Talk:Psychiatry/Archive 3
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Facts
On January 28, I made a plea for some citations in the "Other criticisms" section. Today, David Kernow has done the same. Both of us it would seem have done this out of deference to providing multiple points of view. While I do not doubt that the claims being made in this section could be true, we really need someone to provide citations. There are so many instances of vague wording as to call into question the veracity of the claims: "some believe...", "there is evidence this leads...", "according to critics...", etc. The wording of these phrases indicates that some research or review has been done, and therefore a reference must exist somewhere. However if citations cannot be provided, these claims will have to be removed. So, for the anti-psychiatry-minded, could you guys please provide these sources? Semiconscious • talk 19:15, 21 February 2006 (UTC)
- Hi I'm not just anti-psychiatry minded but I've added some citations. I'm sorry but I cannot yet get to grips with how to do this properly, and link cites to full references, despite trying to read the help pages on it.Franzio 11:52, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
Hi, I've just done some brief research on the supposed 'effacity' of ECT as a treatment for depression disorders (and the oft-mistreated condition of schizophrenia), and would like to request information on the positive results of ECT treatment. I've found much negative about the treatment, including long-term memory loss AND http://www.healthyplace.com/communities/Bipolar/news_2005/book_1.asp, wholesale abuse [1] and the real results of the treatment [2] but NONE for positive results, other than doctors who are pro-ECT stating that it 'works', but with no physical evidence to back the statements up.
As a result of this, I am proposing that the statement which mentions ECT as an effacious treatment be modified as soon as is reasonable to do-so. Gotheek 00:31, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
- Hi, there's actually quite a bit of data on ECT's effectiveness. For instance, here's a meta-analysis from the Lancet which shows the efficacy of ECT over "sham" ECT in 6 trials and over pharmacotherapy in 18 trials:
- "Efficacy and safety of electroconvulsive therapy in depressive disorders: a systematic review and meta-analysis." Lancet 2003 Mar 8;361(9360):799-808.
- I noted that all of your sources above are regular webpages -- in case you don't know, nearly all medical references can be found at http://www.pubmed.com. I found the above link by just searching on the terms "efficacy electroconvulsive therapy" Scot →Talk 01:56, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
Teaching/training details
I may have missed it but could anyone clarify what specialist training psychiatrists receive? This would seem to to be part of the core of what modern psychiatry is. I know the article mentions the different areas of practical experience. But, for example, how much teaching is there on the various lines of work on mental health (e.g. genetic, neurological/psychological, social). How much teaching and training on medication, how much on psychosocial interventions esp. particular ones like Cognitive Behavioural Therapy? How much on general counselling skills? Who does the training? Franzio 11:52, 1 March 2006 (UTC)
- Good point, Franzio -- the article could include more specifics about the training. I'm actually in a psychiatry training program in the US now, so I'll see if I can dig up my copy of the ACGME (Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education) requirements for US psych residency programs and summarize them briefly. Scot →Talk 07:13, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
Psychiatric trainees are generally in full-time medical practice and in the UK would have one day a week to attend lectures and other educational events: which means that, unlike old-style undergraduates, they have to derive the bulk of their information from their individual reading, and also from their experiences and discussions at work, rather than from lectures. Although there would be an examination syllabus, generally expressed in broad terms, there would be no prescribed textbooks and so the balance of the learning achieved would depend on the individual's interests and aptitude as well as on colleagues, superiors and the kinds of patients treated and methods used in the particular series of departments to which they happen to be allocated. This would be as true of other kinds of medical specialties, and also other professions which are studied "on the job," such as accountancy, management and clinical psychology.
In the UK it used to be common for psychiatric trainees to have several years of supervision for psychodynamic psychotherapy, and less commonly group therapy, but nowadays brief psychotherapies and a variety of psychological techniques would also be taught, depending on the availability of trainers: which may be the limiting factor. The trainers would be those who do a lot of this kind of work and have time free for teaching: who may be full-time psychotherapists, psychiatrists or psychologists, or less often nurses or occupational therapists. In the National Health Service the more time-consuming therapies may be given largely by trainees at various levels, with supervision by a fully trained therapist. Personal analysis is rarely undergone except by those who are specifically training as psychotherapists or (rarely) psychoanalysts: it may still be commoner for intending child than adult psychiatrists. Family therapy is mainly found in child psychiatry departments: full training would take four years and would involve an outside institute, as with group therapy and some forms of individual psychotherapy. Hypnosis has almost died out, except in the guise of "relaxation therapy."
As regards medication, information on drugs comes to doctors constantly from all directions, from both industry and government-backed sources as well as the books and journals a trainee would read, and lectures would account for only a part of this.
Psychiatry in the UK is much more highly regulated than other branches of medicine, so hearings and tribunals are frequently held for detained inpatients, as well as other kinds of review meetings with outside participation for a wider range of clients, and so psychiatrists have to keep abreast of changes in details of the law: there is a specific accreditation for this.
