The Journal of Mind and Behaviour
Summer and Autumn 1990. Volume 11, Numbers 3 and 4 Pages 323
[77] - 336 [90)
The Ex-Patients' Movement: Where We've Been and Where We're
Going
Judi Chamberlin
Ruby Rogers Advocacy and Drop-ln Centre
Abstract
The
mental patients' liberation movement, which started in the early 1970s, is a
political movement comprised of people who have experienced psychiatric
treatment and hospitalisation. Its two main goals are developing self-help
alternatives to medically-based psychiatric treatment and securing full
citizenship rights for people labelled "mentally ill." The movement
questions the medical model of "mental illness," and insists that
people who have been labelled as "mentally ill" speak on their own
behalf and not be represented by others who claim to speak "for"
them. The movement has developed its own philosophy, and operates a variety of
self-help and mutual support programs in which ex-patients themselves control
the services that are offered. Despite obstacles, the movement continues to
grow and develop.
Introduction
A
complete history of the mental patients' liberation movement is still to be
written. Like other liberation struggles of oppressed people, the activism of
former psychiatric patients has been frequently ignored or discredited. Only
when a group begins to emerge from subjugation can it begin to reclaim its own
history. This process has been most fully developed in the black movement and
the women's movement; it is in a less developed stage in the gay movement and
the disability movement (of which the ex-patients' movement may be considered a
part).
The
"madman," as defined by others, is part of society's cultural
heritage. Whether "madness" is explained by religious authorities (as
demonic possession, for example), by secular authorities (as disturbance of the
public order), or by medical authorities (as "mental illness"), the
mad themselves have remained largely voiceless. The movement of people who call
themselves variously, ex-patients, psychiatric inmates, and psychiatric
survivors is an attempt to give voice to individuals who have been assumed to
be irrational - to be "out of their minds."
The
ex-patients' movement began approximately in 1970, but we can trace its history
back to many earlier former patients, in the late nineteenth and early
twentieth centuries, who wrote stories of their mental hospital experiences and
who attempted to change laws and public policies concerning the
"insane." Thus, in 1868, Mrs. Elizabeth Packard published the first
of several books and pamphlets in which she detailed her forced commitment by
her husband in the Jacksonville (Illinois) Insane Asylum. She also founded the
Anti-Insane Asylum Society, which apparently never became a viable organization
(Dain, 1989). Similarly, in Massachusetts at about the same time, Elizabeth
Stone, also committed by her husband, tried to rally public opinion to the
cause of stopping the unjust incarceration of the "insane."
In
the early part of this century, Clifford Beers, a wealthy young businessman,
experienced several episodes of confused thinking and agitation which caused
him to be placed in a mental hospital. Following his recovery, Beers (1953)
wrote a book, A Mind that Found Itself, which went through numerous editions
and which led to the formation of the influential National Committee on Mental
Hygiene (later the National Association for Mental Health). Dain (1989) states
that
".
. . Beers was outspoken about abuse of mental patients and passionate in
defending their rights and damning psychiatrists for tolerating mistreatment of
patients. But he eventually toned down his hostility to psychiatry as it became
obvious that for his reform movement to gain the support he sought at the
highest levels of society it would have to include leading psychiatrists.
Although he envisioned that eventually former mental patients and their
families would be recruited into the movement, the public's persistent
prejudice against mentally disturbed people and Beers' own doubts and
inclinations, plus pressures from psychiatrists, drew him away from this
goal." (pp. 9-10)
Dain
also notes, in passing, the formation of the Alleged Lunatics' Friend Society
in 1845 by former patients in England. On the whole, however, this early
history is obscure, and the development of modern ex-patient groups in the
United States at the beginning of the 1970s occurred primarily without any
knowledge of these historical roots.
