Posts Tagged ‘Australia’

DSM 5 Will Further Inflate The ADD Bubble

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011

Psychology Today
by Allen Frances, Former Chairman, DSM Task Force

Video: ADHD Labeling Normal Kids "Mentally Ill"

The Child Work Group Fails Again To Learn From Its Experience

Martin Whiteley is an MP who represents Perth in the Australian parliament. He has been actively involved in mental health issues and succeeded in a crusade to curb what had been Perth’s alarming overdiagnosis and overmedication of  Attention Deficit Disorder Disorder (ADD). Mr Whiteley has become expert in the intricacies of ADD and is alarmed that the changes suggested for DSM 5 will greatly exacerbate the ADD fad he worked so hard to tame. Read Mr Whiteley’s careful item by item review and you will be alarmed too:

http://speedupsitstill.com/dsm-5-proposal-adhd-%e2%80%93-making-l…

We are already in the midst of a false epidemic of ADD. Rates in kids that were 3-5% when DSM IV was published in 1994 have now jumped to 10%. In part this came from changes in DSM IV, but most of the inflation was caused by a marketing blitz to practitioners that accompanied new on-patent drugs amplified by new regulations that also allowed direct to consumer advertising to parents and teachers. In a sensible world, DSM 5 would now offer much tighter criteria for ADD and much clearer advice on the steps needed in its differential diagnosis. This would push back ,however feebly, against the skilled and well financed drug company sell. DSM 5 should work hard to improve its text, not play carelessly with the ADD criteria in a way that may unleash a whole set of dreadful unintended consequences- unneeded medication, stigma, lowered expectations, misallocation of resources, and contribution to the illegal secondary market peddling stimulants for recreation or performance enhancement.

The DSM 5 child and adolescent work group has perversely gone just the other way. It proposes to make an already far too easy diagnosis much looser.

How puzzling and troubling. Child mental health has already promoted no fewer than three false epidemics in just 15 years- ADD, childhood bipolar, and autism. Any reasonable group would now be learning from this past experience. For the future, it would be chastened, cautious, and eager to correct the damage it has done- rather than embarking on any reckless new adventures. A prudent DSM 5 would tighten its criteria for ADD and put in a black box warning against the blatant current off-the-DSM-label diagnosis of childhood bipolar. DSM 5 instead does everything wrong it possibly could with ADD and then remarkably takes the mischievous further step of adding yet another new candidate for diagnostic fad (Disruptive Mood Dysregulation Disorder) likely that will increase the already scandalous overprescription of dangerous antipsychotic medication to children. Go figure.

In many circles, the accepted wisdom is that DSM 5 workers are making such unaccountably bad decisions because they want to promote drug sales to kids. To support this accusation, cynics raise the Biederman affair and also APA’s previous excessive financial support from Pharma.

This is one time when the cynics are dead wrong. The DSM 5 work group is making simply disastrous decisions for the purist of reasons. These are not people with close industry ties and their conflict of interest is intellectual, not financial. Experts in child psychiatry are dangerously naïve about the likely misuses of their well meaning suggestions. They are blind, not corrupt.

What is needed is outside supervision to curb child psychiatry’s seemingly endless taste for diagnostic excess. And APA should also realize the grave harm done to its credibility by the appearance that DSM 5 is far too Pharma friendly even if this has not been the real motivation behind the bad DSM 5 proposals.

To make matters worse, the DSM 5 field trial will be completely worthless- providing no information at all about the magnitude of the rate increase in ADD that will occur once DSM 5 opens the floodgates even wider. We did careful field trials before DSM IV to compare the impact on rates of the different possible definitions and predicted a 15% increase for the one finally chosen. Instead, the rates more than doubled- courtesy of pressure from the drug companies. For obscure reasons, DSM 5 is conducting extraordinarily expensive field trials that (again perversely) avoid the only question that really counts- just how high will the rates skyrocket under the even easier to meet new DSM 5 definition.

