ARTICLE
#9
Prozac, Suicide and Dr. Healy
By Rick Giombetti
Dr. David
Healy of the Department of Psychological Medicine at the University of
Wales in the UK is hardly a household name in the United States and that
is a shame.
One of the
world's leading research psychopharmacologists, Healy's expert testimony
in last year's Paxil civil trial was one of the deciding factors in the
plaintiff's jury victory in that case. Wyoming resident Donald Schell,
60, killed his wife, daughter and granddaughter and then himself with
a gun in 1998 after only two days on Paxil. Schell's surviving family
members sued Paxil manufacturer UK-based Glaxo-Smith-Kline (GSK), the
world's largest pharmaceutical manufacturer, and won. The decisive factor
in the case was the company's own internal data demonstrating that they
knew Paxil could cause agitation and suicidal ideation in research subjects.
A month after the June verdict in the case, GSK caved in to the British
Medicines Control Agency's request to put a suicide warning on Paxil.
The fact
that a jury verdict in a civil trial here in the United States has led
to a suicide warning being put on labels for a popular psychiatric drug
in another country has hardly been headline news. Two weeks after the
verdict in the Paxil trial, Houston area mother and convicted murderer
Andrea Yates drowned her five children while she was on not one, but two
antidepressant drugs with strong stimulant profiles. What could have been
an opportunity for the mass media to educate the public about the dangers
of antidepressant drugs, instead has been a non-stop awareness campaign
for the mental health industry about the need for more psychiatric "treatment."
The real story that has been missed in the Yates case is the fact that
it is a story about psychiatric treatment failure. Yates had been getting
psychiatric drugs for her post partum depression for years. She was on
high doses of two antidepressants drugs at the time she drowned her children
but went ahead and did what these drugs are supposed to prevent anyway.
Meanwhile,
Dr. Healy Hasn't shied away from linking Prozac, Paxil and the other SSRI's
to suicide. He figures at least 250,000 people have attempted suicide
worldwide because of Prozac alone and that at least 25,000 have succeeded.
He was offered a job at the University of Toronto affiliated Center for
Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in 2000. Healy was making arrangements
for moving his family to Toronto when he gave a lecture at the CAMH on
November 30, 2000 where he reiterated his position on Prozac and suicide.
He also made a lot of other statements, backed up by statistical data,
that are politically unpopular with many of his psychiatric colleagues.
Such as the fact that psychiatrists have more patients in their care then
ever before. Healy was unceremoniously turned down for the CAMH job. Speculation
has it that Prozac manufacturer Indianapolis-base Eli Lilly may have had
a hand in Healy's firing. An international controversy has ensued about
Healy's case and the implications it has for academic freedom in academic
medicine. Healy filed a multi-million dollar breach of contract lawsuit
against the CAMH and the University of Toronto on September 24 of last
year.
A summary
of the entire David Healy affair can be read on the Internet at http://www.pharmapolitics.com.
I recently
completed an e-mail interview with Healy about Prozac and suicide, the
CAMH lecture and many other contemporary issues in psychiatry today. Below
is the transcript.
--Rick Giombetti
Seattle
Rick Giombetti
(RG)
David
Healy (DH)
RG: How do
Prozac and the other SSRI's (Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors)
like Paxil cause suicidal ideation ("We can make healthy volunteers belligerent,
fearful, suicidal and even pose a risk to others," you wrote in the June
2000 Primary Care Psychiatry. "People don't care about the normal consequences
as you might expect. They're not bothered about contemplating something
they would usually be scared of)?
DH:
There is a greater difference between Prozac and other SSRI's on the one
side and placebo on the other side in the rate in which they cause agitation,
than there is between Prozac and the other SSRI's and placebo and the
rate at which they get people who are depressed better(i.e. the SSRI's
cause more agitation in testing subjects than sugar pills, but they also
tend to outperform sugar pills at getting depressed people better). The
fact that companies have chose to market them as antidepressants rather
than agents that cause agitation is a business decision rather than a
scientific matter. It is certainly not one that was "ordained by God."
You could say that the fact that some people who are depressed get better
is a side effect.