Although
the terms have often been used interchangeably, "mental patients'
liberation" (or "psychiatric inmates' liberation") and
"anti-psychiatry" are not the same thing. "
Anti-psychiatry" is largely an intellectual exercise of academics and
dissident mental health professionals. There has been little attempt within
anti-psychiatry to reach out to struggling ex-patients or to include their
perspective. The focus in this paper is on ex-patient (or ex-inmate) groups. I
identify the major principles that have guided the development of the
ex-patients' movement, sketch the recent history of this movement, describe its
major goals and accomplishments, and discuss the challenges facing it in this
decade.
Stigma
and discrimination still make it difficult for people to identify themselves as
ex-mental patients if they could otherwise pass as "normal,"
reinforcing public perceptions that the "bag lady" and the homeless
drifter are representative of all former patients. Like the exemplary black
persons of a generation or two ago - who were held to be "a credit to
their race" and, by definition, atypical of black people generally - so
the former mental patient who is successfully managing his or her life is widely
seen as the exception that proves the rule.
Guiding Principles of the Movement
Exclusion of Non-Patients
In
the United States, former patients have found that they work best when they
exclude mental health professionals {and other non-patients) from their
organizations {Chamberlin, 1987). There are several reasons why the movement
has grown in this direction - a direction which began to develop in the early
1970s, influenced by the black, women's and gay liberation movements. Among the
major organizing principles of these movements were self-definition and
self-determination. Black people felt that white people could not truly
understand their experiences; women felt similarly about men; homosexuals
similarly about heterosexuals. As these groups evolved, they moved from
defining themselves to setting their own priorities. To mental patients who
began to organize, these principles seemed equally valid. Their own perceptions
about "mental illness" were diametrically opposed to those of the
general public, and even more so to those of mental health professionals. It
seemed sensible, therefore, not to let non-patients into ex-patient
organizations or to permit them to dictate an organization's goals.
There
were also practical reasons for excluding non-patients. Those groups that did
not exclude non-patients from membership almost always quickly dropped their
liberation aspects and became reformist. In addition, such groups rapidly moved
away from ex-patient control, with the tiny minority of non-patient members
taking on leadership roles and setting future goals and directions. These
experiences served as powerful examples to newly-forming ex-patient
organizations that mixed membership was indeed destructive.
In
attempting to solve these organizational problems, group members began to
recognize a pattern they referred to as "mentalism" and "sane
chauvinism," a set of assumptions which most people seemed to hold about
mental patients: that they were incompetent, unable to do things for
themselves, constantly in need of supervision and assistance, unpredictable,
likely to be violent or irrational, and so forth. Not only did the general
public express mentalist ideas; so did ex-patients themselves. These crippling
stereotypes became recognized as a form of internalised oppression. The
struggle against internalised oppression and mentalism generally was seen as
best accomplished in groups composed exclusively of patients, through the
process of consciousness-raising (borrowed from the women's movement).
Consciousness-Raising
The
consciousness-raising process is one in which people share and examine their
own experiences to learn about the contexts in which their lives are embedded.
As used by the women's movement, consciousness-raising helped women to
understand that matters of sexuality, marriage, divorce, job discrimination,
roles, and so forth were not individual, personal problems but were instead
indicators of society's systematic oppression of women. Similarly, as mental
patients began to share their life stories, it became clear that distinct
patterns of oppression existed and that our problems and difficulties were not
solely internal and personal, as we had been told they were. The
consciousness-raising process may be hampered by the presence of those who do
not share common experiences (e.g., as women or as mental patients). As the
necessity for consciousness-raising became more evident, it provided still
another reason for limiting group membership.
Consciousness-raising
is an ongoing process, with people and groups constantly recognizing deeper
levels of oppression. Within an ex-patient group, various activities often lead
to further consciousness-raising experiences. For example, a group may approach
a local newspaper or television reporter to write a story about the group's
work or to give its viewpoint on a current mental health issue. If the group's
representatives are treated respectfully and their opinions listened to, no
consciousness-raising issue arises. If, however, the reporter is unwilling to
listen to the group's representatives or seems to disbelieve them or makes
comments about their mental status, it can become an occasion for further
consciousness-raising. Whereas, before the advent of the patients' liberation
movement, the group might have altered its strategy or even disbanded after
such a discouraging incident, armed with the knowledge that they have run into
systematic discrimination they can decide how to proceed. They may complain to
the reporter's superior. They may raise questions about discrimination against
mental patients. Because of consciousness-raising, they will have a clear idea
of what they are facing.