The more biological side of psychiatry has been less well taught in the UK since the 1970s: previously, there was a two year diploma course in psychological medicine (DPM) which some neurologists also took, which required more neuroscience at the beginning and neurology at the end than does the current membership examination of the Royal College of Psychiatrists. A proportion of psychiatrists had previously trained and qualified in internal medicine: this is now uncommon, but more have gone through general practice training first - which may also stop with the forthcoming reorganisation of postgraduate medical education. NRPanikker 00:43, 13 November 2006 (UTC)
- One of the peculiarity of the psychiatry is that psychiatrists are thought how to treat patients when they are not in agreement, in a specific course called "patients management". The very strange part is that psychiatrists are thought to fraud the patients, lie at them and to use the force, instead of searching the better therapy for the patients. -- 82.54.154.105 20:12, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
This is one of the worst articles I've ever read on wikipedia. There's a feud taking place here. I'm never been in defence of Psychiatry, but what is going here is ridiculous. First you teel what it is, then you made critics. The article begins severely criticizing psychiatrists, but the theme is not apropriately discussed before. I suggest merging all critics at the end, and blocking the page for anonimous editing.
Nurse & Pharmacist prescribing
I think the introductory statement about only doctors (incl. consultants) being able to prescribe in the UK isn't accurate, not clear if it's referring only to psychiatric drugs. Qualified and registered nurses and pharmacists have had limited prescribing powers for a number of years, which are currently being extended - I'm not sure on the exact situation with regard to psychiatric drugs so will leave any amendments to others who are. Franzio 18:53, 2 March 2006 (UTC)
I've edited to avoid the possible error. See UK Dept of Health but still not entirely clear on current practice. Franzio 18:04, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
POV tags and self-reference
I removed some POV-section tags. There is no attempt being made at resolving whatever POV dispute there was originally.
I also removed a self-referential remark about Wikipedia's anti-psychiatry article. Please review Wikipedia:Avoid self-references if this is problematic.
The section "improvements and criticisms" contains a few named references with no further details in the "references" section. This is not acceptable. Could the person who inserted this material please WP:CITE. JFW | T@lk 04:56, 12 March 2006 (UTC)
- I posted the POV-section tags in the Psychiatry article because someone posted a tag in the main Anti-psychiatry article (which I doubt it is fair). I hope someone will remove that tag too! Cesar Tort.
The assertion that "cures are not expected in psychiatry" is WP:NOR. What is this highly speculative statement based on?
The reference to the anti-psychiatry article is a self-reference. What part of the above-quoted policy don't you understand? JFW | T@lk 19:55, 12 March 2006 (UTC)
- It is said that there is no cure for mental illness, so cures are not expected in psychiatry. --WikiCats 02:35, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
-
- Is a an WHO reference enough good? in the world health report 2001, titled A Public Health Approach to Mental Health [3] (should be also a better version in pdf somewhere) it is explicitly said that the aim is to increase the people under therapy, not to cure people. And it is a little bit strange that they can know the number of people that are affected, if they have not make diagnoses. To a sceptical point of view, may be clear enough that, saying in this way, the alleged number of 450 million people suffering [...] is more an aim rather then a fact proved by scientific criteria. Perhaps one should conclude that somebody have done some calculations and found out the with that amount of alleged mental ill people, the industry of the psychiatry (including not only psychiatrists, but also pharmacological industries and other people and company that increase their earning when new patient are labelled as such) will make enough profit. -- 82.54.154.105 20:25, 8 March 2007 (UTC)
"It is said" does not really satisfy WP:CITE. As an aside, complete response does actually occur in psychiatry, although admittedly not as often as one would like. JFW | T@lk 04:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
- Just to clarify:
- The statement “cures are not expected in psychiatry” is not true except in most cases. And in the case of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder it is completely true.
- On the issue of citations who would you accept as a reliable source? --WikiCats 08:36, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
Also, the statement that "psychiatry is the only branch of medicine in which cures are not expected" is false -- chronic, non-curable conditions are found in nearly all branches of medicine -- what's the cure for diabetes? Asthma? Lupus? Presbyopia? Psoriasis? Congestive Heart Failure? Scot →Talk 07:45, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
- I assume the named references to which you refer are those I inserted at someone elses request, as you can see above. I wasn't sure about the procedures for full refs, seems to vary from page to page. In the end I managed to add them to the antipsychiatry page, and then didn't want to add them here because there were only about two references and it didn't seem right to have more critical references than main psychiatry ones! Please do as you wish with them. Franzio 18:12, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
The article states that "psychiatry when practised properly offers a truly holistic approach to patient care" in the intro. At no point later is there anything that supports this claim. What is meant by a "holistic approch"? Holism is the practice of treating "all the properties of a given system". Is there anything supporting this claim that psychiarty is or should be practiced in a "holistic" manner? Does anyone have any cites in current popular psych texts? -- 2006 May 29.
I removed that claim, as it is unfounded and very hard to believe. Anarchist42 17:44, 29 May 2006 (UTC)
Deleted page?
What's going on, this page isn't existing at the moment? --Horses In The Sky 23:08, 13 March 2006 (UTC)
Pharmaceutical Industry criticism paragraph
Regarding this paragraph, from the "Improvements and Criticisms" section:
Drug companies spend large amounts of money marketing drugs. There is evidence this leads some physicians to prescribe more drugs and to prefer advertised drugs instead of more appropriate, better, or cheaper drugs (or prescribing them when drugs are not needed at all). A 2005 UK cross-party parliamentary inquiry into the influence of the pharmaceutical industry details some of the evidence. The inquiry concludes, amongst other things, that (Pg 100) 'The influence of the pharmaceutical industry is such that it dominates clinical practice" and there are serious regulatory failings resulting in (Pg 101) "The unsafe use of drugs; and the increasing medicalisation of society." There is also a list of scientific and other references provided by the campaign organization No Free Lunch, detailing the prevalence and consequences of the acceptance by medical professionals of gifts from pharmaceutical companies.
