Pubdate: Sat, 17 Jun 2000 Source: New Scientist (UK) Page: 49 Copyright: New Scientist, RBI Limited 2000 Contact: Reed Business Info Ltd, 151 Wardour St, London W1V 4BN, England Fax: +44-20-7331 2777 Feedback: http://www.newscientist.com/letters/reply.jsp Website: http://www.newscientist.com/ Author: Nell Boyce - First Person MIND GAMES SNOOPY is suddenly gripped by a wave of anxiety. But it's OK, he realises, there's a simple way to feel better-lie with your head in your water dish. "This is hushed up, of course, because it would completely ruin the drug companies," says Snoopy. When one of the speakers at the Mind Aid conference showed the Snoopy strip, the audience laughed. I cringed. I'd gone to New York City not knowing what to expect, but intrigued by the claim that neuroscientists and critics of psychiatry would be debating the biomedical model of mental illness. Given that in the US some 4 per cent of schoolchildren take Ritalin and millions of adults take antidepressants daily, it seemed a good time to start asking how far social problems are being turned into medical problems. But only about twenty other people turned up, and they seemed to have already made up their minds. For them, the idea that mental illness is a "brain disease" is a lie perpetrated by uncaring psychiatrists colluding with greedy drugs manufacturers to exert social control over "unacceptable" behaviours. It's a view that dates back to such sixties dissidents as Thomas Szasz and R. D. Laing, who argued that schizophrenia and depression are social labels and not medical diagnoses. So it's not schizophrenic delusions you get, but "spiritual visions". The few medical researchers who'd come to the conference clearly hadn't cottoned on to the Mind Aid agenda. "This conference was a setup," said Eliot Gardner of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, who'd just presented a lecture arguing passionately that drug addiction was down to biological susceptibility, not moral weakness. To the audience's delight, the next speaker, Stanton Peele, ridiculed the role of biology in mental illness, urging that the disease model is an excuse for not being able to understand human behaviours. And that set the pattern. Scientific research followed by polemic against the biological model, followed by wild clapping from the tiny audience. In between talks, members of the audience would approach scientists with harrowing tales of misdiagnosis and mistreatment by their psychiatrists. It was easy to see why they believed psychiatric drugs were evil: now they were drug-free and doing fine. But as Daniel Javitt of the Nathans Kline Institute in New York state gently pointed out to one woman, many people wouldn't do fine. "There are ones left behind," Javitt said sadly. I saw one of them later that day, on the streets outside the conference. He was unkempt and talking wildly to himself. I moved to the other side of the sidewalk. I have a hard time buying that this obviously schizophrenic man was experiencing valuable "spiritual visions". On the other hand, I know someone whose doctor offered her antidepressants as if her husband's recent death was some curable disease. The Mind Aid organisers have a good point: psychiatry is bound up with our social and cultural values. After all, it wasn't too long ago that homosexuality was deemed a mental illness. So how do we decide who needs to take psychotropic drugs? I wish more people had come to the Mind Aid conference to honestly debate these issues and work out how to preserve health without compromising humanity. - ---