
range of treatments for mental health problems.
Interim results from analysis of 178 respondents to
a Mind snapshot survey reveal that:
- 98% of respondents visiting their GP for mental
health problems were prescribed medication,
despite the fact that less than one in five had
specifically asked for it.
- Over half (54%) of respondents felt they had not
been given enough choice.
- Of those who had tried alternative treatments,
over one in three had to take the initiative and
ask for it - and often pay for it - themselves.
- Almost 10% of all respondents had been unable to
access treatments because waiting lists were too
long.
The press release included this message from Jacqui
Smith, Member of Parliament, Health Minister:
"Patients are the most important people
in the health service. However, it doesn't always
appear that way. The NHS Plan makes clear our wish to
widen patient choice in the NHS. Patients tell us that
they are very interested in complementary and
alternative therapies, and demand for these treatments
alongside psychological therapies and counseling is
high. I welcome this initiative as offering a most
important contribution to our thinking on how to
strengthen primary care mental health."
|
| Study
Suggests Link between Antipsychotics and Diabetes |
|
A recent study co-authored by Dr. P. Murali
Doraiswamy, a psychiatrist at Duke University Medical
Center, and Dr. Elizabeth A. Koller, a medical officer
at the FDA, suggests a link between diabetes and the
drug olanzapine, sold in the United States as Zyprexa.
The findings were published in the July 2, 2002 issue
of Pharmacotherapy.
Olanzapine, an atypical antipsychotic, is used to
treat conditions diagnosed as schizophrenia, paranoia
and manic-depressive disorders. Other drugs in this
class include clozapine, risperidone, quetiapine and
ziprasidone.
Although the majority of the patients studied were
not known to be diabetic, the researchers found
metabolic abnormalities ranging from mild blood sugar
problems to diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) and coma.
Diabetic ketoacidosis is a serious condition in which
a person experiences an extreme rise in blood glucose
level coupled with a severe lack of insulin.
This results in symptoms such as nausea, vomiting,
stomach pain and rapid breathing. Untreated, DKA can
lead to coma and even death.
The research was conducted by studying eight years
of abstracts from national psychiatry meetings.
Reseachers identified 289 cases of diabetes in
patients who had been given olanzapine. Of these, 225
were newly diagnosed cases. One hundred patients
developed ketosis (a serious complication of
diabetes), and 22 people developed pancreatitis, or
inflammation of the pancreas, a life-threatening
condition. Deaths included a 15-year-old adolescent
who died of necrotizing pancreatitis, a condition
where the pancreas breaks down and dies. 71% of the
cases occurred within six months of starting the drug.
"While our report does not prove a causal
relationship between the drug and diabetes, doctors
should be aware of such potentially adverse
effects," said Dr. Doraiswamy, "We've found
cases where patients had some very serious problems
associated with olanzapine, and at least 23 of them
died."
"The average age of adults showing signs of
diabetes after taking olanzapine was about 10 years
younger than what is generally seen in the
community," said Doraiswamy. "The younger
age at onset plus the number of serious complications
and the improvements reported when the drug was
stopped all suggest a link to the disease. However,
until we know if there are risk differences among
drugs in this class, it is important for physicians to
watch all patients receiving this medication for signs
of diabetes so that it can be detected quickly and
managed."
Doraiswamy was part of a team from Duke that first
reported a link between the psychiatric drug clozapine
and the development of diabetes. This report appeared
in a 1994 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry.
In 2001, Koller reported in the American Journal of
Medicine that the FDA had received 384 reports of
diabetes associated with the drug clozapine. According
to the researchers, many cases of diabetes have also
been reported with other antipsychotic drugs.
Doraiswamy has previously received funding and
consulting fees from all companies that currently
manufacture antipsychotic medications, including Eli
Lilly and Company, the manufacturer of Zyprexa. The
current study was self-supported by the authors.
|
| Prisoners
Less Violent When Given Supplements |
|
A study published in the July 2002 issue of the
British Journal of Psychiatry indicates that the
simple use of nutritional supplements can
significantly reduce behavior problems among
prisoners. The research was carried out by a
team led by C. Bernard Gesch of University Laboratory
of Physiology, University of Oxford
Basing the study on previous work that has shown
the adverse behavioral effects of nutritional
deficiencies, the researchers set out to test if
adequate intakes of vitamins, minerals and essential
fatty acids could improve antisocial behavior.
The experiment was a double-blind,
placebo-controlled, randomized trial of nutritional
supplements on 231 young adult prisoners, comparing
disciplinary offenses before and during
supplementation.
Those receiving the active capsules committed an
average of 26.3% fewer offenses. Compared to baseline,
the effect on those taking active supplements for a
minimum of 2 weeks was an average 35.1% reduction of
offenses, whereas placebos remained within standard
error.
|
| The
Therapeutic Effects of Simply "Being There"
with Patients |
|
As Dr. Ken Smythe (Doctor of Psychology) of La
Canada, CA, was working his way through school and in
psychiatric hospitals afterwards, he made a rather
startling discovery about his chosen profession:
"I saw a lot of people doing things over and over
that didn't work. I did my masters and doctorate
on schizophrenia and saw that nothing really seemed to
work. Few articles in the literature showed any
hope. I think there is a fixed ideology about
schizophrenia - a fixed hopelessness."
He decided to do something about it after 10 years
of work in psychiatric hospitals, including managing
partial hospitalization programs.
"So much else needs to be done that is not
available," said Dr. Smythe. "I
searched to find things that work. This led me
to putting together the Being There program.
Nothing out there provides this."
He looked into his own life to see what he valued.
He looked at coaches, teachers, neighbors - people who
had an unconditional positive presence. "So
many therapists can present with a non-emotional
affect but they really hate the patient," he
observed. "When that happens, patients
don't do well. Staff who can maintain that
unconditional positive presence are usually aids and
staff and mean a lot to patients."
So what does "being there" mean? It
means spending time with the person, being aware of
any conflicts, yet maintaining a positive presence.
It means doing things, going places, being with.
As an example, said Dr. Smythe, if a person refuses
to shower, threats and force only create conflict.
"Use loving persistence to get them to do it and
they will not be upset. A lot of people dealing
with patients meet their needs and not patients'.
Many patients end up with a stalemate of
conflict."
Dr. Smythe hopes to expand his Being There 121
organization to include a residential facility that is
healthy and positive and provides for growth and
improvement. He also would like to provide a
mentoring program for adolescents and young adults
where they do work or leisure activities for 16 hours
a month.
Dr. Smythe works with clients on medication or not.
Back in the 1970s published studies by psychiatrist
Loren Mosher at his famous Soteria House showed that
non-medicated clients recovered just as readily as
drugged ones (without the side effects) when
supervised by a nonmedical staff instructed to simply
"be with and do with" the patients.
"This work has lead for a lot of personal
growth in myself as well," said Dr. Smythe,
"because I have to look within myself to see how
to improve my tolerance."
Further information is available at (818) 957-8737,
http://www.beingthere121.org,
or ken@beingthere121.org.
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|