These
drugs are drugs that primarily work on the serotonin system. There is
no evidence for any abnormality in the serotonin system in people who
are depressed. There are however variations in the serotonin system in
people who are depressed. There are however variations in the serotonin
system in all of us so that some of us will have quite different effects
from these drugs than others. It would have been a relatively simple matter
to do work on this 10 years ago to find out which of us were more likely
to have problems with the drug than which of us were more likely to do
well on them.
RG:
You testified in the Paxil trial in Wyoming on behalf of the plaintiffs.
The plaintiff's position in the case, vindicated by both the jury and
judge in the case, was that Paxil was the primarily responsible for Donald
Schell shooting his wife, daughter and granddaughter to death before killing
himself with a gun in 1998. Schell had been taking the drug for two days.
Based on the internal Glaxo-Smith-Kline(Paxil's UK-based manufacturer
and world's largest pharmaceutical company) documentation you reviewed
as an expert witness in that case, what would you have to say about Paxil
and suicide to an individual contemplating a prescription for the drug?
DH:
The evidence across the board from all of the companies producing SSRI's
is that their drugs can make 1 in 20 of us agitated to the extent that
we drop out of trials. This agitation in some cases will include thoughts
of suicide, self-harm or strange out of character thoughts. The agitation
may even develop to psychotic proportions.
Part
of the problem with SSRI's is that they have been prescribed to many people
by a doctor who may not be aware of these side effects and may not have
warned you about the side effects. If you then develop problems on the
drugs you many not link the drug to the problem or you may feel now that
you have a very severe nervous problem that and your physician is the
only way out of the problem. A hostage dynamic can develop.
There
is a particularly difficult scenario where a patient is faced with a physician
who tells them that any increased nervousness they now have is not being
cause by their pills and that the answer to this is to continue with the
pills. In this case many people may not even let the physician know how
serious this increased nervousness is - as they feel they are not being
listened to. This situation can arise in part because physicians are dependent
on companies for information about any problems that can be caused by
the drugs are informed that there is no problem of this kind that stem
from the drugs, that any problem of this kind stems from the illness.
In such circumstances where a physician is relying on what they have been
told by the company and not listening to their patient, there is a real
risk of things going badly wrong. Some people will only escape disaster
if they halt their pills.
RG:
The story of Houston area mother Andrea Yates drowning her five
children has led to quite a campaign of awareness about mental illness
in the mass during the past several months. First, it was post-partum
depression and now, with the recent revelation in the testimony in the
Yates' murder trial that she believes she is possessed by Satan, schizophrenia.
What hasn't happened with the Yates case has been an honest accounting
of what it really is about: Another case of psychiatric treatment failure.
Andrea Yates' post partum depression had been getting treated with drugs
for years and she was on two antidepressants at the time she drowned her
five children. I'm not asking for much from the mass media on the reporting
of this case. Just the barest mention of two words with this case would
be helpful: Effexor and Remeron.
At the time
of the drownings Yates was on 450 mg/day of Effexor, or 75 mg above the
maximum recommended dosage, and 45 mg/day of Remeron, or the maximum recommended
dosage. Yates had been taken off 4 mg/day of the tranquilizer Haldol two
weeks before she drowned the children and the Remeron was added to her
prescription, which continued to include the Effexor. Now there is a wealth
of clinical data out there about these two drugs but the media has to
look at it instead of helping the mental health industry promote mental
health awareness.
It turns
out that a gem of study titled "Mirtazapine(Remeron) Versus Venlafaxine
(Effexor) in Hospitalized Severely Depressed Patients With Melancholic
Features" was published in the August 2001 Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology.
It's a gem with regard to the Yates case not only because it compares
two groups of patients put on the same antidepressant drugs she was on
at the time of the drownings, but because it does not omit the fact that
concomitant medications were being administered to the patient/subjects(a
rarity for the published results of clinical studies, indeed).
Out of the
group of 78 patient/subjects put on Remeron, 56 percent of them were administered
the benzodiazepine tranquiler Oxazepam to counter agitation and 35 percent
were administered the hypnotic Zolpidem to counter insomnia. Out of the
79 patient/subjects in the Effexor group, 49 percent were administered
Oxazepam and 41 percent were administered Zolpidem.
Here are
the other vital statistics provided by the article: 62.8 percent of the
Remeron group were female and 68.4 percent of the Effexor group were female.
The maximum dosing of the Remeron group ranged from 45-60 mg/day and 300-375
mg/day for the Effexor group. The study lasted eight weeks and 23.1 percent
of the Remeron group dropped out, plus 35.4 percent of the Effexor group
dropped out of the study.