DSM 5 will be flying completely blind into dangerous territory, unimpeded by adult supervision. The leaders of child psychiatry (who already have the unfortunate track record of producing fads) will now be given a free pass to further feed their blossoming ADD fad. Will they never learn from past mistakes?

http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/dsm5-in-distress/201108/dsm-5-will-further-inflate-the-add-bubble

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Australia: New laws to ban electric shocks on children

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

Note from CCHR: The fact that there is a proposed ban on electroshocking children is good news.  The fact that children are being electroshocked is abhorrent.   The truth is, that more than 1 million people are electroshocked every year, including  the elderly, pregnant women and children.   Even toddlers.     The practice needs to be banned across the boards.  Period.  Read this for the actual facts about ECT by  psychologist John Breeding, “Think They Don’t Electroshock People Anymore? Think Again, Even Toddlers and Pregnant Women are Being Shocked” http://qr.net/eplm

 

The Age, Australia – July 30, 2011

by Jill Stark

 

Electric shock therapy machines. Photo: Brendan Read

ELECTRIC shock therapy on young children will be banned and psychiatrists could be jailed for carrying out the controversial treatment on teenagers and adults without strict legal checks, under proposed legislation.

Under a review of Victoria’s Mental Health Act, new legislation has been drafted that would outlaw electroconvulsive therapy, also known as ECT, for children aged 12 and under.

Doctors would still be able to use it on 13 to 17-year-olds without their parents’ consent if they can convince a mental health tribunal that all other treatment options have been exhausted.

The same rules will apply to adults, with the final decision on whether to use shock therapy taken out of psychiatrists’ hands and given to the tribunal. Doctors who breach the laws will face up to a year in jail.

The treatment, immortalised in the film One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, induces seizures by delivering an electrical current to the brain.

Proponents say the movie unfairly stigmatised the procedure, and the use of anaesthetic and advances in technology have made it safer. But its use on children, whose brains are still developing, remains contentious.

ECT is usually used to treat patients with severe depression or extreme mania whose conditions have not improved with other treatments. While it is still unclear how the treatment works, it is thought the shock-induced seizures affect chemicals in the brain that influence mood.

In submissions to the mental health review, legal groups including Youthlaw and the Law Institute of Victoria, along with Child Safety Commissioner Bernie Geary, the Mental Health Council of Australia and the national depression group beyondblue, have welcomed the changes, saying they provide greater protection for vulnerable patients. Others want the legislation to go further, with a complete ban for anyone under 18.

However, psychiatrists say the new laws are too punitive and could lead to increased suicides as severely depressed people are denied ”life-saving” treatment.

Last year The Sunday Age revealed there had been a 10 per cent rise in the number of patients receiving shock therapy since the previous year.

Almost 20,000 sessions were carried out on 1791 patients in Victorian hospitals in the 2009-10 financial year, including 46 sessions on seven children under 17 and a further 163 on an undisclosed number of 18 to 19-year-olds.

In submissions, the Australian Medical Association, the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists and the Victorian branch of the Australian Nursing Federation called for the draft bill to be amended to allow shock therapy on children.

Doctors from the University of Melbourne department of psychiatry mounted the most strident objections to the changes, arguing they imply doctors are ”evil and want to harm their patients”.

One of the doctors, David Castle, who is also chair of psychiatry at St Vincent’s Hospital, told The Sunday Age that while shock therapy on children was extremely rare, it was a valuable treatment option.

”Anything that categorically bans it could be enormously damaging because some youngsters do get very severe depression and ECT is an extremely effective and very safe treatment. The new law means it’s going to be very difficult to give it to a patient, especially in an emergency when people are in a totally dire situation where they’re not eating or drinking or intensely suicidal,” he said.

Under the draft laws, doctors would be limited to a maximum of 12 sessions of electric shock therapy per patient and would have to seek permission from a mental health tribunal.