Historical Development of the Movement
Like
many new developments in the United States, mental patients' liberation groups
began primarily on the east and west coasts and then spread inland. Among the
earliest groups were the Insane Liberation Front in Portland. Oregon (founded
in 1970), the Mental Patients' Liberation Project in New York City, the Mental
Patients' Liberation Front in Boston (both founded in 1971), and the Network
Against Psychiatric Assault in San Francisco (founded in 1972). Local groups
took a long time to establish ongoing communications, because they were not
funded and membership consisted mostly of low-income individuals. The
development of two major means of communication, the annual Conference on Human
Rights and Psychiatric Oppression, and the San Francisco-based publication,
Madness Network News, helped the movement to grow. Interestingly, both the
Conference and Madness Network News began as mixed groups but later were
operated and controlled solely by ex-patients (see below).
The
first Conference on Human Rights and Psychiatric Oppression was held in 1973 at
the University of Detroit, jointly sponsored by a sympathetic (non-patient)
psychology professor and the New York City-based Mental Patients' Liberation
Project (MPLP). Approximately fifty people from across the United States (and
Canadian representatives) met for several days to discuss the developing
philosophy and goals of mental patients' liberation. The leadership role of
ex-patients was acknowledged; for example, the original name proposed by the
sponsoring professor for the conference ("The Rights of the Mentally
Disabled") was roundly rejected as stigmatising. Although no plan was made
in Detroit to continue the conference, the practice later developed of
designating an attending group to sponsor the next year's conference. The
conference became limited to patients and ex-patients only in 1976. Conferences
were held annually through 1985 (see below for later developments).
Madness
Network News began as a San Francisco-area newsletter in 1972 and gradually
evolved into a newspaper format covering the ex-patients' movement in North
America as well as worldwide. Madness Network News' original core group
included both self-styled "radical" mental health professionals and
ex-patients, but within a few years a major struggle ensued and the paper was
published solely by ex-patients. There were also struggles between women and
men ex-patients resulting in special women's issues edited by all-women,
all-ex-patient staffs. Madness Network News existed solely on subscription
income, which was sufficient to cover printing and mailing costs, but did not
allow for salaries. For many years this publication was the voice of the
American ex-patients' movement, a journal which published personal experiences,
creative writing, art, political theory, and factual reporting, all from the ex-patient
point of view. Madness Network News ceased publication in 1986.
The
heart of the movement, however, continued to be the individual local group.
Although some groups existed for only short periods, the overall number of
groups continued to grow. Most groups were started by a small number of people
coalescing out of a shared anger and a sense that through organization they
could bring about change. Groups were independent, loosely linked through
Madness Network News and the annual Conference. Each group developed its own
ideologies, terminology, styles and goals. Groups were known by an astonishing
variety of names, from the straightforward {Mental Patients' Alliance; Network
Against Psychiatric Assault) to the euphemistic {Project Acceptance; Reclamation,
Inc.). Some groups were organized as traditional hierarchies with officers and
held formal meetings while other groups moved toward more egalitarian
structures with shared decision-making and no formal leadership. Groups were
united by certain rules and principles: mental health terminology was
considered suspect; attitudes that limited opportunities for mental patients
were to be discouraged and changed; and members' feelings - particularly
feelings of anger toward the mental health system - were considered real and
legitimate, not "symptoms of illness."
The
activities of various groups included organizing support groups, advocating for
hospitalised patients, lobbying for changes in laws, public speaking,
publishing newsletters, developing creative and artistic ways of dealing with
the mental patient experience, etc. The two primary thrusts were advocacy and
self-help alternatives to the psychiatric system, as it quickly became clear to
each group that its own membership's needs largely fell into these two areas.