Well, am
I on to something here? Is it unreasonable to suggest that Yates was suffering
from extreme agitation and/or insomnia, given that she was taking high
doses of both Effexor and Remeron, and that this might have been a factor
in her actions the day she drowned her children? What do you know about
Effexor and Remeron? (Effexor is known as a "Serotonin and Norepinephrine
Reuptake Inhibitor" or "SNRI" and Remeron is known as a "Noradrenergic
and Specific Serotonergic Antidepressant," "NaSSA")
DH:
The European tradition had been that all antidepressants could
cause a problem. This included the tricyclic antidepressants which like
Venlafaxine (Effexor) inhibited both serotonin and norepinephrine reuptake.
The clinical trials of Mirtazapine (Remeron) submitted to the FDA that
got it a license contain an excess of suicides and suicide attempts in
those trials compared to placebo. I don't know the details for Venlafaxine
(Effexor).
Your
point about it not being unreasonable to suggest that Yates was suffering
from extreme agitation and/or insomnia on the combination of Effexor and
Remeron is a reasonable one.
(At this
point Healy thanks me for the reference to the study and asks me for the
name of the first study author in order to find out more details about
it -RG)
RG:
"No Such Thing As An Antidepressant" is the title of one of the
chapters of Peter Breggin's book The Antidepressant Factbook. Breggin
writes, "Is it possible that there is no such thing as a genuine antidepressant?
Before the scientific data had confirmed my suspicions, I doubted that
a drug could actually 'treat' depression. After all, if depression is
a product of our conflicts, stressful life experiences, and stifled choices,
a drug would have no direct effect on treating it. Meanwhile, study after
study has confirmed that antidepressants typically perform only a little
better than sugar pills. In some studies, antidepressants actually turn
out to be less effective than the lowly sugar pill." Breggin then goes
on to cite the clinical data in a review of the performance of seven antidepressants
in 45 clinical trials. Is there such a thing as an antidepressant drug
and is controlled clinical testing anyway for us to answer this question?
DH:
The Breggin line that there is no such thing as an antidepressant
because depression arises from conflicts and you couldn't expect a drug
to treat that does not follow a coherent medical logic. The problem with
a wide variety of nervous states we are faced with is that we don't know
the origins of these. To say that they arise from conflicts is too simplistic.
But
even if they did arise from conflicts it is not clear that an entirely
artificial solution that had little to do with conflicts wouldn't be a
way of treating the problem. In many medical states from broken legs through
to cardiac problems the answer may be to insert something artificial like
a metal plate or a plastic valve in order to produce a new modus vivendi
(manner of living). The origins of these problems are not a deficiency
of metal in the leg or plastic in the heart but the metal in one case
and the plastic in another may provide a workable solution. However, having
said this antidepressants are not a cure in the sense that they do not
correct either the biological abnormality that may be involved in depression
or event the biological predisposition to depression. Some antidepressants
are energy enhancing. Others like Zoloft, Prozac and Paxil are more anxiolytic
(anxiety relieving). This may or may not be helpful thing to do in the
case of someone who is depressed.
Controlled
clinical testing doesn't answer the question of whether there is such
a thing as an antidepressant or not. What trials do is to show whether
a drug can do something or not. Whether it is wise to then do that something
or not is an entirely separate question and it is probably the case that
many clinicians don't take the time to make a clear decision as to the
wisdom of using an antidepressant in the case of each of the patients
that they ultimately go on to prescribe for. The overwhelming majority
of who are prescribed antidepressants are at little or no risk for suicide
or other adverse outcomes from their nervous state. Treatment runs the
risk of stigmatizing the person as well as giving them problems that they
didn't have to being with.
RG:
I'm looking at a copy of the August 2001 issue of Primary Psychiatry.
Of course, it's filled with psychiatric drug ads almost exclusively featuring
middle-aged and older female models. Most of the models are smiling widely
because of the happy pills they are on (Effexor, Risperdal, Remeron, Celexa,
Vivactil). The Zoloft add features a portrait painting of a female face
filled with anxiety and depression. The Paxil ad features a model whose
face is filled with anxiety and worry, obviously because she hasn't had
a prescription filled for her happy pill yet (Of course, there is no suicide
warning anywhere to be found in the ad, which I assume is now required
by law in the UK). There is one ad featuring a male model for the narcolepsy
drug Provigil. In one frame the professional looking male model with thick
glasses is overcome with fatigue. In the next frame he is as happy as
can be with a wide smile across his face.