This is an interesting topic, and a discussion of the inappropriate reach of Big Pharma into medical practice may belong somewhere -- but it's not specific to psychiatry and so doesn't really belong here. I'm going to delete it from here if there are no objections. Scot →Talk 07:08, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
- There are a lot of people on Wikipedia who think it's awfully unethical to make money developing drugs that potentially benefit millions of people. They have a particular peeve for psychopharmaceuticals. JFW | T@lk 07:11, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
Hi Scot, I don't object to it being deleted, but it's frustrating (although not your fault) when sources for such statements were requested (see 'facts' above) but then when provided the topic becomes unsuitable. Both those sources provide information about specifically psychiatric issues, and this does appear to be the area where the use of medical drugs is most questioned and their use under force and non-consent is most frequent. The recent debacles over non-disclosed data regarding suicide and withdrawal symptoms linked to some SSRI antidepressants, leading to increased black box warnings and removal of recommendation for some or all age groups, and a huge public issue. Those links in the text include information specific to psychiatry if you want to just provide that, rather than deleting entirely. Also see Perlis et al. (2005) Industry Sponsorship and Financial Conflict of Interest in the Reporting of Clinical Trials in Psychiatry. American Journal of Psychiatry 162:1957-1960. But as I say I won't personally object if it isn't covered here in this way.
I would say to JFW that your comments misrepresent those who are concerned about adverse effects, regulations, and the influence of the pharmaceutical industry. Franzio 08:19, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
- Franzio, I am concerned about adverse effects, regulations and influence like you are, but there is a strong anti-pharma sentiment on Wikipedia. If I was in charge, I would insist that clinical trials are conducted by independent research organisations who have no stake in the outcome. But don't blame pharmaceutical companies for apathy at the regulatory authorities. Adverse effects are a reality of medicine, and coverups are unacceptable, but there are many circumstances where the benefit of a drug massively outweighs the risk of adverse events. If a paranoid schizophrenic is treated, he may develop tardive diskinesia. If he is not treated, he may go into a catatonic state, harm himself or many others. That is a clinical decision.
- I state again that we should stop slamming pharmaceutical companies for developing drugs. If there are unethical practices, these need to be addressed on a factual and reasonable basis and without breathless conspiracy theories. JFW | T@lk 11:36, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
JFW, I merely suggest that these are issues that deserve balanced representation and not exclusion or caricature. They relate to more than apathy or clinical risk/benefit ratios, and I agree they must be addressed on a factual and reasonable basis - by everyone.
The whole paragraph has been deleted now anyway, with nothing back in its place to mention anything about the issue, so presumably that's OK and the conspiracy against psychiatry and pharma companies has been thwarted again. Franzio 17:54, 18 March 2006 (UTC)
- For the record, the disputed text is available almost word-for-word in the anti-psychiatry page, thus if anyone did want to briefly mention the subject in this article, i would propose referring them to the other article for more detail. The Truth is Out There etc. Rockpocket 23:57, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
“cures are not expected in psychiatry”
The article is written in such a way as to give the impression that psychiatry cures schizophrenia and bipolar disorder.
Many disabled can go for many years of treatment under psychiatry and still be no closer to cure than the day they were first diagnosed. This should be stated up front.
I propose this statement: “In the two major disabilities treated, schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, psychiatry has been unable to produce a cure.”
For schizophrenia, this reference[4] from the National Mental Health Association says, “No cure for schizophrenia has been discovered”.
On bipolar, this reference[5] from the National Institute of Mental Health (the Federal agency for research on mental disorders) says, “…it is important to understand that bipolar disorder is a long-term illness that currently has no cure.” --WikiCats 09:31, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
- You are incorrect. Nowhere does the article claim psychiatry cures anything. Your proposed sentence, even if factually correct, does injustice to the fact that without psychiatric treatment these people would cause immeasurable harm to themselves or others. There are hunderds of medical conditions without a cure. In none of the related articles does Wikipedia state so prominently in the intro: "Oh, by the way, apart from a transplant (for which most patients are not elegible) there is no cure for heart failure." You're grinding an axe, aren't you? JFW | T@lk 11:36, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
The original objection was that there had to be citations. Now that I have given citations and quoted what I was told:- “Of course there is no cure for the conditions…”, there are more conditions.
These are emotive objections, but we need to object on the basis of Wiki guidelines. --WikiCats 11:55, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
- What exactly are you trying to achieve? Have a brief look at neurology. Most neurological conditions are incurable. Psychiatry does not stand out enough to warrant the kind of treatment you are giving it.
