Unravelling Madness- NZ Herald 4th April 2009

Read the full article on the NZ Herald Site here

4:00AM Saturday Apr 04, 2009
By Chris Barton

Richard Bentall believes that patients should be given the choice to have drug treatment, rather than be coerced into it.

In 1993 Richard Bentall went a bit mad.

He voluntarily took an antipsychotic drug and at first thought he’d get through unscathed.

“For the first hour I didn’t feel too bad. I thought maybe this is okay. I can get away with this. I felt a bit light-headed.”

Then somebody asked him to fill in a form. “I looked at this test and I couldn’t have filled it in to save my life. It would have been easier to climb Mt Everest.”

That was the least of his troubles. Bentall, an expert on psychosis from the University of Bangor in Wales who is in New Zealand under the University of Auckland Hood Fellowship programme, developed akathisia – unpleasant sensations of inner restlessness and an inability to sit still.

“It was accompanied by a feeling that I couldn’t do anything, which is really distressing. I felt profoundly depressed. They tried to persuade me to do these cognitive tests on the computer and I just started crying.”

Bentall had volunteered to be in a study run by Irish psychiatrist Dr David Healy. Volunteers were given either 5mg of the antipsychotic droperidol, 1mg of lorazepam, a type of tranquillizer, or a placebo.

 

But it was the fact that most of the healthy volunteers who took the antipsychotic became so unwell, let alone do the cognitive tests, that meant the study couldn’t continue. One psychiatrist became suicidal and had to be put under observation.

In his controversial book Let Them Eat Prozac Healy wrote about what the volunteers experienced. “It was not like anything that had happened to them before… Highly personal memories of previous unhappy times – broken relationships or loneliness – seemed to be flooding back. And if they previously held themselves responsible for these unhappy times, they seemed to hold themselves responsible for feeling the way they did now as well.”

The antipsychotic experiment, which gave him a hangover for a week, typifies Bentall’s approach to mental illness – rigorous scientific research coupled with a clinical psychologist’s perspective.

He has a doctorate in experimental psychology. “Most of my arguments are research-based,” says Bentall. “I’m just interested in what the evidence says about the nature of mental illness and how best to treat it. I’m a scientist at heart.”

…Bentall dislikes categorical psychiatric diagnoses which he says are born out of, and largely unchanged from, the Victorian era: “The assumption is that there is a borderline between mental illness and normal function – that is, you have a mental illness or you don’t.”

Bentall notes studies that show the majority of people who are diagnosed as depressed are also anxious and vice-versa: “It becomes somewhat arbitrary whether you say someone has depression or anxiety.”

Blanket diagnoses such as schizophrenia are similarly not meaningful – especially when two people diagnosed that way can each have completely different manifestations.

Bentall prefers to focus on symptoms, usually by getting the patient to list and identify their problems. “A patient may say: ‘I do hear voices, but actually it’s never really bothered me, but I’ve got this terrible relationship with my husband’ or whatever.”

The idea that psychosis is more understandable than is commonly thought builds on the work of Dutch social psychiatry professor Marius Romme, a founder of the Hearing Voices movement. The central premise is that hearing voices – usually a key symptom in the diagnosis of schizophrenia – is not in itself a sign of mental illness; that many people hear voices with no ill effect and that if hearing voices causes distress, people can learn strategies to cope with the experience.

Bentall, who spoke at a meeting organised by the New Zealand arm of the movement (www.intervoiceonline.org), is not saying antipsychotics should never be used, but that they should be used with great caution.

He says though there is considerable doubt about how effective antidepressants such as prozac are compared to placebo, there’s actually no doubt that antipsychotics do, in quite a lot of patients, reduce the severity of their psychotic symptoms – particularly paranoid delusions and hearing voices in the early stages of treatment.

“They appear to work on those two symptoms of psychosis, but not on others,” says Bentall. “In fact, some symptoms they may even make worse – especially negative symptoms, such as loss of motivation and apathy.”

But they’re also seriously dangerous drugs. “There is no street market for antipsychotics,” he says. “No one is trying chlorpromazine [the oldest in the antipsychotic family of drugs] on the sly.”

As well as mood-altering side effects, variously referred to as “neuroleptic dysphoria, (literally taking hold of the nerves and the opposite of euphoria), neuroleptics, or antipsychotics, can also have life-threatening consequences including diabetes and increased risk of heart attack. “Studies show life expectancy is reduced by them.”