Has the aggressive
marketing of psychiatric drugs as happy pills (to the general public as
well as doctor's in professional journals) over the past decade and-a-half
turned MD's into Dr. Feelgoods?
DH:
I spend a good deal of time cutting out adverts for psychotropic drugs
to use to illustrate my talks. The marketing of psychiatric drugs and
the change of climate that this marketing brings about has turned what
used to be physicians into what lawyers now refer to as pharmacologists.
It has become standard practice in the US for you to get your drugs from
a pharmacologist and to get therapy from a psychologist or counselor paid
at a lower rate. This split is, I would have thought, disastrous. It means
that the people who monitor the impact of therapy on you are not trained
at all to know about the hazards of that therapy.
RG:
Out of curiosity, I wonder if you have any analysis and/or opinion about
Loren Mosher's Soteria experiment (This was an experiment in drug-free
psychiatric treatment conducted under the auspices of the National Institute
of Mental Health during the '70s. The experiment went well by all accounts.
It's just that not only was Soteria drug-free, but Mosher staffed the
experiment with non-professional counselors. Soteria was quickly defunded
and forgotten by the late '70s). I bring this up because I don't recall
it being mentioned in The Anti-depressant Era and it is a case often brought
up by critics of the politicization of clinical testing in psychiatry
(The most recent example being Robert Whitaker's book Mad In America).
DH:
Unfortunately, although I have recently met Loren Mosher, I haven't
analyzed or come up with a view on the Soteria experiment. This is an
omission, particularly in the light of the fact that I have a new book
out from Harvard University Press this month on the antipsychotics called
The Creation of Psychopharmacology. It picks up many of the issues touched
on in a variety of your questions but unfortunately not Mosher's Soteria
Experiment.
It
sounds like Whittaker's book Mad in America is one that I need to get.
RG:
At the press conference announcing your lawsuit against the University
of Toronto and the CAMH, you said that any punative damages you might
win in your suit would be put into an academic trust fund. The reaction
to the events of September 11 has lead to new threats to academic freedom.
For example, a Palestinian professor was recently fired from his tenured
position at the University of South Florida and calls for the firing of
University of Texas journalism professor Robert Jensen soley for his anti-war
beliefs have been made (here in Seattle by right-wing talk radio host
Michael Medved). How would such an academic freedom trust fund be made
available to professors who believe their academic freedom has been violated?
DH:
I have no idea how academics suffering from violations of academic freedom
post-September the 11th would be able to access an Academic Freedom Trust
Fund into which I've made contributions. I have no idea for the simple
reason that if there is money that results from the lawsuit I will be
handing it over to others to manage and would not wish to have any say
on how it should be accessed or who should be able to access it. My plans
would be to walk away from the management of any such funds so that no
one could argue that I was using it to further my own ends.
The CAMH
Lecture
RG:
In The Antidepressant Era you took exception to Breggin's argument in
Toxic Psychiatry that pharmaceutical companies exercise undue influence
over research and the medical literature that gets published. Has your
treatment by the CAMH changed your position on the influence of the pharmaceutical
industry over research and academic freedom in publication?
DH:
The Antidepressant Era is all about the extraordinary influence
that pharmaceutical companies can have over research and the medical literature.
The difference between the position I take in this book and Peter Breggin's
argument is that I believe that psychotropic drugs can be helpful where
he seems to think that physical treatments generally are both unhelpful
and ethically dubious. My treatment by the CAMH hasn't altered my perceptions
on this issue.
RG:
At the beginning of the CAMH lecture you mentioned a couple of the crucial
laws passed during the 20th century that were landmarks in the "War On
Drugs" here in the United States (The 1914 Harrison Narcotics Act, which
made the opiates and cocaine available by prescription only and the 1951
Humphrey-Durham Amendment to the 1938 Food, Drugs and Cosmetics Act, which
made the new antibiotics, anihypertensives, antipsychotics, antidepressants,
anxiolytics and other drugs, available by prescription only).