- I reserve the right to give additional objections. Whether that is emotive or not is your assertion and of nil relevance to the actual discussion. JFW | T@lk 12:07, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
Is the purpose of Wikipedia to exclude any point of view that is not complementary to psychiatry? --WikiCats 12:39, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
I am happy to qualify the the contribution as:
“Psychiatry is an essential science, but for the two major disabilities treated, schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, it has been unable to produce a cure.” --WikiCats 12:52, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
There might be a million good reasons why this should be covered up but at the end of the day the disabled, their families and people in general have the right to know the facts. And this is factual. --WikiCats 13:30, 15 March 2006 (UTC)
- "Neurology is an essential science, but for the two major disabilities treated, stroke and epilepsy, it has been unable to produce a cure". Please, WikiCats, why can't you address my arguments? JFW | T@lk 05:33, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
Sure. If there are other medical disciplines in Wikipedia that don’t have cures, then this should be clearly stated. These articles should be looked at. This is basic information that needs to be included. This is an information encyclopedia. If patients research this encyclopedia for information then they have a right to expect to find all the facts. --WikiCats 06:28, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
- No, this is not basic information. It is a biased statement that can easily be taken as a personal criticism; "hey, look at those head shrinkers, they can't even cure the most common conditions they work with". I remain strongly against its inclusion. If you find this unacceptable, please consider a request for comments to clarify community opinion. JFW | T@lk 11:08, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
Are you saying that information like “Psychiatry does not cure schizophrenia[6] or bipolar disorder[7] ” is something the disabled, their families and people in general do not have the right to know? --WikiCats 11:32, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
Your withdrawal from consensus is respected. --WikiCats 12:21, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
- This has nothing to do with the "right to know". This information is notable and belongs on schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. But to state it here, prominently, is a clear example of POV.
- WikiCats, where is the consensus you are referring to? Have you reviewed Wikipedia:Concensus? If you are looking for consensus, we will definitely need an RFC. In fact, I will file one now and see how we stand[8]. JFW | T@lk 20:21, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
Disclaimers: Non-medical, advocate, layperson speaking here, knowledgeable about Tourette syndrome. Just some of my thoughts, because I completely agree with JFW that this discussion is not properly framed vis-a-vis the word "cure". With neuropsychiatric disorders, that is a problematic word. The example I know best is Tourette syndrome. MOST children with tics outgrow them as they pass through adolescence, and symptoms may remit to the point that DSM criterion are no longer met in adulthood. But, since persons with TS still carry the same underlying genetic difference or vulnerability, even if they show no symptoms, what is the meaning/relevance of the word "cure" in this context? Another recent example: highly-publicized claims that Deep brain stimulation "cures" Tourette's. Well, it *may* stop symptoms for some people, but if you remove the batteries, you still have tics, so again, what is the relevance of the word "cure"? People with bipolar or schizophrenia can achieve stabilization with medication, so again, why focus on the word "cure" -- isn't it more relevant to know if the person can function with the condition? Like living with cancer or asthma or diabetes? We don't necessarily "cure" asthma -- we treat it so the person can live with it. We don't "cure" diabetes -- we treat it so the person can live well. Why the focus on "cure" here? It is POV. We don't "cure" lots of medical conditions, and you can't "cure" your genetic makeup anyway. One problem with the anti-psychiatry movement, which is prevalent on internet support message boards for neuropsychiatric conditions, is that if often promotes anecdotal, alarming information (not always presented with scientific accuracy) to frighten people away from meds, without always presenting viable alternatives for those who truly need meds (e.g.; schizophrenia, bipolar, severe tics). Another example from the realm of Tourette's: the alarming side effects of neuroleptic medications are often highlighted, without noting that, for most people with tics, the dosage of neuroleptics used is far lower than those used for schizophrenia or employed in most studies, so the alarmist info isn't always relevant. POV is an issue, and scientific relevance and accuracy should be established for many anti-psychiatry claims. Sandy 16:04, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
- I'll add my twopence here. Psychiatry is translated in the article as 'healer (iatros) of the spirit (psyche)'. Psuche, as used by Aristotle, means the soul, otherwise known as the Astral body, the place of emotions, and our everyday mental functioning. This was declared an anathema by the Church in 769 at the 8th Ecumenical council. As a result, there is no separate place for emotions, and a two way split of mind (officially located in the rational soul, although in practice the higher faculties of the rational soul are not readily available, requiring effort to actualise) and body, instead of soul and body is created. As a result of the enlightenment, the existence of the rational soul was no longer accepted, so there is now no place for emotions or mind other than the brain. This forms the cultural backdrop for psychiatry. The question one has to ask is which version is true. Hard experience has convinced me that the original version - that we really are 'ghosts in the machine', is the true one, and once you have seen that it becomes obvious why psychiatry offers nothing but descriptive diagnoses, is trying wihtout success to find mental illness on brain scans, and cannot achieve a cure - with all due respect to the many genuine people who are trying to do this. It is looking in the wrong place. Aniksker 11:39, 12 December 2006 (UTC)
I commend Aniksker for his clear and concise input. His point is 100% accurate and extremely helpful in understanding the situation. History is filled with research that ended without results. Astrology, numerology, alchemy and countless others were all once thought factual. In the future, psychiatry will join these, and resultantly (as a side note) comments like "If he is not treated, he may go into a catatonic state, harm himself or many others" are going to look similar to arguments for slavery in the US 150 years ago: psychiatric patients today are more often than not, the victims of abuse rather than anything like the other way around. I recognise that comparing psychiatry to astrology is a little in advance of the current level of awareness and hence my post might be deemed reactionary but I think we as a society are ready to step up to this level of understanding. Therefore allusions to the idea that psychiatry's principles are unfounded and the fact that their cures do not work should definitely appear in the opening paragraphs. Durashka123 21:41, 17 December 2006 (UTC)
Summary for RFC
I have been discussing, in the previous paragraph, WikiCats' addition of the statement that psychiatry cannot cure the two most common psychiatric conditions. I have objected that to state this prominently amounts to POV, as most medical conditions cannot be cured, only controlled, and that psychiatry is not the "odd one out" to the point that the article needs to mention this. Please offer your views. The relevant policies are WP:NPOV and, to a lesser extent, WP:NOR. JFW | T@lk 20:21, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
Comment
WikiCats has a perfectly valid point: there are currently no cures for schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, and these points should be clearly made. With that said, those points should be made on the schizophrenia and bipolar disorder pages. There are no cures for depression, amnesia, dementia, anorexia, alcohol abuse, drug abuse, etc. As JFW pointed out, other "main topic" medicine pages on wikipedia such as neurology, virology, immunology, etc. do not mention every major disease that has no cure.