Youthlaw’s submission expressed concern about the effects of shock therapy on the developing brain and called for a ban on the treatment for patients up to the age of 25.

A spokeswoman for Mental Health Minister Mary Wooldridge said the reforms were complex and the state government was reviewing feedback.

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Attention deficit disorder gurus in conflict of interest

Friday, July 15th, 2011

The Australian – July 14, 2011

by Sue Dunlevy

TWO of the seven experts advising the government on national guidelines for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder have links to ADHD drug companies, new conflict-of-interest declarations show.

Westmead adolescent health expert Michael Kohn, who has been appointed to the National Health and Medical Research Council working group, was paid by Eli Lilly, the maker of the ADHD drug Strattera, to develop educational material.

And Janssen-Cilag, which makes the ADHD drug Concerta, gave funds for Professor Kohn to go to a Beijing conference on mental health and to produce teaching material.

Claims have been made that some experts advising the government on ADHD have links to drug companies. Source: The Daily Telegraph

The consumer representative on the committee, Margaret Vikingur, the president of Learning and Attentional Disorders, says her organisation received $5000 from three drug companies to develop educational materials.

More than 400,000 ADHD prescriptions a year are written, and their use has soared by 300 per cent over the past seven years, sparking debate about use and conflicts of interest.

Drug firms told Medicines Australia they spent more than $40 million wining and dining and “educating” doctors in the six months to March last year.

The conflict-of-interest declarations will be made public today by Mental Health and Ageing Minister Mark Butler, and follow the controversy over the 2009 draft ADHD guidelines, which were never adopted by the NHMRC because of concerns US research heavily cited in them was compromised by drug firm funding.

US psychiatrist Joseph Biederman, whose work is cited over 80 times in the draft guidelines, and two colleagues were sanctioned by Harvard University after allegedly failing to report more than $1.6m they received from drug firms.

The 2009 ADHD guidelines will be redeveloped.

“I am committed to ensuring the clinical practice points developed by this group will not be influenced by undeclared or inappropriate conflicts of interest,” Mr Butler said yesterday.

West Australian Labor MP Martin Whitely said the conflicts of interests declared by Professor Kohn and Ms Vikingur should have had them excluded from the panel.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/health/attention-deficit-disorder-gurus-in-conflict-of-interest/story-fn59nokw-1226093390142

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ADHD review as US expert faces inquiry

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

The Australian – July 5, 2011

AUSTRALIA’S ADHD guidelines are being redeveloped as a US psychiatrist whose work is heavily cited in existing draft guidelines has been sanctioned by Harvard University for violating conflict-of-interest rules.

Professor Joseph Biederman and two colleagues, Thomas Spencer and Timothy Wilens, were investigated by Harvard after allegedly failing to report to the university millions of dollars they received from drug firms.

Australia’s National Health and Medical Council held off approving the draft guidelines for Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder issued in 2009 as it awaited the outcome of the US conflict-of-interest investigation.

The Boston Globe reported that, in a letter to their colleagues, Professor Biederman, Dr Spencer and Dr Wilens apologised for their “honest” mistakes and said they had been sanctioned.

The National Health and Medical Research Council said yesterday it could not yet assess the impact of the outcome of the Harvard investigation on the scientific literature and said the draft guidelines citing Professor Biederman would remain on its website.

Independently of the Harvard review, the council had appointed a multi-disciplinary panel to develop new clinical practice points to provide clear advice to clinicians and health professionals for the diagnosis and treatment of ADHD, the council said.

The review will be completed in September, but the council was last night unable to provide The Australian with names of the experts involved.

In 2007, Daryl Effron, who chaired the committee that drew up Australia’s draft ADHD guidelines, resigned as chairperson after his ties with pharmaceutical companies that produce ADHD drugs were exposed. He remains on the committee.

About 350,000 Australian children and adolescents are estimated to have ADHD and controversy has been raging about the use of medications such as Ritalin.

