Home Menu

Menu


Closed Thread
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #126  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 07:50 PM
stopdog stopdog is offline
underdog is here
 
Member Since: Sep 2011
Location: blank
Posts: 35,154
Quote:
Originally Posted by Leah123 View Post
Absolutely- it's funny you mention the flat world- I brought that up a page ago on this thread. Evidence that science is evolving.
And then of course there is interpretation bias - your take on it versus mine for example.
__________________
Please NO @

Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live.
Oscar Wilde
Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.

advertisement
  #127  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 07:52 PM
Leah123's Avatar
Leah123 Leah123 is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jun 2013
Location: Washington
Posts: 3,593
Right, because we're not using the scientific method.
  #128  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 07:53 PM
divine1966's Avatar
divine1966 divine1966 is offline
Legendary Wise Elder
 
Member Since: Dec 2014
Location: US
Posts: 23,238
Quote:
Originally Posted by stopdog View Post
As someone who must satisfy ongoing education requirements for my license to practice law - if theirs is anything like the requirements we have - it is not rigorous nor useful in any real way. I have, based on my own profession, no faith that continuing education requirements do anything but provide licensing bodies and those who put on the events with some income.

100% agree. Am surprised it is the same in law!

Continuing education requirements for educators are designed to provide income to regional agencies and the state. It is total nonsense. I am dating RN, he has to renew his license every two years and classes he takes aren't contributing to his improvement whatsoever. They are irrelevant and a waste of time and he can do them in his sleep.

If it is all dumb waste in education and medicine and law then it's got to be the same nonsense for therapists! They do same old same old a year after year!!



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
  #129  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 07:54 PM
stopdog stopdog is offline
underdog is here
 
Member Since: Sep 2011
Location: blank
Posts: 35,154
Quote:
Originally Posted by Leah123 View Post
Right, because we're not using the scientific method.
I don't think that is the difference - two sets of scientists can interpret data the same way.
Hence studies that interpret 1 male to several females animals as the male being in charge versus the interpretation that the females simply have no use for a lot of males because the male is simply needed to provide sperm and one of them is enough.
__________________
Please NO @

Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live.
Oscar Wilde
Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.
Thanks for this!
GeminiNZ
  #130  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 07:56 PM
BudFox BudFox is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Feb 2015
Location: US
Posts: 3,983
Quote:
Originally Posted by Leah123 View Post
That's a massive generalization. Too broad to really discuss fairly I believe. My own experience of using a diagnosis in DSM has been empowering and useful. Not pefect, but it's led to concrete improvements in my life. I don't happen to use any medications and none were recommended to me during my diagnosis-specific treatment.
True, but the above quotes from insiders are suggesting that such a generalization is appropriate. Here's a few more:

“DSM-IV is the fabrication upon which psychiatry seeks acceptance by medicine in general. Insiders know it is more a political than scientific document…DSM-IV has become a bible and a money making bestseller—its major failings notwithstanding.”
—Loren Mosher, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

“We can manufacture enough diagnostic labels of normal variability of mood and thought that we can continually supply medication to you…But when it comes to manufacturing disease, nobody does it like psychiatry.” —Dr. Stefan Kruszewski, Harvard trained Pennsylvania psychiatrist, 2004

“I believe, until the public and psychiatry itself see that DSM labels are not only useless as medical ‘diagnoses’ but also have the potential to do great harm—particularly when they are used as means to deny individual freedoms, or as weapons by psychiatrists acting as hired guns for the legal system.” —Dr. Sydney Walker III, psychiatrist
  #131  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 07:57 PM
Leah123's Avatar
Leah123 Leah123 is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jun 2013
Location: Washington
Posts: 3,593
I wouldn't probably be interested in their interpretations, but in their findings.
  #132  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 07:59 PM
stopdog stopdog is offline
underdog is here
 
Member Since: Sep 2011
Location: blank
Posts: 35,154
I do not have the same faith it appears you do that findings are separable from interpretation. Or that findings matter or even can exist in a sense without the accompanying interpretation. Once one has findings, one puts them into some sort of interpretation.
__________________
Please NO @

Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live.
Oscar Wilde
Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.
Thanks for this!
BudFox
  #133  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 07:59 PM
Leah123's Avatar
Leah123 Leah123 is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jun 2013
Location: Washington
Posts: 3,593
Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
True, but the above quotes from insiders are suggesting that such a generalization is appropriate. Here's a few more:

“DSM-IV is the fabrication upon which psychiatry seeks acceptance by medicine in general. Insiders know it is more a political than scientific document…DSM-IV has become a bible and a money making bestseller—its major failings notwithstanding.”
—Loren Mosher, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry

“We can manufacture enough diagnostic labels of normal variability of mood and thought that we can continually supply medication to you…But when it comes to manufacturing disease, nobody does it like psychiatry.” —Dr. Stefan Kruszewski, Harvard trained Pennsylvania psychiatrist, 2004

“I believe, until the public and psychiatry itself see that DSM labels are not only useless as medical ‘diagnoses’ but also have the potential to do great harm—particularly when they are used as means to deny individual freedoms, or as weapons by psychiatrists acting as hired guns for the legal system.” —Dr. Sydney Walker III, psychiatrist
You know that we could go on a quote war, but I don't think it would be helpful.... you post a page of quotes, I post a page of quotes.....

I think the DSM, like many things, has elements of blessing and bane. I understand those who point out its failings. It has failings. And strengths. I believe in those who believe(d) that naming things can have healing properties, and created a system to help us with common illnesses.

And I personally enjoy it and find parts of it helpful. I don't expect any group would agree with everything in such a massive tome- how would that even be possible? Yet the majority employs it, showing that it is found to be helpful enough despite its imperfections.

Last edited by Leah123; Jul 05, 2015 at 08:56 PM.
  #134  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 08:01 PM
Leah123's Avatar
Leah123 Leah123 is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jun 2013
Location: Washington
Posts: 3,593
Quote:
Originally Posted by stopdog View Post
I do not have the same faith it appears you do that findings are separable from interpretation. Or that findings matter or can exist without the accompanying interpretation.
It's not faith, it's an observation that the two are separate. I do see how they can be blurred, part of ensuring they aren't during the research process goes back to doing the study scientifically.
  #135  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 08:02 PM
stopdog stopdog is offline
underdog is here
 
Member Since: Sep 2011
Location: blank
Posts: 35,154
Quote:
Originally Posted by Leah123 View Post
It's not faith, it's an observation that the two are separate. I do see how they can be blurred, part of ensuring they aren't during the research process goes back to doing the study scientifically.
We are not going to agree because I do not see it as being even possible to be as pure as you present it. Let alone probable.
__________________
Please NO @

Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live.
Oscar Wilde
Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.
  #136  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 08:05 PM
Leah123's Avatar
Leah123 Leah123 is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jun 2013
Location: Washington
Posts: 3,593
I wasn't planning on us agreeing.
  #137  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 08:10 PM
ruh roh's Avatar
ruh roh ruh roh is offline
Run of the Mill Snowflake
 
Member Since: May 2015
Location: here and there
Posts: 4,468
Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
Don't buy it, don't use it, don't teach it. Theres nothing official about it. [about DSM-V]" -- Dr Allen Francis, Chair of the DSM-IV committee, and one of the most powerful psychiatrists in the country according to the NY Times

""There is no definition of a mental disorder. It's bulls**t. I mean, you just can't define it." -- Dr Allen Francis, Chair of the DSM-IV committee, and one of the most powerful psychiatrists in the country according to the NY Times
I guess he would have more knowledge than most as to what goes into the sausage making of that tome. Thanks for sharing.
  #138  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 08:21 PM
Leah123's Avatar
Leah123 Leah123 is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jun 2013
Location: Washington
Posts: 3,593
But according to Allen, the versions in which he had more control, DSM-III and IV were acceptable at the time, so he wouldn't throw out much of the past content, just parts of the latest edition it seems and the push for quick medication-related diagnoses of the "worried well." Does that change your argument at all? Or is the fact that he was so okay with content of the book's prior editions that he had that managing influence on its publication matter?

http://www.abc.net.au/lateline/conte...3/s3763502.htm

My sticking point is not flaws in the system, or that the flaws are serious, it's that therapy does more harm than good for the majority who use it. I haven't yet seen any evidence of that.

Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
My sense, from my own reading, is that the bulk of Psychiatry and its bible the DSM is fraud and quackery and social engineering and marketing for the drug companies.
But about psychiatry, the man you quote, Francis Allen says:

"I very much support the diagnostic system and I'm a great believer in psychiatry. I've seen tens of thousands of patients who've benefited from psychiatric treatment. I'm worried about it extending itself too thin beyond its area of competence. Careful diagnosis and careful treatment saves lives and dramatically improves them. What I'm worried about is excessive diagnosis and excessive treatment for the worried well. The worst thing that could come from this is if people lose faith in psychiatry, stop their medicine, get sick and maybe even kill themselves. So people should not lose faith in psychiatry. It's a lot better than DSM V."

Last edited by Leah123; Jul 05, 2015 at 11:52 PM.
Thanks for this!
Lauliza
  #139  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 09:01 PM
Gavinandnikki's Avatar
Gavinandnikki Gavinandnikki is offline
Grand Member
 
Member Since: Apr 2013
Location: Texas
Posts: 872
Many people that seek theray have been starved and deprived of a figure of authority that listened to them, showed interest in them, paid attention to them and showed a caring, if not loving, stance.
So, off we go to therapy and OMG, there IS someone who does many, if not alll, of those things.
How alluring. How addictive. This person is all about ME. What every young child needs and wants and here they are (albeit they're getting paid).
For many people, a therapist is giving them what they have missed their entire lives!
Not so easy to walk away from, even if the therapist sucks.
Just saying.
__________________
Pam
Thanks for this!
BudFox, GeminiNZ, missbella, SarahSweden
  #140  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 09:16 PM
BudFox BudFox is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Feb 2015
Location: US
Posts: 3,983
Quote:
Originally Posted by missbella View Post
There IS a choice to leave a bad therapist. But for some people it takes a major upending to realize it.
There is also the matter of the attachment bond and the possibility that a client may try to preserve this even in the face of wrongdoing or incompetence. I found this terribly conflicting. Even now when someone begins to criticize my ex T, based on what i have reported, I can't decide if I should join in or defend her. In the past I would never have understood how unmet attachment needs from childhood, once activated in therapy, could affect one so powerfully.
Hugs from:
SarahSweden
Thanks for this!
SarahSweden
  #141  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 09:35 PM
Anonymous37890
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Nothing in this thread makes me change my mind about therapy. In fact I feel more sure than ever that therapy does more harm than good.
Thanks for this!
missbella
  #142  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 09:39 PM
ruh roh's Avatar
ruh roh ruh roh is offline
Run of the Mill Snowflake
 
Member Since: May 2015
Location: here and there
Posts: 4,468
I've mostly had either useless or harmful therapists, except for the one I see now and one other. It took me a long time to figure out for myself what to look for and expect. I think I've got that now with my current therapist, but I think it has a lot to do with my own clarity about what I need and finding someone I work well with, and where there's mutual respect.

In the past, I was led to believe I was the problem. The therapist I see now has helped me see where that's not true.

I feel badly for anyone who's been hurt by a therapist. It's devastating.
Thanks for this!
BudFox, SarahSweden
  #143  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 10:03 PM
Gavinandnikki's Avatar
Gavinandnikki Gavinandnikki is offline
Grand Member
 
Member Since: Apr 2013
Location: Texas
Posts: 872
Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
In the past I would never have understood how unmet attachment needs from childhood, once activated in therapy, could affect one so powerfully.
This 100%. Like a lock and a key. The attachment bond can be quite fierce. And that is a primary reason why some simply can not walk away from bad therapy.
__________________
Pam
Thanks for this!
BudFox
  #144  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 10:07 PM
stopdog stopdog is offline
underdog is here
 
Member Since: Sep 2011
Location: blank
Posts: 35,154
This md guy is more therapy than drugs - interesting considering this topic I thought:
https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog...ts-big-profits
__________________
Please NO @