I argue I
should have the right to go across the street to the coffee shop I frequent
and have my afternoon cup of coffee spiked with 5 mg of Ritalin or 5 mg
of Prozac or 5 mg of Remeron or 5 mg of Cocaine or whatever I want. It's
laws like the one mentioned above that stand in the way of me being able
to do this. Furthermore, my government shouldn't be granting exclusive
patents over drugs I paid to develop. Public Citizen has pointed out that
the majority of the costs of brining a prescription drug to the market
is put up by tax payers and our reward for this is to have to pay the
extortionately high prices for drugs made possible by exclusive patents.
In a decriminalized free market, I don't have to pay the Mob's high drug
prices or have the blessing of a doctor to take a drug. I can report any
adverse event I might experience to a doctor without fear of legal sanction
against me. If the FDA made adverse event reporting mandatory for doctors
and adverse event forms widely available to the public for the purpose
of voluntary reporting, then researchers could probably get more good
data on drugs than they currently do from the clinical testing controlled
by the pharmaceutical industry.
What is your
opinion of a free market for drugs (I ask because you mentioned in The
Antidepressant Era the fact that you could prescribe anything you want
for yourself while your patients don't have this privilege)?
DH:
My use of the idea of making all these drugs available over the counter
was as a thought experiment to try and bring home to people how much prescription
only status channels us down a disease model. This shows up clearly in
the difference between the marketing of St John's Wort and the marketing
of Prozac. You can get St John's Wort to treat yourself for stress and
burnout, to get Prozac you have to be made depressed. There are implications
for this.
There
are a whole lot of other ways to solve many of the problems we have however.
One would be to insist that pharmaceutical companies have to make their
data and not just their trials publicly available. It would be a simple
matter to say that the data is inherently unscientific while it remains
proprietary. There is no other branch of science in which the raw data
remains inaccessible to investigators generally and indeed essentially
to the public.
The
whole area of how to handle drug misuse etc. is a complex and fraught
one. I see my role in the debate as trying to bring certain angles of
the problem to light, angles that are not ordinarily commented on. I don't
presume to know the answers.
RG
(The following are two question for Healy that are answered below)
"Coming from my perspective the antipsychiatry arguments that madness
does not really exist are simply wrong." All right, then define what a
mental disorder is. Your colleagues at the American Psychiatric Association
haven't helped with this issue with each new edition of their burgeoning
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Having read about
a third of the DSM-IV-TR so far, it's easy to see the politics and difficult
to see the science driving the most popular diagnoses such as AD/HD for
unruly school boys, Delusional Disorder of both the Grandiose and Persecutory
Type for the homeless or JFK assassination conspiracy buffs, Generalized
Anxiety Disorder for middle and upper income women, etc., etc.,.
"In the same
way fear of God was once seen as a good thing that held social order in
place. The fear then became anxiety and anxiety disorders - something
to treat. What this shows is that there are forces at play, that can change
not only the kinds of drugs we give, not only the conditions we think
we are treating, but our very selves who are doing the giving. Forces
that can change us more profoundly than we can be changed by a handful
of LSD containing dust," you said near the end of the CAMH lecture. You
are sounding a lot like Thomas Szasz here (author of the "Myth of Mental
Illness") yet you don't see eye to eye with him on the existence of madness.
I mean something like the above quote suggests that mental disorder has
been invented to replace the Church in managing social order, i.e. Szasz's
"Therapeutic State." Elaborate further on what mean by the above quote
because something like it could confuse people about your position on
these issues.
DH:
In the case of Thomas Szasz he was arguing that it was unreasonable to
say that psychoneuroses were diseases. I agree with him. However I have
not been a psychotherapist earning my living out of treating minor mental
disorders. I'm at the coalface in a District General Hospital setting
managing psychoses. Many of these patients can end up in states of rigid
immobility that we know can last for months or years if left untreated.
Others are consumed by nihilistic delusions of various sorts. Yet others
have thought disorder of a kind that most clinical observers looking at
it have said indicates frontal lobe dysfunction. It is these states that
I am happy to say look like real diseases.
Saying
that these look like real diseases does not mean that they have to be
treated with physical means. I am happy to respect a person or their families
wish to leave the state untreated. I also believe that when we finally
understand the biological underpinnings of things this will put us in
a better position to know how to handle many of these states by non-physical
means. Genetic testing for disorders like phenylketonuria makes it possible
to avoid the damage that this illness causes by simply managing your diet
properly.
