American Psychiatric Association President Resigns
Note: Loren Mosher (President of the American Psychiatric Association)
passed away in 2004.
His letter from 1998 and much of his website is good reading, opening
many eyes to what is going on
http://www.moshersoteria.com
4 December 1998
Loren R. Mosher, M.D. to Rodrigo Munoz, MD,
President of the American Psychiatric Association (APA)
Dear Rod,
After nearly three decades as a member it is with a mixture of pleasure
and disappointment that I submit this letter of resignation from the American
Psychiatric Association. The major reason for this action is my belief
that I am actually resigning from the American Psychopharmacological Association.
Luckily, the organization's true identity requires no change in the
acronym.
Unfortunately, APA reflects, and reinforces, in word and deed, our drug
dependent society. Yet it helps wage war on "drugs". "Dual
diagnosis" clients are a major problem for the field but not because
of the "good" drugs we prescribe. "Bad" ones are those
that are obtained mostly without a prescription. A Marxist would observe
that being a good capitalist organization, APA likes only those drugs
from which it can derive a profit -- directly or indirectly.
This is not a group for me. At this point in history, in my view, psychiatry
has been almost completely bought out by the drug companies. The APA could
not continue without the pharmaceutical company support of meetings, symposia,
workshops, journal advertising, grand rounds luncheons, unrestricted educational
grants etc. etc. Psychiatrists have become the minions of drug company
promotions. APA, of course, maintains that its independence and autonomy
are not compromised in this enmeshed situation. Anyone with the least
bit of common sense attending the annual meeting would observe how the
drug company exhibits and "industry sponsored symposia" draw
crowds with their various enticements, while the serious scientific sessions
are barely attended. Psychiatric training reflects their influence as
well: the most important part of a resident's curriculum is the art
and quasi-science of dealing drugs, i.e., prescription writing.
These psychopharmacological limitations on our abilities to be complete
physicians also limit our intellectual horizons. No longer do we seek
to understand whole persons in their social contexts -- rather we are
there to realign our patients' neurotransmitters. The problem is that
it is very difficult to have a relationship with a neurotransmitter --
whatever its configuration. So, our guild organization provides a rationale,
by its neurobiological tunnel vision, for keeping our distance from the
molecule conglomerates we have come to define as patients. We condone
and promote the widespread use and misuse of toxic chemicals that we know
have serious long term effects -- tardive dyskinesia, tardive dementia
and serious withdrawal syndromes. So, do I want to be a drug company patsy
who treats molecules with their formulary? No, thank you very much. It
saddens me that after 35 years as a psychiatrist I look forward to being
dissociated from such an organization. In no way does it represent my
interests. It is not within my capacities to buy into the current biomedical-reductionistic
model heralded by the psychiatric leadership as once again marrying us
to somatic medicine. This is a matter of fashion, politics and, like the
pharmaceutical house connection, money.
In addition, APA has entered into an unholy alliance with NAMI (I don't
remember the members being asked if they supported such an association)
such that the two organizations have adopted similar public belief systems
about the nature of madness. While professing itself the "champion
of their clients" the APA is supporting non-clients, the parents,
in their wishes to be in control, via legally enforced dependency, of
their mad/bad offspring: NAMI with tacit APA approval, has set out a pro-neuroleptic
drug and easy commitment-institutionalization agenda that violates the
civil rights of their offspring. For the most part we stand by and allow
this fascistic agenda to move forward. Their psychiatric god, Dr. E. Fuller
Torrey, is allowed to diagnose and recommend treatment to those in the
NAMI organization with whom he disagrees.
Clearly, a violation of medical ethics. Does APA protest? Of course
not, because he is speaking what APA agrees with, but can't explicitly
espouse. He is allowed to be a foil; after all - he is no longer a member
of APA. (Slick work APA!) The shortsightedness of this marriage of convenience
between APA, NAMI, and the drug companies (who gleefully support both
groups because of their shared pro-drug stance) is an abomination. I want
no part of a psychiatry of oppression and social control.
"Biologically based brain diseases" are certainly convenient
for families and practitioners alike. It is no-fault insurance against
personal responsibility. We are all just helplessly caught up in a swirl
of brain pathology for which no one, except DNA, is responsible. Now,
to begin with, anything that has an anatomically defined specific brain
pathology becomes the province of neurology (syphilis is an excellent
example). So, to be consistent with this "brain disease" view,
all the major psychiatric disorders would become the territory of our
neurologic colleagues. Without having surveyed them I believe they would
eschew responsibility for these problematic individuals. However, consistency
would demand our giving over "biologic brain diseases" to them.
The fact that there is no evidence confirming the brain disease attribution
is, at this point, irrelevant. What we are dealing with here is fashion,
politics and money. This level of intellectual /scientific dishonesty
is just too egregious for me to continue to support by my membership.
I view with no surprise that psychiatric training is being systematically
disavowed by American medical school graduates. This must give us cause
for concern about the state of today's psychiatry. It must mean --
at least in part that they view psychiatry as being very limited and unchallenging.
To me it seems clear that we are headed toward a situation in which, except
for academics, most psychiatric practitioners will have no real, relationships
-- so vital to the healing process -- with the disturbed and disturbing
persons they treat. Their sole role will be that of prescription writers
-- ciphers in the guise of being "helpers".
Finally, why must the APA pretend to know more than it does? DSM IV
is the fabrication upon which psychiatry seeks acceptance by medicine
in general. Insiders know it is more a political than scientific document.
To its credit it says so -- although its brief apologia is rarely noted.
DSM IV has become a bible and a money making best seller -- its major
failings notwithstanding. It confines and defines practice, some take
it seriously, others more realistically. It is the way to get paid. Diagnostic
reliability is easy to attain for research projects. The issue is what
do the categories tell us? Do they in fact accurately represent the person
with a problem? They don't, and can't, because there are no external
validating criteria for psychiatric diagnoses.
There is neither a blood test nor specific anatomic lesions for any
major psychiatric disorder. So, where are we? APA as an organization has
implicitly (sometimes explicitly as well) bought into a theoretical hoax.
Is psychiatry a hoax -- as practiced today? Unfortunately, the answer
is mostly yes.
What do I recommend to the organization upon leaving after experiencing
three decades of its history?
- To begin with, let us be ourselves. Stop taking on unholy alliances
without the members' permission.
- Get real about science, politics and money. Label each for what it
is - - that is, be honest.
- Get out of bed with NAMI and the drug companies. APA should align
itself, if one believes its rhetoric, with the true consumer groups,
i.e., the ex-patients, psychiatric survivors etc.
- Talk to the membership -- I can't be alone in my views.
We seem to have forgotten a basic principle -- the need to be patient/client/consumer
satisfaction oriented. I always remember Manfred Bleuler's wisdom:
"Loren, you must never forget that you are your patient's employee."
In the end they will determine whether or not psychiatry survives in the
service marketplace.
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