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Debate on forced outpatient psychiatric drugging

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National Public Radio's show "Justice Talking" featured discussions with representatives of 'both sides of the story' about the issue of involuntary psychiatric drugging of people out in their own neighborhoods and homes using court orders.

Debate on forced outpatient psychiatric drugging

Michael Allen defends freedom of choice in mental health care on National Public Radio.

MICHAEL ALLEN, a MindFreedom member in Washington, D.C. area who is an attorney, debated the issue of forced outpatient psychiatric drugging on the National Public Radio show "Justice Talking."

Representing the other side, promoting more forced outpatient psychiatric drugging, was a representative from the Treatment Advocacy Center. Significantly, this is one of the first times the main representative was not attorney Mary Zdanowicz who served as founding executive director of the Treatment Advocacy Center (TAC), or psychiatrist E. Fuller Torrey, who has made promoting forced drugging a focus of his career.

Ms. Zdanowicz left the employment of TAC suddenly to return to the "environmental" field.

On the NPR show, the representative defending forced outpatient psychiatric drugging was a member of the Stanley family that actually funds TAC, attorney Jonathan Stanley.

Jonathan Stanley, who is now acting director of TAC, has experienced the psychiatric system personally. He uses his experience as a "mental health consumer" to promote more forced psychiatric drugging for others. All known organizations actually run by mental health consumers and psychiatric survivors oppose the expansion of involuntary psychiatric drugs.

The show aired the week of 20 August 2007. 

An archive of the show may be heard at:

http://www.justicetalking.org/programarchive.asp



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Dorothy Dundas

While institutionalized for three years as an adolescent in the 1960's, MindFreedom member Dorothy Washburn Dundas was labeled a "schizophrenic" and forced to undergo 40 combined insulin coma-electroshock "treatments." Dorothy says, "I experienced and witnessed many atrocities. I believe that luck, determination, and my own anger and one compassionate advocate were my best friends on the road to my ultimate survival and freedom." Through a number of op-ed pieces, she has voiced her opposition to abusive psychiatric practices. Her poster, "Behind Locked Doors," which she created from her hospital records, is used in training programs. Dorothy lives in the Boston area where she has raised her four wonderful children. She founded and is the sole driver in her "safe, friendly and reliable" car service called The Crystal Lake Express.

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