What worries Bentall is how many mental health services seem to ignore what the research says and when an antipsychotic medicine doesn’t work, simply up the dose.

Once again Bentall refers to the science – that about a third of recipients don’t get any benefit whatsoever from the drugs. And research that shows if patients don’t respond at a relatively low dose, they’re not going to respond to a high dose. And are very likely not going to respond to any other anti-psychotic.

The optimum dose of antipsychotics is about 350mg per day (measured as chlorpromazine equivalents). Yet a recent study in the north of England found the median dose of antipsychotic drugs was about 600mg and about a quarter of those reviewed were on a gram or more a day.

“The average dose was about twice the optimum. How does that happen? It doesn’t make any sense.” Bentall suggests the reason such “unethical doses” occur is because mental health services have come to rely on these drugs as if they are the only treatment available. “When a patient doesn’t respond, they just up the dose in some magical belief that hopefully something will happen.”

But while promoting alternatives like cognitive behavioral therapy – the Government-sanctioned treatment of choice for depression and anxiety disorders in England – Bentall also points to research that shows all psychotherapies work, and that no type is more effective than any other. It’s a finding that surprised many, including Bentall.

Closer analysis highlights a common theme. “The quality of the relationship between therapist and patient explained most of the result.”

It seems blindingly obvious that having a good quality, empathetic therapist is likely to get good results, so why doesn’t it happen? “Establishing good relationships with patients shouldn’t be that difficult, but most psychiatric services seem to find it very difficult indeed,” says Bentall.

He says many services operate from a coercive model: “We know best. We’ve got the treatment. Better take these no matter what the side effects. Do what we say and if you don’t, we’ll put you on a community treatment order and you’ll be legally obliged to do what we say.”

As he points out, it’s not, and never was, a good way to try to help anybody. “The evidence that these coercive methods make the public safer is just not there. What they do is turn patients off psychiatric services. It seems completely wrong-headed.”

Bentall is a strong advocate of patients being given choices – especially the choice to have drug treatment. “I’m not against people being given antidepressants or antipsychotics, but the evidence is increasingly showing that having services which rely on drugs is a very bad idea.”

In the realm of low-end anxiety and depression type illnesses, he says it’s quite clear that psychological treatments are more effective than drug treatments. And at the severe end of illnesses where people are delusional, he says choice is very important too.

“The drugs do help some people, but some they harm more than they help. The only person that can tell that is the patient themselves and it’s important to provide people with alternatives.”

…Not surprisingly he argues for more emphasis on psychological approaches. And he would like the rivalry between and psychology and psychiatry to disappear. “My objections to psychiatry are science-based, evidenced-based. They are against theory and practices which are harmful to patients. I want psychiatrists to use more rational and more humane methods of treatment.”

NEW ZEALAND’S $60M DRUG BILL

There were about 400,000 antipsychotic prescriptions in New Zealand in 2008 at a cost of $60.5 million. Drug funding agency Pharmac began funding for the antipsychotic medicine ziprasidone (Zeldox) as a second-line treatment for people with schizophrenia and related psychoses from August 2007.

Pharmac says ziprasidone, one of the newer “atypical” antipsychotic range of medicines, became funded for people who have tried others (clozapine, risperidone, quetiapine and olanzapine) but stopped using them because of side effects or inadequate response.

In October 2008, after concerns raised in both the United States and Britain about high rates of use of antipsychotics in elderly people, Pharmac and the College of Psychiatrists launched new guidelines for use in that age group.

Concerns included potential health risks (possible increased risk of stroke and higher death rates), and that over-prescription of antipsychotics to people with dementia in care does significant harm.

Pharmac’s prescribing data showed there was comparatively high use of antipsychotics among older people.

In 2006/07 about 35,000 prescriptions were recorded for people aged 80-

DRUG FREE OPTION HELPING MENTAL HEALTH PATIENTS-

5:00AM Friday Oct 03, 2003  By REBECCA WALSH health reporter NZ Herald Friday Oct 03 2009 

People with schizophrenia should be given choices other than medication to help treat their illness, says a British psychology professor. Professor Richard Bentall of Manchester University has been in Auckland this week teaching health workers how to use cognitive behaviour therapy for people suffering delusions. He says mounting evidence shows the treatment can have a positive impact on mental health, in conjunction with medication or on its own.