One cannot be selectively inclusive in these matters. Perhaps there should be a link to list of mental illnesses without cures or something similar in the article, but there is no way such a list should be in the main article itself simply because it would add unnecessary clutter. Mentioning specifically that schizophrenia or bipolar disorder do not have cures in this article is a form of selection bias.
To address WikiCats's concern that "at the end of the day the disabled, their families and people in general have the right to know the facts": if someone has bipolar disorder they would likely visit that page before visiting psychiatry. On page psychiatry they should read a statement indicating the difficulty of providing cures for mental illnesses. On page bipolar disorder they will read about the specifics regarding their condition. Wikipedia is not a medical advice website. Semiconscious • talk 21:15, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
- It should be noted there are now three doctors objecting that the article be written with no criticism.
- The article is about Psychiatry, so it should state what psychiatry offers and what it does not offer.
- There is acknowledgment that this is a point of view. Blocking a point of view is preventing NPOV. --WikiCats 02:49, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
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- This article has criticism. Just not your criticism. The article already states how psychiatry is practiced, and you will concede that psychiatrists would aim for cure if the means were extant.
- NPOV presumes that the points of view are themselves (1) notable, (2) verifiable. Your criticism is being "blocked" because there appear to be very few people who criticise psychiatry for not finding a cure for mental illness. JFW | T@lk 02:56, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
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- Your comment that the main objectors are doctors is ad hominem. Please stick to the relevant facts, not the people. JFW | T@lk 02:59, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
The point is the request was put on the “Clinical and medical topics” page specifcally to attract doctors rather that in a dispute resolution process that was neutral. This is was plainly unfair. --WikiCats 04:23, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
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- I am not a Dr. and I find the statement POV, and lacking in relevance. Perhaps my comments above should have been placed below this discussion. Sandy 16:12, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
Personally I have not finished debating, why have you given up on the debate? --WikiCats 06:16, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
In the debates I am used to, different editors rewrite the contribution until everybody is happy, then there is consensus. You are the one that told me about this. Why don’t you think about it and put it in your words. If you want to put in qualifications, then do that. --WikiCats 08:23, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
- There is no need to rewrite the contribution. It shouldn't be there. What we are looking for is a statement such as the following: "Many psychiatric conditions are chronic, having a significant impact on the quality of life of patients and often decreasing life expectancy. [Person] has observed that cure is a rare commodity in psychiatry." This puts the onus on the conditions, rather than the field. This is only viable if you can find the [person] who has made this observation and is notable enough for this observation to be of relevance (e.g. president of the APA or AMA, professor of psychiatry of a prestigious medical school, statement by a nationwide patients' collective, E. Fuller Torrey, or whatever).
- I don't think you have much control over the way the debate takes place, despite what you are used to. As obvious from this reply, I'm still open to debate. What I'm looking for is an indication that the POV you are trying to work into the article is actually a notable POV. JFW | T@lk 10:55, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
Done. I am happy with that. --WikiCats 11:12, 17 March 2006 (UTC)
I propose that the contribution be:
“Many psychiatric conditions are chronic, having a significant impact on the quality of life of patients and often decreasing life expectancy. Complete response does occur in psychiatry, although not as often as would be hoped for.” --WikiCats 02:39, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
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- I'm not sure I agree with that phrasing. I would say *some* ... are chronic, etcetera. For reference, please read the prognosis section on Tourette syndrome. Sandy 16:12, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
- Sorry I've missed most of this discussion -- I think it's been a really good one. I agree, WikiCats, that the article was missing some information on prognosis, which should probably be covered more thoroughly in the "Mental Illness" article, but which the Psych article should also probably touch on. I also agree with JFW and Semiconscious that we should probably refrain from getting into treatments for specific conditions, or talk about the "curability" of specific conditions. Wiki, I'd like to expand your above-proposed passage a bit, to give a little more context on prognosis and the variability of treatment efficacy.