Selfishness is not living as one wishes to live, it is asking others to live as one wishes to live.
Oscar Wilde
Well Behaved Women Seldom Make History - Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
Pain is inevitable. Suffering is optional.
Thanks for this!
BudFox
  #145  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 10:10 PM
Anonymous100325
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
Yep. I sensed this happening with my ex T. She did say I'm sorry eventually, so she deserves some credit, but then only after months and months of me asking for it, and then a 3rd party coercing her to talk to me. In the end she still avoided most of the acknowledgement and responsibility and she pushed me off a cliff to save herself. Not only to avoid self-incrimination and possible legal trouble, but to protect the fragile edifice that is her belief in what she is doing.
OMG!! How terrible! She sounds like one arrogant T. I'm so sorry you had to go through such a horror. Obviously, she was in the wrong. Didn't she get that??
Thanks for this!
BudFox
  #146  
Old Jul 05, 2015, 10:13 PM
Lauliza's Avatar
Lauliza Lauliza is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Nov 2009
Location: United States
Posts: 3,231
Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
My sense, from my own reading, is that the bulk of Psychiatry and its bible the DSM is fraud and quackery and social engineering and marketing for the drug companies.

"Don't buy it, don't use it, don't teach it. Theres nothing official about it. [about DSM-V]" -- Dr Allen Francis, Chair of the DSM-IV committee, and one of the most powerful psychiatrists in the country according to the NY Times

""There is no definition of a mental disorder. It's bulls**t. I mean, you just can't define it." -- Dr Allen Francis, Chair of the DSM-IV committee, and one of the most powerful psychiatrists in the country according to the NY Times
t
I can't say anything about the other quotes you posted, but Francis Allen doesn't oppose the DSM itself or of the diagnosing of mental illness. He specifically takes issue with the DSM V and the over diagnosis of mental disorders. He feels that the newest version breaks mental illness down into too many subcategories that, quite frankly, become ridiculous and overwhelming. He seems to think it almost trivializes mental illness, which if used the wrong way, probably does.
Thanks for this!
Leah123
  #147  
Old Jul 06, 2015, 02:31 AM
Ididitmyway's Avatar
Ididitmyway Ididitmyway is offline
Magnate
 
Member Since: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,071
To the DSM subject, I like this video of Dr. Terry Lynch where he explains what fundamental fraud of psychiatry is based on

He has other good videos on the subject. Those who are interested can google him. He also wrote a couple of great books: "Beyond Prozac" and "Selfhood".

Dr. Gabor Mate is another psychiatrist who doesn't speak psychobabble, exposes lies and misinformation of psychiatry. He has so many amazing videos with his talks and presentations that I can't list them all here. Just google him and you'll find plenty.
__________________
www.therapyconsumerguide.com

Bernie Sanders/Tulsi Gabbard 2020
Thanks for this!
BudFox
  #148  
Old Jul 06, 2015, 11:48 AM
BudFox BudFox is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Feb 2015
Location: US
Posts: 3,983
Quote:
Originally Posted by Leah123 View Post
"I very much support the diagnostic system and I'm a great believer in psychiatry. I've seen tens of thousands of patients who've benefited from psychiatric treatment. I'm worried about it extending itself too thin beyond its area of competence. Careful diagnosis and careful treatment saves lives and dramatically improves them. What I'm worried about is excessive diagnosis and excessive treatment for the worried well. The worst thing that could come from this is if people lose faith in psychiatry, stop their medicine, get sick and maybe even kill themselves. So people should not lose faith in psychiatry. It's a lot better than DSM V."
Seems like he is talking out of both sides of his mouth. I wonder about the timing of these quotes, and what is most recent. His incriminating comments seem more notable since it is far more risky to say those things. For the main author of DSM-IV to publicly say "there is no definition of a mental disorder. It's bulls**t. I mean, you just can't define it"… that seems very telling.

Anyway Allen is just one guy. There are so many others of note saying that psychiatry is mostly insane and corrupt and driven by drug company profiteering.