Different
groups developed different terminologies to describe themselves and their work.
"Ex-patient" was a controversial term because it appeared to embrace
the medical model; Madness Network News promoted the use of
"ex-psychiatric inmate," which became widespread. Other groups
referred to themselves as "clients," "consumers," or
"psychiatric survivors." Differences in terminology stressed
differing emphases and priorities; clearly the individuals labelling themselves
"inmates" or "survivors" took the more militant stance.
Because
most groups existed with little or no outside funding they were limited in
their accomplishments. The question of funding generated numerous
controversies, as did the question of reimbursement for organisational labour.
Even if the group decided it had no objection in principle to receiving outside
funding, obtaining such funding was difficult. Potential funding sources tended
to look askance on ex-patient groups - especially groups that rejected
psychiatric ideology and terminology. Moreover, foundations which funded
community organising efforts did not view ex-patient groups as falling within
their purview. Finally, state departments of mental health were seldom
approached because of their role in running the very institutions in which
group members had been oppressed. And those mental health departments that were
approached were highly sceptical of the ability of ex-patient groups to run
their own projects.
Gradually,
however, inroads were made. Members of ex-patient groups demanded involvement
in the various forums from which they were excluded - conferences, legislative
hearings, boards, committees and the like. Although at first in only the most
token numbers, ex-patients were slowly invited to take part in such forums.
Often groups had to insist on being invited, however.
Once
involved in such meetings, ex-patients could move in two different tactical
directions: cooperation or confrontation. Clearly, much was said in these
forums which directly contradicted the movement's developing ideology. While
most such meetings featured a reliance on psychiatric terminology and
diagnosis, and on the assumption that patients existed in a lifetime dependency
relationship, the patients' movement stood in opposition to the medical model
and in support of self-reliance and self-determination. Although ex-patients'
objections to such mentalist assumptions were often used as a reason to exclude
ex-patients from future meetings, it is to the movement's credit that the
ex-patients did speak up and object to much of what was being said.
Frequently-heard objections from professional participants were that the
ex-patients "polarized the discussion" or were
"disruptive." Professionals sometimes chose to work with non-movement
identified ex-patients who were much more likely to be compliant. For example,
the most publicly visible post to go to an ex-patient in the 1970s - as one of
the twenty-member President's Commission on Mental Health - went to a woman who
had never worked with an ex-patient group but who had written about her
patienthood experience in professional journals.
However,
from this forum, as from others, the movement refused to be excluded. Movement
activists packed many of the Commission's public hearings, testifying
eloquently about the harmfulness of the psychiatric treatments they had
experienced while pleading for enforcement of patients' rights and funding of
patient-run alternatives to traditional treatment. The Commission's final
report acknowledged the role of alternative treatments, stating that many of
the latter "are wary of being classified as mental health services,
convinced that such a classification entails a medical perspective and implies
authoritarian relationships and derogatory labelling" ("Report,"
1978, p. 14).
The
report went on to note that "groups composed of individuals with mental or
emotional problems are in existence or are being formed all over the United
States" (pp. 14-15).
The
movement also demanded its inclusion in a series of conferences organized by
the Community Support Program (CSP), a small division of the National Institute
of Mental Health (NIMH). CSP, which began in the late 1970s, focused on
providing assistance to programs in community settings. However, in the movement's
view, these programs often perpetuated many of the worst features of
institutionalisation, including labelling, forced drugging, and paternalistic
control. The participation of ex-patients in CSP conferences (even though the
movement activists were vastly outnumbered by mental health professionals)
forced CSP to acknowledge the importance of funding patient-run programs as a
part of community support. Such recommendations would not have been made -
indeed, would not even have been considered - without the tenacity of movement
activists who insisted on being heard.
Participation
in professionally-sponsored conferences and meetings produced an additional
unintended benefit. It enabled ex-patients to meet each other and learn from
one another. Such contacts, especially by people from different geographical
areas, were previously difficult but later became a source of inspiration and
support during the exercise of an otherwise thankless task - to present the
patient viewpoint to audiences that were often indifferent or even hostile
toward that view.