Child psychiatrist Professor Jon Jureidini, who argues against the long-term use of stimulant drugs in treating behavioural problems tagged as ADHD, says that the current guidelines rely heavily on Professor Biederman’s work.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/nation/adhd-review-as-us-expert-faces-inquiry/story-e6frg6nf-1226087514583

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In Australia— 200 Psych Patients Died Suddenly

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

The Age – July 1, 2011

by Kate Hagen

Photo: Tamara Voninski

MORE than 200 psychiatric patients died in ”unexpected, unnatural or violent” circumstances last year, a report by Victoria’s chief psychiatrist reveals.

Six patients died by committing suicide in hospital but most of the 237 deaths occurred in the community.

Chief psychiatrist Ruth Vine could not provide a breakdown of the number of deaths that occurred inside hospitals but said it was ”very small, and when it does occur it is followed by a very thorough review”.

Dr Vine said deaths in the community could include those due to car accidents or house fires, but it was the role of the coroner to determine their cause.

The Age reported in February that a coroner was investigating the deaths of two psychiatric patients thought to have suffocated while being restrained in separate incidents at Frankston and Dandenong hospitals in 2007.

Dr Vine said she was ”of course” concerned about the suicides of psychiatric patients but believed they were impossible to completely prevent.

”If you compare a mental health inpatient unit with a coronary care unit, in terms of the severity of mental illness we’re treating it is equally severe,” she said.

”It is impossible to prevent completely because suicide is a choice and to completely prevent suicide would be to impose an incredible level of restriction on care that would be anti-therapeutic.”

Dr Vine’s annual report for 2009-10 shows that 14 per cent of inpatients were secluded, or confined in a room locked from the outside, in what guidelines say should be used only when a patient poses an immediate risk to himself or others.

A total of 1828 patients were secluded and there were 6059 episodes of seclusion, up slightly from the previous year. More than 1100 were for longer than 12 hours.

A total of 1750 patients received electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), including 83 children, the youngest of whom was 13.

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In Australia – Electric shock therapy on the rise for young

Saturday, June 25th, 2011

Note from CCHR:  More than 1 million people are electroshocked every year, including children, the elderly and pregnant women.   This is simply a brutal, invasive and damaging ‘treatment’ where up to 450 volts of electricity are sent through the skull.  Psychiatrists admit they don’t know how electroshock ‘works’ and the reason behind this is simple:  it doesn’t work.  Not unless you consider cognitive impairment, brain seizures, permament memory loss and death ‘workable.’ Now in Australia, the use of electroshock for the young is on the rise.   Mentioned in this article are the atrocities that were committed in Chelmsford psychiatric hospital where patients were put into drugged induced coma’s and electroshocked, killing dozens.  That lethal and inhumane practice was exposed and then banned due  to the efforts of CCHR.   No organization has done more to expose the deadly practice of electroshock, or helped enact more international laws restricting or prohibiting its use, than CCHR.    To get the facts about electroshock ‘treatment’ read this article by psychologist John Breeding, “Think They Don’t Electroshock People Anymore? Think Again” http://qr.net/edoh

Sydney Morning Herald – June 26, 2011

by Natalie O’Brien

Revelations about the practises at Chelmsford and the film One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest led to a major drop in treatments.

ELECTRIC shock treatments for mental health patients have increased by almost 30 per cent in the past five years in NSW, particularly among young women, Medicare figures show.Female patients – all aged under 24 – received almost 600 procedures last year, more than twice the rate of young women in Victoria.

The trend has sparked concern among some psychiatrists about the ”start of a slippery slope”.

An investigation by The Sun-Herald into the resurgence of the treatment, also known as electro-convulsive therapy, or ECT, reveals that the number of voluntary sessions received by young women rose from 184 in 2000 to 575 last year.

The figures do not specify how many women were involved in the procedures, as one patient can often undergo more than one session.