BTW, we are on a major tangent here...
  #149  
Old Jul 06, 2015, 11:53 AM
SarahSweden SarahSweden is offline
Grand Poohbah
 
Member Since: Jun 2014
Location: Sweden
Posts: 1,706
I can relate to this because although I was badly hurt by my former T, Iīve now and then thought about contacting her and ask her if we could try to start therapy again.

Sometimes it feels like things could be solved but my thoughts about it always ends up in what negative things she said and did and I put my thoughts aside about contacting her again.

Another example of a T who did more harm than good is one of the T:s I saw in evaluation. It was just a few weeks ago and just before she went on a rather long holiday she after only two sessions told me I should do a psychiatric evaluation. She talked about different neuropsychiatric diagnoses and I have never before met anyone that thought I have a diagnosis, noone in school, no therapist.

Then she just left me with that! She went on her holiday, I canīt contact her and she of course knows I donīt have another T to talk to while sheīs on holiday. I also think itīs very unproffessional to meet with a client for just two times and stir up a lot of thoughts about diagnoses. She isnīt within the psychiatry and she hasnīt worked their earlier on.

Of course she should have waited until she was available again after her holiday and we could then meet up and talk through things.

Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
There is also the matter of the attachment bond and the possibility that a client may try to preserve this even in the face of wrongdoing or incompetence. I found this terribly conflicting. Even now when someone begins to criticize my ex T, based on what i have reported, I can't decide if I should join in or defend her. In the past I would never have understood how unmet attachment needs from childhood, once activated in therapy, could affect one so powerfully.
  #150  
Old Jul 06, 2015, 11:54 AM
Leah123's Avatar
Leah123 Leah123 is offline
Grand Magnate
 
Member Since: Jun 2013
Location: Washington
Posts: 3,593
Quote:
Originally Posted by BudFox View Post
Seems like he is talking out of both sides of his mouth. I wonder about the timing of these quotes, and what is most recent. His incriminating comments seem more notable since it is far more risky to say those things. For the main author of DSM-IV to publicly say "there is no definition of a mental disorder. It's bulls**t. I mean, you just can't define it"… that seems very telling.

Anyway Allen is just one guy. There are so many others of note saying that psychiatry is mostly insane and corrupt and driven by drug company profiteering.

BTW, we are on a major tangent here...
The quotes were nearly simultaneous- I posted one of the interviews so you can see the timing, indeed the quote I posted was basically *in response* to questions about his earlier quote. So no, the more negative quote is *not* the more recent.

I don't think it's a tangent- you said basically- so and so agrees with me, here's an expert who corroborates my opinion about psychiatry being awful- and so I'm showing that that's not correct. I think it's quite on point, the point of the title of this thread- that therapy does more harm than good, but dismissing facts and evidence to the contrary as invalid without any credible or substantiated defense.

I do see people are hurt by bad therapy, sometimes enough that they leave in worse mental health than when they started. And I've seen evidence of it. But I don't see that in the majority of cases is all.

I'm sorry for those who dealt with incompetent, unprofessional, hurtful, manipulative, or otherwise just... terrible therapists and pyschiatrists and bad meds.

I don't think this is a perfect science or all science or that it's harmless- where there's power to do good, is power to do harm.

But I do want to be fair about discussing it when we have a thread that isn't "I was abused in therapy" or "My bad therapy really hurt me" but "Therapy does more harm than good" in general.

Last edited by Leah123; Jul 06, 2015 at 12:48 PM.
Thanks for this!
Lauliza, Middlemarcher, PeeJay, RedSun
Closed Thread
Views: 22640

attentionThis is an old thread. You probably should not post your reply to it, as the original poster is unlikely to see it.




All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:43 AM.
Powered by vBulletin® — Copyright © 2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.




 

My Support Forums

My Support Forums is the online community that was originally begun as the Psych Central Forums in 2001. It now runs as an independent self-help support group community for mental health, personality, and psychological issues and is overseen by a group of dedicated, caring volunteers from around the world.

 

Helplines and Lifelines

The material on this site is for informational purposes only, and is not a substitute for medical advice, diagnosis or treatment provided by a qualified health care provider.

Always consult your doctor or mental health professional before trying anything you read here.