Self-Help and Empowerment
Gradually,
the movement began to put some of its principles into action in the operation
of self-help programs as alternatives to professional treatment. Although the
Mental Patients' Association (MP A) in Vancouver, Canada, began operating its
drop-in centre and residences within months of its founding in 1971, the first
such projects did not appear in the United States until the late 1970s, largely
because funding was unavailable.
Programs
that developed out of the ex-patients' movement tend to be sceptical about the
value of the mental health system and traditional psychiatric treatment
(Chamberlin, Rogers, and Sneed, 1989). Members usually gravitate to these
groups because they have had negative experiences in the system. Often, members
are angry, and their anger is seen by the group as a healthy reaction to their
experiences of abuse by the mental health system. At the same time, members,
despite their distrust of the system, may simultaneously be involved in
professionally-run programs. Members of user-run services are free to combine
their participation in self-help groups with professionally-run services, in
whatever proportion and combination each member determines.
Through
successes experienced in self-help groups, members are enabled to take a
stronger role in advocating for their own needs within the larger mental health
system. Empowerment means that members have a voice in mental health matters
generally - they reject the role of passive service recipient. Group members
found themselves moving naturally into the role of advocate, representing the
needs of clients on panels, boards, and committees. This may require
accommodation on the part of other groups and group members such as
administrators, policy makers, legislators, and family members, who typically
have listened to everyone but the client about client needs.
Self-help
groups do not exist in a vacuum. Even a group that sees itself as totally
separate from the mental health system will of necessity, have some
interactions with it, while groups that have been aided or brought into
existence by mental health professionals will need to devise their own ways of
making themselves autonomous from the larger system. By taking on a role other
than that of the passive, needy client, self-help group members can change the
systems with which they interact, as these systems adjust to respond to clients
in their new roles as advocates and service providers.
Self-help is a concept, not a single program
model. The concept is a means by which people become empowered and begin to
think of themselves as competent individuals as they present themselves in new
ways to the world. By its very nature, self-help combats stigma, because the
negative images of mental patients ultimately must give way to the reality of
clients managing their own lives and their own programs. The successes of
self-help groups have been striking. Groups are handling annual budgets that
may be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars; producing newsletters, books,
and pamphlets; educating other clients and professionals about group work;
influencing legislation and public policy; publicizing and advocating on their
own behalf in the media; and, in general, challenging stereotypes and creating
new realities. At the same time, individual group members may still be battling
the particular manifestations that led to their being psychiatrically labelled
in the first place. Self-help is not a miracle nor a cure-all, but it is a
powerful confirmation that people, despite problems and disabilities, can
achieve more than others (or they themselves) may have ever thought possible.
Advocacy
Self-help
is one of two co-equal aspects of the ex-patients' movement; the other is
advocacy, or working for political change. Unlike groups such as Recovery Inc.
or Schizophrenics Anonymous, patient liberation groups tend to address problems
that go beyond the individual. The basic principle of the movement is that all
laws and practices which induce discrimination toward individuals who have been
labelled "mentally ill" need to be changed, so that a psychiatric
diagnosis has no more impact on a person's citizenship rights and
responsibilities than does a diagnosis of diabetes or heart disease. To that
end, all commitment laws, forced treatment laws, insanity defences, and other
similar practices should be abolished.
Ending involuntary treatment is a long-term goal
of the patients' liberation movement. Meanwhile, movement activists work to
improve conditions of people subjected to forced treatment, and to see that
their existing rights are respected, keeping in mind that these are interim
steps within a basically unjust system.
Existing
laws have the power to compel people to receive treatment for mental illness.
This almost never occurs in the case of physical illness, except in the rare
instances when courts overrule parents who refuse medical treatment for a
child. The courts in these instances assume the parens patriae role, acting in
lieu of parents in what the court defines as the child's best interest. When a
person of whatever age is ordered by a court to undergo psychiatric treatment,
this same parens patriae power comes into effect. This connection between the legal
and medical systems places the mental patient at a disadvantage that is not
faced by patients with physical illnesses.
