T.W.
Wednesday 8th July 2009 5:47pm [Edited]
15,786 posts
A major problem with mental health services is, frankly, that psychiatry hasn't actually managed to cure anything of seriousness successfully in the last century or so. It offers pharmacological treatments which, in the long term, have little or no supporting evidence as to their efficacy.
Take Prozac (or any other of the SSRIs). These "work" by apparently elevating levels of serotonin, leading to alleviation of depression. Unfortunately there is minimal evidence to suggest that low serotonin levels in the brain cause or are a major neurochemical feature of, depression.
Psychiatry is a dead-ended and (usually unintentionally) fraudulent speciality, which jumps off the fence occasionally every few years to advocate a route of treatment, only to jump back on the fence soon after.
Q: The most successful ever drug in psychiatry? A drug whose invention led to the insane asylum population of Europe being halved, after a course of treatment?
A: Penicillin. (It treated quaternary syphilis - curing the so-called "paralysis of the insane".)
I agree that mental health services are terrible (I have close members of my family who suffer from long-term illness), but the fundamental ideas of how to treat mental illness are so outdated and historically unsucessful that a new philosophy is needed even more than money.