- So far the only passage in the article which talks about prognosis is the last paragraph in the "Practice of Psychiatry" section, starting with "Historically...". The following is meant to replace that paragraph:
Psychiatric illnesses can vary widely. While some psychiatric illnesses have short time courses and only minor symptoms, many are chronic conditions which have a significant impact on patients' quality of life and life expectancy, and as such require long-term or life-long treatment. Efficacy of treatment for any given condition is also variable from patient to patient, with some patients having complete resolution of symptoms and others unfortunately having poor or minimal response to even the strongest measures. In general, however, psychiatric treatments have improved significantly over the past several decades, beginning with the advent of psychiatric medications (see History section, below). In the past, psychiatric patients were often hospitalized for six months or more, with a significant number of cases involving hospitalization for many years. Today, most psychiatric patients are managed as outpatients. If hospitalization is required, the average hospital stay is around two to three weeks, with only a small number of cases involving long-term hospitalization.
I take strong issue with contributor Spark Plug.
Jfdwolff put forward his version of the contribution and I said “Done. I am happy with that.” So that was consensus.
Then consensus was ignored. Spark Plug, after not contributing to the debate for four days, decided to throw consensus out the window and restart the debate. We really need to follow the debate, and not have contempt for consensus. --WikiCats 17:02, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
- Well, as I said, I'm sorry for not being able to enter the debate sooner -- but I do have an opinion on the subject and I'd like to add it now. Do you have specific comments about the passage? Scot →Talk 19:53, 19 March 2006 (UTC)
The original contribution was removed with an objection. There was then detailed and vigorous debate.
The main objector then put forward his version of what the contribution should be and I agreed 100%. You chose not to assist.
I can not make any greater concession that full agreement with the principle objector.
What more do you want? --WikiCats 04:22, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
- I think Spark Plug's version is better than mine. I hope you meant "principal objector" - I may have principles but my objections are not the result of principle but policy. By the way, I'm still waiting for the "[person]" to cite as a representative for your POV. JFW | T@lk 16:54, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
I also think you're missing something fundamental about Wikipedia -- contributions and changes can be made by anyone, at anytime. Just because something is decided at a given point, doesn't mean someone can't come along in a week, or a month, or a year, and open up the whole discussion all over again. The only reason for something to stay in a certain form is that EVERYONE who cares agrees that it should be that way. I really didn't mean to hijack your debate -- I just had an opinion, that's all.
So again I ask -- do you have specific comments about the passage? Scot →Talk 01:11, 21 March 2006 (UTC) (aka Spark Plug)
(By the way -- just so there are no "sockpuppet" accusations -- I'm currently transitioning from Spark Plug to a new username, which reflects my real name: ScotG) Scot →Talk 01:11, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
Everyone should agree. I’m happy to comment.
The original contribution was one short phrase. The contribution by Jfdwolff was two sentences. This passage is 157 words to talk about a lot of things but it does not say clearly “cure is a rare commodity in psychiatry”.
I suggested to Jfdwolff that if he wanted to qualify the statement then I would agree to that. But I feel this is qualifications on top of qualifications and buries the original contribution.
The issue that I have always had is that Psychiatry seems to produce reams of jargon to ovoid saying exactly what they can offer and what they can not. I feel that this is what this passage does.
I want to say something that is clear like:
- “cure is a rare commodity in psychiatry” or
- “Complete response does occur in psychiatry, although not as often as would be hoped for.”
I have not written either of these comments. They are based on advice from by Jfdwolff.
If you want to include the proposed passage after a comment like one of these, then that is not a problem. --WikiCats 08:44, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
- I would not object to using Scot's paragraph with the addition: "Most conditions cannot be cured, and follow a chronic course." The definition of "chronic" is a condition that neither spontaneously resolve nor is curable in the practical sense.
- WikiCats, why are you in such a rush to have your addition inserted? What's taking place here is - in my view - a very focused content-oriented discussion. Whatever you are used to elsewhere, I hope you can muster the patience for us to work this out properly. JFW | T@lk 13:59, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
I have taken part in debates that have lasted for months. I am happy to do what it takes to work it out properly. --WikiCats 14:12, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
- I would like to ask you a medical question. With respect to schizophrenia or bipolar, is it that the condition can never be cured or that the possibility is that it could be cured in the future? --WikiCats 12:27, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
For a cure to be developed, one of the following is necessary: a completely serendipitous finding or decades of research. Nobody understands the mechanism of either of these diseases completely, let alone their root cause (which may be multifactorial). Until that research has been performed, cures will only be of the serendipitous variety. The same goes with remedies: both chlorpromazine and lithium were pretty serendipitous discoveries, and while we have learnt an enormous lot (e.g. the dopamine hypothesis in schizophrenia), there is still a lot of work to do before targeted therapy can be developed.
In that respect, cures are expected, but not soon. However, a breakthrough can be forged within a few weeks, and if that breakthrough changes the paradigm sufficienty, cures may be developed. JFW | T@lk 21:39, 22 March 2006 (UTC)
Regarding the passage, please read the following and see what you think. As with the previous passage, this is a suggestion, and you are free to edit it mercilessly:
Most psychiatric illnesses cannot be cured. While some have short time courses and only minor symptoms, many are chronic conditions which can have a significant impact on patients' quality of life and even life expectancy, and as such require long-term or life-long treatment. Efficacy of treatment for any given condition is also variable from patient to patient, with some patients having complete resolution of symptoms and others unfortunately having poor or minimal response to even the strongest measures. The majority of patients will fall somewhere in between.