In
addition to the parens patriae doctrine, which assumes that a mentally ill
individual is incapable of determining his or her own best interest, an
additional doctrine, the police power of the state, is used to justify the
involuntary confinement of individuals labelled mentally ill. This doctrine is
based on the assumption that mentally ill people are dangerous and may do harm
to themselves or to others if they are not confined. The belief in the
dangerousness of the mentally ill is firmly rooted in our culture. It is
especially promoted by the mass media, which frequently run stories in which
crimes of violence are attributed to mental illness. If the alleged criminal
has been previously hospitalised, the fact is prominently mentioned; if not,
frequently a police officer or other authority figure will be quoted to the
effect that the accused is "a mental case" or "a nut." In
addition, unsolved crimes are often similarly attributed. Both the parens
patriae power and the police power relate to the stereotyped view of the
prospective patient - that he or she is sick, unpredictable, dangerous, unable
to care for himself or herself, and unable to judge his or her own best
interest.
The
movement's advocacy has focused on the right of the individual not to be a
patient, rather than on mere procedural safeguards before involuntary treatment
can be instituted. A major lawsuit testing this right was filed by seven
patients at Boston State Hospital in 1975, many of whom had been members of a
patients' rights group that met weekly in the hospital with the aid of the
Mental Patients' Liberation Front. The suit, originally known as Rogers v.
Macht, was called, in later stages, Rogers v. Okin and Rogers v. Commissioner
of Mental Health (1982). It established a limited right-to-refuse-treatment
(i.e., psychiatric drugs) for Massachusetts patients.
Since
Rogers v. Commissioner, right-to-refuse-treatment cases have been decided in a
number of states, including New York (Ritlers v. Katz, 1986) and California
(Riese v. St. Mary's Hospital, 1987), and the right has been established
administratively in some other states. While the movement first greeted these
decisions as victories, it has become clear that, in practice, these reforms do
little to change the power relationship between patient and psychiatrist. Each
procedure (varying from state to state) provides one or more methods to
override the patient's decision to refuse drugs; and whether the procedure is
administrative or judicial, the end result is that most drug-refusing patients
whose cases are heard are forced, ultimately, to take the drugs, despite the
ostensible right to refuse them (Appelbaum, 1988). Many movement activists have
become discouraged and no longer believe that the courts will help people avoid
involuntary patienthood through the mechanism of the right to refuse treatment.
Many
individuals in the ex-patients' movement first encountered a critique of the
mental health system - a critique which confirmed their feelings - in the works
of Thomas Szasz. In such books as The Myth of Mental Illness (1961) and The
Manufacture of Madness (1970), in a career spanning more than thirty years,
Szasz has always spoken powerfully about the essential wrongness of forced
psychiatric treatment, and the fallacy of defining social and behavioural
problems as illnesses. In a recent paper, Szasz (1989) provides a devastating
critique of the mental patients' "rights" movement, which has been
guided largely by lawyers and non-patients.
"Rallying
to the battle cry of "civil rights for mental patients," professional
civil libertarians, special-interest-mongering attorneys, and the relatives of
mental patients joined conventional psychiatrists demanding rights for mental
patients - qua mental patients. The result has been a perverse sort of
affirmative action program: since mental patients are ill, they have a right to
treatment; since many are homeless, they have a right to housing; and so it
goes, generating even a special right to reject treatment (a right every
non-mental patient has without special dispensation). In short, the phrase
"rights of mental patients" has meant everything but according persons
called "mental patients" the same rights (and duties) as are accorded
all adults qua citizens or persons." (p. 19)
The
National Association of Psychiatric Survivors (NAPS), founded in 1985 as the
National Alliance of Mental Patients, promotes the same ideals Szasz espouses.