Cognitive behaviour therapy aims to help patients get back in touch with reality. Many New Zealand psychologists and psychiatrists support its use, and they say more resources need to go into training mental health workers to be able to give such treatment. Professor Bentall said anti-psychotic drugs reduced patients’ risk of being readmitted to hospital, but medication worked for only about 70 per cent of patients.

Many also suffered serious side-effects, from diabetes and weight gain to sexual dysfunction. “Unfortunately in modern psychiatric care, every patient gets drugs whether or not they respond to them and irrespective of their side-effects,” he said. “That’s clearly wrong.” Cognitive behaviour therapy involved getting people to examine their beliefs and how those beliefs affected their behaviour. Patients were encouraged to collect evidence about whether their beliefs could be true, and find other more productive ways of looking at situations.

Professor Bentall said many people with schizophrenia heard voices, but they could be taught to challenge the belief the voices could control them. As a result of therapy some patients reported hearing fewer voices or reported being less bothered by them. In the United Kingdom, use of cognitive behaviour therapy was written into national health plans for treating people with psychotic problems. The director of clinical psychology at Auckland University, Dr John Read, said psychological treatments were used in a small number of cases in New Zealand and he was keen to see that extended. “The principle we are trying to establish is that people should be given the choice about types of treatment. “We want to get to the point where everyone is offered both. “Most people assume people with this diagnosis have to have medication and that it’s a biological illness. “This is a completely different approach, which makes it quite controversial.”

Planet fm 104.6 Tues 19th March- Interview with Richard Bentall

Listen in tomorrow Tuesday 10th March on Planet FM104.6 in Auckland. Sheldon Brown from Framework Trust will be interviewing Professor Richard Bentall, along with Adrienne from the Hearing Voices Network Aotearoa NZ.

His views on the treatment and diagnosis of the “Schizophrenias” are fascinating.

We will post a link to the radio  show, when it comes online on the Like Minds Like us website.

Radio Interview with Prof. Richard Bentall author of Madness Explained

Professor Richard Bentall from the University of Bangor in United Kingdom was in Wellington this week. He was interviewed on our National Radio.

Listen to the interview  here on Radio New Zealands website

He talks about the links with life experiences and trauma with hearing of voices and psychosis, and proposes the view that  Pscyhiatric labels for mental illness serve no purpose. Included is an interesting case study with one of his patients that hears voices.

If you like what you hear you may want to come along to our evening on March 19th on the North Shore Auckland to hear him in person. For more details contact the Hearing Voices Network Aotearoa NZ at hearingvoices@woosh.co.nz

Say NO to Testing on Humans!

I was at a conference this week. I sat and listened to tests that had been undertaken on “schizophrenics”- the good news is it is now in hyphens. Heard about “token experiments” when people were given tokens for behaving nicely. Heard about people being given watches that bleeped at certain intervals. Saw symptoms divided up, put into percentages, and ,made into charts. I didnt see any faces there. I became increasingly more upset as it went on. Until towards the end I went outside and wept.

I wept and wept around the corner alone. No matter what I did, I could not seem to stop. I finally after 30 mins pulled myself together and returned. Only to see more analysis and statistics of studies. I left. When my cousin collected me in her car, she spoke to me of how she had been training her dog, to behave. She spoke to me of testing on animals. How she had seen videos on the internet of dogs that were put in cages and drugged so much they couldnt move, then tests were carried out on them. As a result she was no longer going to buy the dog foods that carried these tests out.

I wondered why is it still okay to carry out tests on humans?
In the plane on the way home, I realised that I wept because my heart is still open. I do not see figures and symptons, I see people that are experiencing suffering. That are are showing their raw emotions. Not symptoms, figures and data.
I was reminded of testing that used to be done on native people, thesis written on why black and Polynesian people were not the same as others. Pictures of their skulls were paraded about, to prove these theories. Which really just amounted to good reasons to treat them badly. I understood then, what my Maori ancestors suffered. In a more profound way than words could ever have portrayed.

Earlier I had spoken to a woman, who said how Maori land had been confiscated to build a Mental health institute- Tokonui. The irony was that the majority of its inhabitants were Maori people. Still suffering the same treatment, but under a different category.