Electric shock treatment still carries the stigma from its brutal portrayal in the film One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest and from the Sydney experience of the horrific practices at the Chelmsford Hospital in the 1960s and ’70s, where dozens of patients died after being given deep sleep therapy and ECT. But doctors say they are working with new treatments and patients no longer suffer a physical convulsion.

The Medicare figures show that last year, NSW men aged under 24 were given the therapy at three times the rate of men in that age group in Victoria.

Across Australia, 24,714 ECT sessions were administered to patients of all ages. In NSW, 5733 treatments were carried out – slightly fewer than in Victoria.

A former president of the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists, Dr Jonathan Phillips, who works as a private clinician, said he was worried by the number of sessions younger people had undertaken.

”In a way it is very easy to order ECT treatment,” he said. ”I would not like to think that it is being used just because it’s easy.”

He was especially surprised by the rate of young women receiving the treatment and said he would find it hard to explain.

”I don’t know why there is a such a difference in statistics. I do hope it is not the start of the slippery slope. Are we going back to an era where we resort to ECT rather than talking to people and using the art of psychiatry?

Read the rest of the article here -  http://www.smh.com.au/nsw/electric-shock-therapy-on-the-rise-for-young-20110625-1gklc.html#ixzz1QIdHnpE0

To get the FACTS about electroshock, watch this video:

Electroshock — It’s Not Treatment, It’s Torture


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDR3cD8_kck&feature=channel_video_title

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Australia’s Outrageous Mental Health Agenda Under Attack from Leading U.S. Psychiatrist

Thursday, June 16th, 2011

The 'Pre Psychosis Risk' Scam

While the United States unfortunately leads the world in labeling its children with mental ‘disorders’ which cannot be scientifically proven to exist as medical conditions,  Australia seems determined to take over  the [dishonorable] title.  And they just might do it.   For poised to carry them into the winners circle is none other than psychiatrist and former “Australian of the Year”  Patrick McGorry.   The scam is called “pre-psychosis risk syndrome” which simply translates as this:  Despite the fact there is not one proven scientific or medical test to prove any child has a mental “disorder,”  Patrick McGorry maintains he can determine who will develop one.  That’s right.   He can determine who will develop a mental disorder before they develop a mental disorder that cannot be medically proven to exist.   If that sounds a little crazy to you,  rest assured, you’re not alone.    In fact,  the logic is so backwards that McGorry’s plan has come under fire from U.S. psychiatrist Allen Frances, who chaired the committee that produced the psychiatric diagnostic bible of “mental disorders” used the world over, ‘The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) IV.    If you’re in the mental health “business,” like McGorry is,  then that is called being attacked from altitude.

Frances calls McGorry a “false prophet” and says “Australia, led astray by his impractical hopes, is about to embark on a vast and untried public health experiment that will almost surely cause more harm to its children than it prevents.”

We agree.  And it looks like Australians are starting to catch on….

from The Australian—June 16th, 2011

Schism opens over ills of the mind

PATRICK McGorry is the face of mental health in Australia. He put the subject on the public agenda through his GetUp! ads at last year’s federal election and was instrumental in securing $2.2 billion in government funding for his cause in last month’s budget.

But now he and his early psychosis prevention and intervention centres are under attack from members of his own psychiatric profession.

At stake is the credibility of the centres that treat people aged 15-24. A $222 million program to establish 16 EPPICs is an important plank in Julia Gillard’s mental health reforms. Tony Abbott also wants to expand the centres as part of his mental health policy.

McGorry is no stranger to controversy. In 2006 Time magazine in an article headlined “Drugs before diagnosis?” was critical of his work testing the use of anti-psychosis drugs on pre-psychosis patients in the late 1990s.

West Australian Labor MP Martin Whitely has been conducting a campaign against McGorry on his blog Speed Up and Sit Still.

Many of McGorry’s mental health colleagues have questioned whether his centres got the bulk of extra money in the budget’s mental health reforms because the government wanted to silence its biggest critic. There are other models and other priorities for mental health funding, they say.