The first item in its Goals and Philosophy Statement reads:
"To
promote the human and civil rights of people in and out of psychiatric
treatment situations, with special attention to their absolute right to freedom
of choice. T o work towards the end of involuntary psychiatric intervention,
including civil commitment and forced procedures such as electroshock,
psychosurgery, forced drugging, restraint and seclusion, holding that such
intervention against one's will is not a form of treatment, but a violation of
liberty and the right to control one's own body and mind. We emphasize freedom
of choice for people wanting to receive psychiatric services through true
informed consent to treatment which includes the right to refuse any unwanted
treatments. We will also work to assure the rights of all people who have been
psychiatrically labelled including but not limited to people in halfway houses,
day treatment, residential facilities, vocational rehabilitation, nursing
homes, psycho-social rehabilitation clubs as well as psychiatric
institutions." (NAPS, no date, p. i)
This
is the essence of "mental patients' " liberation. NAPS was formed
specifically to counter the trend toward reformist "consumerism,"
which developed as the psychiatric establishment began to fund ex-patient
self-help. Ironically, the same developments which led to the movement's growth
and to the operation of increasing numbers of ex-patient-run alternative
programs, also weakened the radical voices within the movement and promoted the
views of far more cooperative "consumers." The very term
"consumer" implies an equality of power which simply does not exist;
mental health "consumers" are still subject to involuntary commitment
and treatment, and the defining of their experience by others.
It
is not surprising that once the Community Support Program at NIMH began funding
"consumer" conferences, the International Conference on Human Rights
and Psychiatric Oppression disbanded. The first CSP-funded conference,
"Alternatives '85," was held in Baltimore in June, 1985; the last
International Conference in Burlington, Vermont, in August of that year. The
dissolution was aided by a group of "consumers" who may have seen the
liberation perspective as a threat. At the same time, some extreme radicals
opposed any form of organization as oppressive, believing that a totally
decentralized and unstructured movement could accomplish its goals.
Madness
Network News disintegrated the next year. Its all-volunteer staff became
exhausted by the effort of putting out the newspaper with no funds but member
subscriptions, and they were succeeded by a very small group of extreme
radicals who published only one issue - critical of anyone attempting to
develop organizational structure or sources of funding for movement activities.
The paper then ceased publication, leaving a gap in movement communication that
went unfilled for several years. Although Dendron, a newsletter published by
the Clearinghouse on Human Rights and Psychiatry in Eugene, Oregon, began
publishing shortly thereafter, only recently has it become as visible within
the movement as had been Madness Network News.
Where the Movement Stands Now
At
present, many groups exist that claim to speak "for' patients, that is, to
be patients' advocates. Even the American Psychiatric Association claims this
role, as does the National Alliance for the Mentally Ill (NAMI), a group
primarily composed of relatives of patients. Which enthusiastically embraces
the medical model and promotes the expansion of involuntary commitment and the
lifetime control of people labelled "mentally ill." However, a basic
liberation principle is that people must speak for themselves.
Former
patients recognize numerous currents of opinion within their community (which.
after all, numbers in the millions). There are groups whose members promote the
illness metaphor (e.g.. National Depressive and Manic-Depressive Association);
groups whose members promote self-help in conjunction with treatment for illness
(e.g.. Recovery. Inc.); groups whose members see themselves as consumers (e.g.,
the National Mental Health Consumers Association); and groups whose members see
themselves as liberationists (e.g., National Association of Psychiatric
Survivors). However, it is safe to say that by far the largest number of
patients and ex-patients are those who identify with none of these
organizations - indeed most patients and ex-patients have probably never even
heard of these groups.
The
movement continues to face formidable obstacles. The psychiatric/medical model
of "mental illness" is widely accepted by the general public. Indeed,
new psychiatric "illnesses" are being "discovered" all the
time, and psychiatry now claims that social deviants - from rapists to repetitive
gamblers - are suffering from a variety of newly defined "mental
illnesses." Psychiatry is entrenched, as well, in the courts, the prisons,
the schools, and all major institutions of society.
At the same time, there are many hopeful signs
for the movement. The ex-patients' movement is developing alliances with the
physically disabled, with the poor, and with ex-patients in other countries.