I wrote this as a way to try and show how I was feeling.

SAY NO TO HUMAN TESTING
I am not a frog on a slab in a biology class, awaiting dissection to see how I work.
I am a woman.
I am not a statistic- here to be added up, deleted, manipulated and categorised,
I am a living breathing being.
You wonder why those that hear voices feel they are always being watched and monitored by their governments?
It is because most of them are, in their hospital wards.
And the rest of us? We can feel their pain.
I am not someone to be looked at from a distance,
Come beside me and hold my hand.
I do not behave the way you would like.
Should I apologise that my suffering has manifested in a way that you can clearly see
Without me speaking the words to explain it.
Please do not try to explain my pain and suffering.
JUST CARE.
Please do not drug me, restrain me, and test me like a lab animal.
I know that because people care many companies have stopped animal testing.
So why haven’t you stopped testing on me?
I am not an animal,
I am you dressed in another body, clothed in the events of my life,
My Clothes are not as clean and as tidy as yours.
I cannot see my story in your charts.
6 week tests are the proof that the drugs work.
Their promotional videos say so.
So why is it 20 years later when people are still unwell,
It is they who are made to feel a failure not the drugs?
Say no to human testing, and become a human.
I am not Mad,
I am angry.
Angry that you have forgotten who I am.
I am you.
When will you start treating me like you?

 

I did  enjoy listening to the presentation by Wiremu Nia Nia and Egan. They told stories of Maori people who were treated as insane,  whose experiences when put into a cultural context were understood, explained and healed. In New Zealand I am pleased to say that there is a greater understanding of the cultural diversity that is present. Health Boards, are at last acknowledging Maori concepts and understandings.

 I am hopeful that a new path is being laid for those that hear voices to walk. The Hearing Voices Network in Aotearoa NZ, and other countries around the world are making people aware  of how changes need to be made. How we are all the same in a different way.

Britney Spears hearing voices. New Weekly Magazine Feb 16 2009

An excerpt from the above magazine article pg 10 called “BRIT’S SECRET DIARIES EXPOSED”

Britney Spears has found herself in the middle of yet another crisis after her personal diaries were stolen and details of her private life exposed. The handwritten journals and video diaries that disappeared from her Berverley Hills Home contain never before revealed details of the singers fragile mental state in the lead-up to her hospitilisation.

  “Britney writes that shes heard voices for years”, says another insider. “She still hears them, and they tell her to run away and hide. She can’t get them out of her head.”

The diaries also reveal that the real reason behind Brit’s shocking head-shaving incident after she checked out of a rehab facility in February 2007.

“She beleived someone had planted an electronic bug in her hair and couldnt think of a way to get rid of it except to have her head shaved!” says the insider.

“She confides that she was out of her head at the time and was suffering from delusions.”

end of excerpt.

I think the above just indicates the strength of Britney Spears to pick herself back up, and pull her life back together. Hearing  of voices can be experienced by anybody rich or poor, young or old. With the right support and advice,  we can learn to control the voices and integrate them into a meaningful life. 

May Britney succeed with hers.

Hearing Voices? Maybe Cut back on Coffee.

Hearing Voices? Maybe Cut Back On Coffeesee full story here

 

 NEW YORK  — A new study by a British university links high caffeine intake with hallucinatory experiences like hearing voices and seeing things that are not there.

The study out of Durham University quizzed 219 students about their consumption of coffee, tea, energy drinks and chocolate. The students were then asked about hallucinatory experiences and their stress levels. These finding were published Wednesday in the academic journal Personality and Individual Differences.

The survey found that students that fell into the “high caffeine users” category – consumers of more than seven cups of coffee a day – were more likely to report seeing or hearing something that was not there.

Researchers are attributing the hallucinations to the fact that caffeine has been found to exacerbate the physiological effects of stress.

Simon Jones, lead author and a PhD student at Durham University’s Psychology Department, said in a statement: “Hallucinations are not necessarily a sign of mental illness. Most people will have had brief experiences of hearing voices when there is no one there, and around 3 percent of people regularly hear such voices. Many of these people cope well with this and live normal lives. There are, however, a number of organizations, such as the HEARING VOICES NETWORK, who can offer support and advice to those distressed by these experiences.”