This week McGorry came under fire from US psychiatrist Allen Frances, the man who chaired the committee that produced the psychiatric diagnostic bible Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV.

Underlying the attack on McGorry is a dispute dividing psychiatry worldwide: is there a danger that attempts to define mental illnesses are making a disease out of everyday suffering resulting in the unnecessary medication of patients?

Frances says he was very conservative when he produced DSM IV, including only two out of 84 suggested new mental illness diagnoses. After its publication, diagnoses of autism, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and bipolar disorder skyrocketed.

“Once the genie was out of the bottle and heavy drug marketing followed and the internet and ADHD and school services [began] being tied to a diagnosis, the manual gets used differently to the way you thought it should and you have no control over it,” he says.

Frances says anti-psychotic drugs are now the leading revenue producing drugs in the US.

“It’s an astounding fact that 5 per cent of all scripts in the US are written for anti-psychotics. The industry in America is $US15bn and it is the No 1 seller of all drugs and anti-depressants are the fourth biggest sellers,” he says.

“What we’re talking about is a massive worldwide experiment in the use of anti-psychotics.”

Frances fears a similar outbreak of over-diagnosis of mental illness and unnecessary medication of patients could follow the new DSM 5, due out in 2013.

The root of Frances’s dispute with McGorry is the Melbourne psychiatrist’s work in trying to develop a tool that can diagnose patients before they develop full-blown psychosis and finding ways to treat them to prevent the illness.

This tool has various names: psychosis risk syndrome, attenuated psychotic syndrome or ultra high-risk syndrome.

This new diagnosis is a candidate for inclusion in DSM 5. But it is a highly controversial issue in the psychiatric profession and its listing is opposed by one of McGorry’s research partners, Melbourne University psychiatrist Alison Yung.

Yung and Frances fear listing the disorder will lead to teenagers being labelled and stigmatised and given powerful anti-psychotic drugs that have side effects including substantial weight gain.

Read the rest of the article here:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/features/schism-opens-over-ills-of-the-mind/story-e6frg6z6-1226075910650

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US expert slams Patrick McGorry’s psychosis model

Monday, June 13th, 2011

Note from CCHR:   CCHR International was the first organization  to expose  the complete insanity of psychiatrist and “Australian of the Year” Patrick McGorry’s campaign to “pre-diagnose” children before they ‘develop” mental disorders.  But we’re no longer the only ones.   Even his fellow psychiatrists are attacking it.  Let’s just break it down; psychiatrists admit there are no medical tests in existence to prove any child suffers from a mental ‘illness.”  Diagnoses is based solely on opinion, yet more than 20 million children worldwide have been ‘diagnosed’ and prescribed dangerous and potentially lethal drugs based on nothing more than psychiatry’s junk science.     Yet this doesn’t seem to be a problem to McGorry, or Australia for that matter, considering they just allocated $400 million to McGorry’s  crystal ball theory of “pre-diagnoses,”  for ‘psychosis’ adding even  more lunacy to the child labeling and drugging epidemic that is literally killing kids.   Now that, is psychotic – and it’s psychiatrist Patrick McGorry that’s leading the way.

The Australian – June 14, 2011

by Sue Dunlevy

PATRICK McGorry’s model of early diagnosis of psychosis, favoured by the federal government and the Coalition in their mental-health policies, has come under attack from a leading US psychiatrist, who warns that predicting psychosis is unreliable and could lead to patients being wrongly medicated.

Allen Frances, who chaired the committee that produced the current diagnostic bible for psychiatry, the DSM-IV, has warned that Professor McGorry’s Early Psychosis Intervention Centres do not have a reliable early diagnosis tool.

Professor Frances, an emeritus professor at Duke University in North Carolina, fears early diagnosis could lead to people without psychosis being put on medications that have serious side-effects, including massive weight gain.

