Oaks warns of psychiatric abuse By Carrie Dennett Emerald Associate Editor When David Oaks was a student at Harvard University in the early 1070s, tie was placed in psyc hiatric hospitals five times One tune when he dumped a d(we el !upiid Thorazine on the floor rattier than following orders to swallow it, he was surrounded In male hospital workers, thrown in solitary c on linemenl, and given a forcible drug injec Mon This prac tice of -solitary confinement lol lowed- in ' Iwrc 1111e injection w as not one oin innr said Oaks, coordinator o! the (desiring house on Human Rights and I’syc 111 airy In one a use a male psyc hiatric: patient sui ierv-.i , :i i at;a, k wdiiie stnii'ad ;ng against lie’ orderlies Iiirc ing iurii into solitary t he dex tor returned, gave tie: patient a drug injec tion, then leah/ed the patient was dead "They gave a forcible mjec tiem to a 'danger mis dead person,' Oaks said, speaking to alxuit 20 people Thursday, at the universily Oaks called psychiatric: drugs .i ' liquid lc> balmily" that soiiw people agree to take, but is often given without choice. Young people tire especially vulnerable to being drugged forcibly, or with a lesser level of coercion, when the are perceived .is having a psychiatric problem, he said Oaks saui the number of teenagers in private mental Institutions has increased as much as ■400 percent in recent years. In Eugene, 252 children are diagnosed as having Attention Deficit Disorder, for which the drug Ritalin, a form of speed, is typically prescribed, he said. Oaks said the public needs to question why these children are drugged, and why no one considers that it may be unnatural to confine small children in a room for several hours a day. Oaks said the frequent use of drugs that is a part of modern psychiatry is linked to industri uli/.ud society. Industrialized society is an extremely organ Isr.ed system, he said, which brings curtain ben efits hut has the negative characteristic of be ing a system with a hierarchical form of con trol The society's need tor control does nol allow people to be different, he said, and takes ex treme measures to subdue people diagnosed with mental disturbances Oaks said University students are at risk of being given those forms of treatment, because a number of students are referred to Sacred Pf'Ohj ’if s*».V- >■ V4^?U* Dav/cf OaAj, coordinator ot the Clearinghouse on Human Rights and Psychiatry, spoke at tho University Thursday about the dangers ot psy chiatric drugs. Heart General Hospital for treatment each ve.ir Lloctroshock therapy has twcomti more com mon recently at Sacred Heart, said Oaks..-Who has organized protests against its use Oaks accused the hospital of not placing complete information about electroshock s risks in the consent forms patients sign, and of not acknowledging that permanent memory loss can bo u result A student In tho audience said she is un happy with how quickly tho University Health Guntur diagnoses students as having a particu lar mental illness and offers psychotic drugs In 1U90 she begun suffering from extreme anxiety attacks She received lit weeks of counseling from the Counseling Gunter, the maximum time allowed per student She then sought help from a Health Center psychiatrist After 2U minutes with the psychiatrist, she was diagnosed with the words "Congratula tions, you’re the proud owner of an anxiety disorder,” and gave her a medical instruction sheet fur a powerful anti-depressant The student said she declined dtug treat ment. because she believes in holistic healing, but she later went bat k several times lo voice her dismay at how she was handled Oaks recommended that students pursuing psychiatry as a earner look for alternative wavs of helping people by empowering them and giving them a variety of options lo help them through their mental distress Go ahead... you can have decal! 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