Physically disabled people have organized their own self-help programs, using
the model of independent living. According to the principles of independent
living, any person - no matter how physically disabled he or she may be - can
live independently if provided with the proper supports. Such supports must be
individualized - a person may need special equipment, personal care attendants,
modified transportation vehicles, and so forth. The particular mix of supports
is determined by the individual, in consultation with an independent living
specialist {who is also a physically disabled person). As the disability rights
movement has grown, it has become a powerful force for legal change as well.
For more than ten years, this movement has lobbied in favour of the Americans
with Disabilities Act, the so-called civil rights bill for the disabled. The
bill was signed into law on July 26, 1990. Although the ex-patients' movement
entered that struggle late, the final version of the Act does include persons
with "psychiatric disabilities" under its protections.
Linkages
of the ex-patients' movement with the impoverished include efforts at
affordable housing, campaigns for universal medical insurance, and involvement
in the Rainbow Coalition. It has proved extremely useful for ex-patient
activists to become involved in these activities - not only do ex-patients
require the services being advocated but demystification in the eyes of one's
allies can serve an invaluable purpose. When labelled as "mentally
ill" - a nameless, faceless person - the "mental patient" may be
seen as the enemy; as a co-worker and a colleague, facing the same problems and
struggling for the same solutions, the ex-patient becomes an individual:
knowable and understandable.
The
growing internationalisation of the ex-patients' movement is another sign of
the movement's growth and strength. As groups exchange newsletters, and attend
meetings and conferences, a shared ideology is developing. Although the lack of
a solidifying terminology continues to be troubling, such variety does not
necessarily indicate wide variations in viewpoints and activities. Whether group
members call themselves clients, consumers, ex-patients, users, or psychiatric
survivors, groups throughout the world are united by the goals of
self-determination and full citizenship rights for their members.
It
is true that the vast majority of former patients remain unorganised, but this
challenge is being met. As groups become more visible, they recruit more
members. This occurs because ex-patient groups speak to a truth of the
patienthood experience: that people's anger and frustration are real and valid,
and that only by speaking out can individuals who have been harmed by the
entrenched power of psychiatry mount a challenge against it.
References
Appelbaum,
D. (1988). The right to refuse treatment with antipsychotic drugs: Retrospect
and prospect. American Journal of Psychiatry, 145, 413-419.
Beers,
C. (1953). A mind that found itself. Garden City, New York: Doubleday.
Chamberlin,
J. (1979). On our own: Patient-controlled alternatives to the mental health
system. New York; McGraw-Hill.
Chamberlin,
J. (1987). The case for separatism. In 1. Barker and E. Peck (Eds.), Power in
strange places (pp. 24-26). London, England: Good Practices in Mental Health.
Chamberlin,
J., Rogers, J.A., and Sneed, C.S. (1989). Consumers, families, and community
support systems. Psychosocial Rehabilitation Journal, 12, 93-106.
Dain,
N. (1989). Critics and dissenters: Reflections on 'anti-psychiatry' in the
United States. Journal of the History of the Behavioural Sciences, 25, 3-25.
National
Association of Psychiatric Survivors. (No date). Goals and philosophy
statement. Unpublished manuscript.
Report
to the President for the President's Commission on Mental Health. (1978).
Volume I. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office.
Riese
v. St. Mary's Hospital, 209 Cal. App. 3rd, 1303, 1987.
Rivers
v. Katz, 67 N.Y., 2nd, 485, 1986.
Rogers
v. Commissioner of Mental Health, 390 Mass. 498, 1982.
Szasz,
T. (1961). The myth of mental illness. New York: Hoeber-Harper.
Szasz,
T. (1970). The manufacture of madness. New York: Dell.
Szasz,
T. (1989, July). The myth of the rights of mental patients. Liberty, pp. 19-26.
Requests
for reprints should be sent to Judi Chamberlin, Ruby Rogers Advocacy and
Drop-ln Centre, 2336 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02140.