He has also attacked the Gillard government’s plans to spend $222 million expanding Professor McGorry’s EPIC program by another 16 centres as a “vast untried public-health experiment”.

“The Australian experiment will be flying blind on an airplane that is not at all ready to leave the ground,” he said in a blog posted on Psychology Today in the US.

His concerns are shared by Adelaide University psychiatry professor Jon Juredini, who says the Gillard government should have shared mental-health funding around many different early intervention projects to see what worked best. “A lot of the evaluation of EPIC shows any advantages it has disappear over time, so that tends to suggest that in terms of intervention they are good while they are happening, but they don’t necessarily give long-term protection,” Professor Juredini told The Australian.

Their criticism came as the past president of the Royal Australian College of Psychiatrists, Louise Newman, attacked the $197 million the government will spend on expanding the number of Headspace youth mental health centres from 60 to 90.

“There have been certain statements about the efficacy of  the Headspace approach that have been overstated,” she told Australian Doctor magazine.

Early intervention to prevent mental illness needed to happen at a much earlier stage of development than adolescence, Dr Newman said.

A spokeswoman for Mental Health Minister Mark Butler said the government was making substantial investments in youth mental health and early psychosis prevention services. “We are confident these evidence-based models will be of benefit to young Australians,” she said.

Professor Frances’s arguments have been seized on by Scientologists, who argue against the notion of mental illness.

Although Professor Frances chaired the committee that produced the fourth version of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders in 1994, he has been left off the panel developing the fifth version.

He has written extensively of his concerns about how strict medical definitions of mental illness can lead to misdiagnosis by non-experts.

Professor McGorry dismissed Professor Frances’s attack as a “beat-up”, and said no one received anti-psychotic drugs at his centres unless they had had a psychotic episode.

While Professor Frances agreed that Professor McGorry did not recommend anti-psychotic medication as a preventive measure, he feared general practitioners might overuse the drugs if they started using Professor McGorry’s diagnostic tool for early psychosis.

Professor Frances said in his Psychology Today blog that early intervention to prevent psychosis required first that there be an accurate tool to identify who would become psychotic.

“The false positive rate in selecting pre-psychosis is at least 60-70 per cent in the very best hands and may be as high as 90 per cent in general practice . . . these are totally unacceptable odds,” he said.

Professor McGorry agreed that false positive rates of diagnosing prepsychosis were high, but said the first line of treatment for people who had sub-threshold psychosis was supportive care.

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/national-affairs/us-expert-slams-patrick-mcgorrys-psychosis-model/story-fn59niix-1226074544901

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Australia’s Reckless Experiment In Early Intervention

Wednesday, June 8th, 2011

Note from CCHR: The article below was written by Allen Frances, a psychiatrist, and former Chairman of the DSM IV task force.  The subject of the article is Australian psychiatrist Patrick McGorry and his agenda to pre- diagnose kids with mental ‘illness’ before they develop it, which  Frances calls  a dangerous and risky proposition.    It is.  Yet Frances seems to be making excuses for the fact that McGorry’s plan is not only dangerous – its criminal.    He calls McGorry a charismatic psychiatrist, which may be true, but this is exactly what makes him so dangerous.  Because the Australian government has just funded a program so controversial and dangerous to children that even other psychiatrists, leaders in the field, are speaking out against it.  And why did they fund it?   Because “charistmatic” Patrick McGorry sold them  a $400 million bill of goods.

“Charisma is a tricky thing.  Jack Kennedy oozed it–but so did Hitler and Charles Manson. Con artists, charlatans, and megalomaniacs can make it their instrument as effectively as the best CEOs, entertainers, and presidents.” Patricia Sellers, FORTUNE Magazine


prevention that will do more harm than good

Psychology Today
By Allen Frances
May 31, 2011

Patrick McGorry is a charismatic psychiatrist who has recently gained heroic status. First he was chosen to be Australia’s Man Of The Year. Now, he has convinced the Australian government to spend more than $400 million over five years to fund his plan for a nationwide system of Early Psychosis Prevention and Intervention Centres. McGorry is the visionary prophet and pied piper of preventive psychiatry. His goal is to diagnose mental disorders early and treat them expectantly- before they can do their worst damage.

