Debate begun by Chuck Areford about antipsychotic psychiatric drugs
Long-time mental health worker began a debate when his guest commentary criticizing neuroleptic psychiatric drugs — also known as neuroleptics — was published in the main newspaper of The Register-Guard on 16 March 2008. You can read the back and forth he started here.
- Antipsychotic drugs are doing harm
- The main newspaper for Eugene, Oregon, USA published this guest column by long-time mental health worker Chuck Areford questioning the use of neuroleptic psychiatric drugs, which are also known as antipsychotics. Chuck is on the Advisory Committee for MindFreedom Lane County. Update: Chuck’s column led to a response by a psychiatrist, see the link at the bottom in “Related Content.”
- Antipsychotic meds have proven role
- On 16 March 2008 the daily newspaper for Eugene, Oregon, USA — The Register-Guard — published a guest commentary from mental health worker Chuck Areford highly critical of neuroleptic psychiatric drugs, also known as antipsychotics. On 25 March 2008 The Register-Guard printed this rebuttal by an Oregon psychiatrist.
- Letter to editor: Hugh Massengill on neuroleptic debate
- Long-time human rights activist and psychaitric survivor Hugh Massengill weighs into the debate in the pages of The Register-Guard about the role of neuroleptic psychiatric drugs, also known as antipsychotics. The debate began when mental health worker Chuck Areford wrote a hard-hitting commentary critical of neuroleptics that was published 16 March 2008 in the paper.
- Letter to editor: David W. Oaks on chemical-free mental health
- MindFreedom director David W. Oaks talks about his personal experience in the mental health system in a debate in the pages of The Register-Guard about the role of neuroleptic psychiatric drugs, also known as antipsychotics. The debate began when mental health worker Chuck Areford wrote a hard-hitting commentary critical of neuroleptics that was published 16 March 2008 in the paper.
- Footnoted version of “Antipsychotic drugs are doing harm”
- Here is a version of the article warning about neuroleptic psychiatric drugs (also known as antipsychotics) by long-term mental health Chuck Areford, with footnotes. The guest commentary was published by the daily newspaper of Eugene, Oregon, kicking off an ongoing debate. A psychiatrist wrote a reply challenging the research and citations behind Chuck’s piece. Here are those references.
- Resources & references for Ron Unger’s commentary in The Register-Guard
- Mental health counselor Ron Unger submitted a guest commentary to The Register-Guard as part of an ongoing debate about the role of neuroleptic psychiatric drugs, also known as neuroleptics. Here are resources and references for readers interested in Ron’s commentary.
- Guest commentary submitted by Ron Unger to The Register-Guard, Eugene, Oregon
- When mental health worker Chuck Areford submitted his guest commentary to The Register-Guard criticizing neuroleptic psychiatric drugs (also called “antipsychotics”), it led to an ongoing debate, including a response by a psychiatrist Richard Staggenborg, MD defending neuroleptics. Here’s Ron’s response to Dr. Staggenborg, as submitted to The Register-Guard as an attached MS Word file.
- How to submit a letter to editor to The Register-Guard
- Especially if you live in Lane County, Oregon, USA — though sometimes letters outside the region are printed — please consider e-mailing in your own letter to The Register-Guard about the topic of human rights and mental health. [Updated 19 Nov 2012]
- Debate in The Register-Guard about gifts from pharmaceutical industry to doctors
- In the same month that the daily newspaper for Eugene, Oregon, USA began a debate about the wisdom of prescribing neuroleptic (“antipsychotic”) drugs, March 2008, by coincidence The Register-Guard also had a debate about the wisdom of allowing gifts from the pharmaceutical industry to doctors! The debate about drug company gifts began as a piece by a reporter who discovered that a local doctor, Gail Hacker, was the only local member of an organization, “No Free Lunch,” that criticizes gifts by drug companies to doctors. A sales person from Novartis (ironically, a manufacturer of neuroleptic psychiatric drugs) wrote a guest column complaining about the bad reputation of drug sales staff; he protested that he is a “nice guy.” A letter to the editor that same day claimed Dr. Hacker was 20 years behind the times. Dr. Hacker responded with her own guest column. Here’s the debate.
- Letter to editor: Professor Pam Birrell says drug-free mental health is possible
- University of Oregon professor Pam Birrell, PhD added her opinion to the controversy in the pages of The Register-Guard about the role of neuroleptic psychiatric drugs, also known as antipsychotics. The debate began when mental health worker Chuck Areford wrote a hard-hitting commentary critical of neuroleptics that was published 16 March 2008 in the paper.
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