 

An Evening with Professor Richard Bentall

HEARING VOICES NETWORK AOTEAROA NZ

Te Reo Orooro

Providing support and information for hearing voices, tactile sensations and other sensory experiences

 

Are pleased to invite you to an evening with

 

Professor Richard P. Bentall

 

 

Researcher, 

Professor of Clinical Psychology

 

Esteemed Author 

“Is madness purely a medical condition that can be treated with drugs? Is there really a clear dividing line between mental health and mental illness – or is it not so easy to classify who is sane and who is insane?

In Madness Explained leading clinical psychologist Richard Bentall shatters the modern myths that surround psychosis. This groundbreaking work argues that we cannot define madness as an illness to be cured like any other; that labels such as ‘schizophrenia’ and ‘manic depression’ are meaningless, based on nineteenth-century classifications; and that experiences such as delusions and hearing voices are in fact exaggerations of the mental foibles to which we are all vulnerable.
 
We need, Bentall argues, a radically new way of thinking about psychiatric problems – one that does not reduce madness to brain chemistry, but understands and accepts it as part of human nature.” Excerpt from Penguin Books

 

 

When: 7.30 – 9PM Thursday 19th March 2009

Where: 215 Wairau Rd, Glenfield, Auckland , New Zealand

Entry: Free. We appreciate any donations to help support our work.

All are welcome.Voice hearers, Family, Health Professionals, Concerned Citizens.

Please Bring a plate so we can share supper and

interesting conversation afterwards.

Bookings: Please let us know if you are coming!  

Contact: Adrienne at 0211024151 or email: hearingvoices@woosh.co.nz

 

 


 

ISPS Making Sense of Psychosis Conference February 23,24, 25th in Wellington

I attended the ISPS conference in Auckland last time, and it was very good. I would well recommend it to anyone who works with those who hear voices, or for voice hearers themselves. They have generously offered all HVN Aotearoa NZ members free registration to the conference and the workshops. If you wish to attend, and are a member contact us at hearingvoices@woosh.co.nz .

If you are not one of our members you can still attend, contact ISPS directly as per below details.

 

www.isps.org

The New Zealand Branch of I.S.P.S. (ISPS-NZ), invites you to:

 

  

The 6th Annual  “MAKING SENSE OF PSYCHOSIS” Conference

The Power of Relationships

 

FEBRUARY 23 (Workshops), 24 & 25 (Conference), 2009

St John’s Centre, Willis Street, WELLINGTON

 

Keynote Speaker: Professor Richard Bentall [24th]

University of Bangor, UK.    Author of ‘Madness Explained’

‘Psychological treatments for psychosis: valuing the relationship’

 

Other speakers include:

Gary Platz – Wellink Trust [24th]

Debra Lampshire – University of Auckland [24th]

Aisling O’Kane – Cheshire & Wirral Trust Early Intervention Services, UK [25th]

Wiremu Nia Nia and Egan Bidois Capital Coast DHB [25th]

Dr Patte Randal – Auckland DHB [25th]

Dr John Read – University of Auckland [25th]

 

for info about how to register or submit a paper/workshop:     ispsnz@gmail.com

 

February 23rd           Pre-Conference One-Day Training Workshops:

 

Addressing Spiritual Issues – A skills workshop.   Dr Patte Randal [patter@adhb.govt.nz] & Dr Vanessa Beavan [VBeavan@adhb.govt.nz]

 

Working with Voices and Beliefs  Training to develop a therapeutic approach to reducing distressing voices and beliefs. Debra Lampshire & Janette Symes [Debra.L@xtra.co.nz]

 

February 24th & 25th   Keynote Addresses plus a range of other local and international speakers

 

For more information or if you would like to give a talk about your work, personal experiences with

psychosis, research etc., send an abstract of 200-300 words asap, Nov 15 latest, to: ispsnz@gmail.com

 

 

Registration forms: ispsnz@gmail.com      www.isps.org     

 

SUPPORTED BY THE NEW ZEALAND PSYCHOLOGICAL SOCIETY  www.psychology.org.nz

 

This Conference will apply for endorsement by The Royal New Zealand College of General Practitioners to be approved for up to 16 hours for General Practice Education Programme Stage 2 (formerly AVE) and Maintenance of Professional Standards (MOPS) purposes (approved for 2006 conference)