McGorry’s goal is certainly great. But its current achievement is simply impossible and Australia’s plans are patently premature. Early intervention to prevent psychosis requires first that there be an accurate tool to identify who will later become psychotic and who will not. Unfortunately, no such accurate tool exists. The false positive rate in selecting prepsychosis is at least about 60-70% in the very best of hands and may be as high as 90% in general practice. That’s right, folks, nine misidentified non patients for one accurately identified truly prepsychotic patient. Those are totally unacceptable odds.

What are the costs? McGorry does not recommend antipsychotic medications as a routine part of his prevention regimen. But experience teaches us that they will be overused despite having no proven efficacy and posing the risk of massive weight gain (and its consequent array of serious complications). The false positives will also suffer unnecessary stigma and worry and will undergo unnecessary and misdirected treatment. And surely there are many more productive ways to spend $400 million doing a better job of managing the mental health needs of those who have real and treatable psychiatric disorders.

Unfortunately, Mcgorry is a false prophet who’s visions are offered at least a few decades before their time. Australia, led astray by his impractical hopes, is about to embark on a vast and untried public health experiment that will almost surely cause more harm to its children than it prevents. Before embarking on this headlong and reckless rush, the following research steps need to be accomplished:

1)Developing a proven and reliable definition of “Psychosis Risk”

2)Learning how to use it in a way that reduces current outrageously high false positive rates to levels that are tolerable.

3)Demonstrating that the interventions chosen are indeed effective in preventing psychosis.

4)Determining the likely rate of antipsychotic use and how this influences the overall risk/benefit balance sheet of early intervention.

5)Studying the beneficial and harmful impacts of early diagnosis on stigma and self perception.

6)Comparing the marginal utility of a dollar spent trying to prevent an alleged future disorder vs a dollar spent treating an already clearly established one.

This is a research enterprise that will take many groups around the world many decades to complete. But it is an absolutely necessary precondition before spending $400 million on what is likely to be a failure. The Australian experiment will be flying blind on an airplane that is not at all ready to leave the ground. Doing prevention prematurely and poorly will give a good idea an unnecessary bad name.

McGorry’s intentions are clearly noble, but so were Don Quixote’s. The kindly knight’s delusional good intentions and misguided interventions wreaked havoc and confusion at every turn. Sad to say, Australia’s well intended impulse to protect its children will paradoxically put them at greater risk. Let’s applaud McGorry’s vision but not blindly follow him down an unknown path fraught with dangers.

Read article here:  http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/dsm5-in-distress/201105/australias-reckless-experiment-in-early-intervention

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Australian Psychiatrist Patrick McGorry’s Pre Diagnosing Kids Agenda: Voodoo Science & Snake Oil

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

Seroxat Sufferers Please Stand Up
By Bob Fiddaman
June 2, 2011

Two great articles by Kat McCormick from May 2011. It seems McGorry has a growing army of critics, pity the Aussie government can’t see through his crystal ball gazing as many others can – it’s akin to taking a losing lottery ticket up to a paypoint and…well, being paid the jackpot prize.

McCormick’s first article poses many questions, the most pertinent of which are: Are our children really AT RISK or is Patrick McGorry selling us Voodoo Science & Snake Oil?

Her article is concise as well as thought-provoking.

McCormick’s second article, ‘Mental Health and the Budget’ focuses on McGorry’s research methods and she writes, “There are several disturbing elements in Patrick McGorry’s research and I’m not the only one to question his motives or methodologies.”

Nope, you sure ain’t sister!

Read article here:  http://fiddaman.blogspot.com/2011/06/is-patrick-mcgorry-selling-us-voodoo.html

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