In general, psychiatric treatments have improved significantly over the past several decades, beginning with the advent of modern psychiatric medications (see History section, below). In the past, psychiatric patients were often hospitalized for six months or more, with a significant number of cases involving hospitalization for many years. Today, most psychiatric patients are managed as outpatients. If hospitalization is required, the average hospital stay is around two to three weeks, with only a small number of cases involving long-term hospitalization.
I agree that "reams and reams of jargon" can obscure the truth, but I also think that a statement like "Cures do not occur often in psychiatry" also obscures the truth by omission. The reason I want to expand your statement is because I think more information is necessary to give the whole picture. Scot →Talk 06:01, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
- Thanks Scot. I believe that the statement “most psychiatric illnesses cannot be cured” is a false statement based on JFW’s answer to my question.
- If Psychiatry feels that cures are expected then it can’t be said that Psychiatry believes that conditions cannot be cured.
- I would like to say “Most psychiatric illnesses have not been cured as yet.” The rest of the passage I am quite happy with. --WikiCats 14:31, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
"Have not been cured" shows your misunderstanding of nosology in general. The conditions you refer to are not infectious diseases, and hence the pathogen cannot be eradicated. Smallpox has been "cured" (although it is unconventional to phrase it as such) because the variola virus has been eradicated. But this doesn't work with multifactorial conditions; they are prevented, or there is a cure, but otherwise "conditions" are not "cured" on a global scale. It would be wrong to put this problem at psychiatry's door.
Psychiatry believes that these conditions will eventually be curable, but only if (1) a treatment is found serendipitously that completely reverses the disease process, (2) new understandings of the disease lead to the development of new treatments that may cure the conditions. So psychiatry believes that these conditions will one day be cured. And is working actively towards that goal.
WikiCats, we have spent several kilobytes on this page trying to work your POV into this article. Can you please tell us your agenda? Can you please identify others who have publically and notably expressed the same POV? JFW | T@lk 17:15, 23 March 2006 (UTC)
- I am quite happy with either of these two statements.
- “Psychiatry believes that these conditions will eventually be curable, but only if (1) a treatment is found serendipitously that completely reverses the disease process, (2) new understandings of the disease lead to the development of new treatments that may cure the conditions.” or
- “Psychiatry believes that these conditions will one day be cured. And is working actively towards that goal.”
- Then whatever you may wish to say after that. --WikiCats 05:17, 24 March 2006 (UTC)
- I am happy with your statement - Psychiatry believes that these conditions will one day be cured. And is working actively towards that goal. --WikiCats 13:34, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
JA: A statement like "X believes ...", where X is not a person, is faulty on the grounds of illegitimate anthropomorphism. Normally, the problem is fixed by simple rephrasing, but when this figure of speech is in fact being used as a form of WP:WEASEL wording, then it represents a bigger problem. Jon Awbrey 14:00, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
- I'm not sure if the statement applies to the whole of psychiatry. There must be individuals and groups who believe no breakthroughs will come at all. One needs only mention the name Thomas Szasz. JFW | T@lk 15:33, 26 March 2006 (UTC)
This guy - Thomas Szasz, sounds an awful lot like "anti-psychiatry". So are references from anti-psychiatry and Scientology ok now? --WikiCats 14:10, 27 March 2006 (UTC)
Comment(cont.)
For the sake of consensus, I am happy to agree to any of these statements;
- “Complete response does actually occur in psychiatry, although admittedly not as often as one would like.” or
- “Cure is a rare commodity in psychiatry." or
- “Psychiatry believes that these conditions will eventually be curable, but only if (1) a treatment is found serendipitously that completely reverses the disease process, (2) new understandings of the disease lead to the development of new treatments that may cure the conditions.” or
- “Psychiatry believes that these conditions will one day be cured. And is working actively towards that goal.”
These are your own words. I can not able to give any greater concession for the sake of consensus than to agree completely with your own statements. --WikiCats 12:27, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
If there is no further discussion, I will select one of the above statements for inclusion in the article as the contribution. --WikiCats 10:43, 30 March 2006 (UTC)
- How about "Most psychiatric illnesses cannot currently be cured." Scot →Talk 01:41, 3 April 2006 (UTC)
Thank you JFW and Scott. Perfectly happy with that. I will put that statement in the article. Thank you for a vigorous debate. --WikiCats 09:39, 3 April 2006 (UT)
With aplogies for digging up bones - I still find the statement "Most psychiatric illnesses cannot currently cured" misleading. The most severe cannot currently be cured, but I don't think these represent the bulk of peope seeking mental health treatment. For example, the majority of cases of Major Depressive Episodes remit with treatment or on their own. Most anxiety disorders are highly amenable to congitive behavioral therapy and lead to lasting change in ther persons mental health status. This is borne out in the literatire and I can also attest to the fact as a psychotherapist who has years of experiencing successfully treating patients with therapy and in collaboration with psychiatrists who provide medication. Many of these patients do not even need to be on meds the rest of their lives. There are conditions listed in the DSM - bipolar disorder and schizophrenia for example - that are essentially incurable at this time and must be manged long-term. However, these disorders are statistically less prevalent than disroders like unipolar depression, social phobia, generalized anxiety disorder, and adjustment disorder, which can in many cases be successfully treated. The sentence, as stated, seems to indicate anyone with a DSM diagnosis is unlikely to be cured. I would argue that if you look at all patients that meet the criteria for a DSM diagnosis, most can be successfully treated because they have milder, often situationally induced cases of mental illness, not an endogenous biomedical disease. --bjb 3:15, 13 July 2006.