I
believe the real concern the antipsychiatrists had was not so much whether
mental illness was real or not, but rather a concern at the extension
of the psychiatric reach out into the community that took place in the
1960s. Who were these guys who were telling us how to live our lives -
what training do they have in how to live life.
If
you read The Creation of Psychopharmacology you realize that the
origins of operational criteria as found in DSMIII and IV etc are not
because the people who came up with the idea of operational criteria knew
what these diseases really were. Operational criteria are a confession
of ignorance. They do not legitimate the existence of any of the disease
entities that people are particularly keen about nowadays.
RG:
One of the more controversial aspects of the CAMH lecture was
your assertion that psychiatric patients in Britain are being detained
at 3 times the rate today than they were 50 years ago. What prompted me
to contact you was a report about suicide in the UK I read at Organon's
website back in January (Organon is the manufacturer of Remeron).
The report stated that the number of patients being admitted to John Radcliffe
Hospital in Oxfordshire for self inflicted harm had increased from 1,000
per year in 1990 to 1,600 per year by the end of the decade. The annual
suicide rate for men aged 15-24 in the UK increased from 10 deaths per
1,000 in 1983 to 15 deaths per 1,000 in 1992. Today the suicide rate for
young men in the UK is double what it was in 1968. Do these kinds of statistics
buttress your argument that psychiatrists now have more patients in their
care than ever before? Could one argue that this is an example of treatment
failure on the part of psychiatry (The 60 percent increase in suicide
admissions at one hospital in the UK during the '90s, a decade when medical
science had purportedly made on revolutionary pharmacological break through
after another in the treatment of depression, hardly comes across as something
for psychiatry and the pharmaceutical industry to write home about, much
less to use as the basis for bankrolling awareness campaigns about the
need for people to seek "treatment" for depression)?
(Healy provided
me with the text of a lecture he gave at the University of Toronto a year
ago. This lecture went over the statistical data underlying Healy's claim
that psychiatrists are treating more patients than ever before. It compares
admission statistics at North Wales Hospital in 1896 to 1996. The implications
from the data are clear enough. Patients in 1996 were being discharged
from the hospital with prescriptions for neuroleptic and antidepressant
drugs that can cause agitation and suicidal ideation. This may be the
reason why the 1996 patients have much higher suicide rates than the 1896
patients. The most embarrassing implication of all for modern psychiatry
is that psychiatric patients of 1896 may very well have had better outcomes
in the area of death rates than patients of 1996 when the lack of antibiotics
in 1896 are taken into account. One conclusion to draw from this data
is clear: psychiatric patients at North Wales Hospital in 1896 were dying
primarily from physical causes while a century later they were dying far
more often from self inflicted harm. A major indictment of the claim that
the past half-century has been a golden age in the treatment of psychiatric
illness. I would recommend everybody interested in this subject to e-mail
Healy for a word copy of this interesting lecture at: Healy_Hergest@compuserve.com.)
RG:
You noted the unceremonious retirement of Thorazine's co-discoverer Jean
Delay. His office was ransacked during the May 1968 strikes and protests
in Paris and that at the time "he has no sympathy for the new world, in
which students can expect to address the professors in informal terms."
You go on to argue that "Both psychiatry and antipsychiatry were swept
away by a new corporate psychiatry. Galbraith argues that we no longer
have free markets; corporations work out what they have to sell and then
prepare the market so that we will want those products. It works for cars,
oil, and everything else, why would it not work for psychiatry? Prescription
only status makes the psychiatric market easier than almost any other
market - only a comparatively few hearts and minds need to be won."
Do you think
your firing by the CAMH and your suspicions that Eli Lilly had a hand
in it vindicates your argument about the take over of the profession by
what you call corporate psychiatry?
DH:
I have never voiced suspicions that Eli Lilly had a hand in my
firing from CAMH. Lots of other people have voiced those suspicions. Yet
others again have made strong cases for the possibilities that Pfizer
or SmithKline may have brought influence to bear on this issue.
It's
a bit too early to judge whether my firing by CAMH gives a good indication
of where the profession of psychiatry generally is at. Leaving my case
aside however I think the takeover by corporate psychiatry is fairly complete
at this point in time.
Revised September 4, 2007
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