Improvements and Criticisms
That section is rather a mess. I hacked a t a bit of the beginning, but I get the sense that what is really meant by the later parts is more like:- "some psychiatrists are badly trained and use worthless techniques". If that is verifiable then say it. "Problems also exist" is weasel wording, and innuendo and better lost. I'd say that one of the things about the use of drugs is that knowing how they affect a range of people, and what to look out for is part of the technique and knowledge. Although we are a much less variable species than other apes, particularly those of us whose ancestors left Africa early, it would be very optimistic to expect drugs whcih do not produce different levels of effect on people with different alleles. And yes, it will be nice to have better drugs one day but is that truly encyclopedic? Needs a severe prunign and re-writing, with a clear idea fo what it is about Midgley 18:12, 18 March 2006 (UTC)
- Well, I did some pruning, and some rewording and re-working of this section. At least it reads somewhat better, I think. I also went through the article to standardize the reference format, and in the process realized that several of the refs in this section are not clearly cited -- one can't just say (McGuffin et al, 1999) without an endnote to give the full reference. I marked all these instances with the {{Fact}} tag, and if the references aren't fixed by someone who knows them then statements will be subject to deletion. Scot →Talk 04:14, 21 March 2006 (UTC)
rohypnol abuse misdiagnosed
Too often victims of prolonged rohypnol abuse become labeled as mentally ill. As far as I have been able to tell Mental Health Professionals are not trained in this area and are not helping the patients and actually putting them in a position where they will continue to be harmed. There are many sites including one by the Drug Enforcement Agency that will give information letting doctors of psychiatry know symtoms including delusions, moments of extreme agitation, and even hallucinations. Benzodiazapines should not be prescribed unless necessary, so they may be detected by vitims of this crime through urine samples. Consider unexpected urine test on patients so that the predators will not be prepared and disrupt an accurate analysis and diagnosis. URGENT ATTENTION is needed to combat this problem. PLEASE examine this issue with complete desire to help patients in need of mental recovery and safety.
Psychiatry will be a more notably recognized profession if this problem is addressed properly.
Please respond with a reply to Anthony K. Ammons [email address removed]
Thank you for taking the time to read this and in advance for your consideration.
- What exactly are you planning to contribute to the psychiatry article? Do you have any figures on the prevalence of chronic flunitrazepam administration, and why should a whole field be trained to recognise this? Delusions, hallucinations and agitation are more likely a result of withdrawal of benzodiazepines. I agree that benzodiazepines should not be dished out like sweets, but I suspect your view of "unless necessary" may not coincide with that of many health professionals. I have removed your email address. Wikipedia is popular, and that includes spambots. JFW | T@lk 22:21, 28 March 2006 (UTC)
Citations for references, please
There are a number of references made to what I assume are journal articles, but no citations given at the end of the article. Examples (from the Anti-psychiatry section) are:
- Moncrieff and Cohen, 2004; A Report of the Surgeon General, 2001; Williams et al, 1992; McGorry et al, 1995; van Os et al, 1999
There is also a dysfunctional footnote number 9, <ref name="Wells, 1998"/>, which suggests a previous footnote indicating what/where Wells 1998 is and may be found has been removed.
Could those more abreast of the above than I attend to these, please? I've done Hirschfeld et al 2003 from the Anti-psychiatry section as a URL was included.
Thanks, David Kernow 20:54, 22 April 2006 (UTC)
- PubMed is your friend.
- Moncrieff & Cohen 2004: PMID 15832065 (actually was 2005, but never mind)
- Williams 1992: over 3500 citations, impossible to locate
- McGorry 1995 could be PMID 8825814, PMID 8746490, PMID 8573050, PMID 8573040, PMID 7794204. I think PMID 7794204 is the most likely, but clarification is needed.
- Van Os 1999 - reviewing the abstracts I think PMID 10405080 is the best candidate.
- I am personally less than thrilled with this approach. This is just a form of namesdropping, and it obfuscates matters. I would suggest we remove the Williams 1992 reference as being too imprecise to trace. JFW | T@lk 21:54, 22 April 2006 (UTC)
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- Can the following references help?:
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- McGorry PD, Mihalopoulos C, Henry L et al (1995) Spurious precision: procedural validity of diagnostic assessment in psychiatric disorders. American Journal of Psychiatry 152 (2) 220-223
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- van Os J, Gilvarry C, Bale R et al (1999) A comparison of the utility of dimensional and categorical representations of psychosis. Psychological Medicine 29 (3) 595-606
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- Williams, J.B., Gibbon, M., First, M., Spitzer, R., Davies, M., Borus, J., Howes, M., Kane, J., Pope, H., Rounsaville, B., and Wittchen, H. (1992). The structured clinical interview for DSM-III-R (SCID) II: Multi-site test-retest reliability. Archives of General Psychiatry, 49, 630-636.
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- —Cesar Tort 20:04, 6 May 2006 (UTC)
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- The above discussion is preserved as an archive. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page, such as the current discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.