Psychiatric Drug Facts via breggin.com :

“Most psychiatric drugs can cause withdrawal reactions, sometimes including life-threatening emotional and physical withdrawal problems… Withdrawal from psychiatric drugs should be done carefully under experienced clinical supervision.” Dr. Peter Breggin

Oct 8, 2011

Saturday Survivors: MindFreedom International Founder, David Oaks

Psychiatrist and author Loren Mosher, former director of the National Institute of Mental Health Scizophrenia section, said in the LA Times, "The fact that the movement has survived is due in large part to David's ability to work like a dog for almost no money and his ability to mollify those people who are outraged. He has managed to keep a lot of disparate opinions under the tent."

David W. Oaks, Executive Director, MindFreedom International
David Oaks Psychiatric Survivor visionary leader 
leader in the Human Rights movement

MindFreedom International is extending an invitation to Boycott Normal!


via MindFreedom:


A brief biography about David W. Oaks


David W. Oaks, Executive Director of MindFreedom International, has been a psychiatric survivor human rights activist since 1976.

"My recruitment room..."


David was born on 16 September 1955 in Chicago, Illinois, USA. All of his grandparents were immigrants from Lithuania. Both of his grandfathers were coal miners in rural Illinois before moving to Chicago.
David's parents were working class loving parents who both worked in offices. David had a brief encounter with mental health care after his high school graduation from St. Ignatius College Prep in 1973.
In the Fall of 1973 David attended Harvard University on scholarships, including one from his father's Teamster's Union.
In David's sophomore, junior and senior year he experienced the psychiatric system. David was placed in psychiatric institutions five times. He was diagnosed both "schizophrenic" and "manic depressive" (now known as "bipolar") and underwent forced psychiatric drugging and solitary confinement. David has been given neuroleptics (including Thorazine, Stelazine, Haldol, Mellaril, Navane), lithium, anti-depressants, etc.
It was while in a psychiatric solitary confinement cell in Bowditch Hall in McLean Hospital in Belmont, Massachusetts, that David decided he wanted, once freed, to take action to improve the mental health system.
A psychiatrist at McLean Hospital, a Harvard teaching institution, told David that because he had a genetically-caused chemical imbalance he would have to remain on powerful neuroleptic psychiatric drugs the rest of his life.
That psychiatrist turned out to be incorrect.

Community Organizer Since 1976


In 1976, Harvard's student volunteer agency Phillips Brooks House placed David with one of the early psychiatric survivor human rights organizations, Mental Patients Liberation Front, which met at Vocations for Social Change near Central Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts. David wrote his senior paper about community organizing with psychiatric survivors, and graduated with honors in 1977.
With support from peers and his family, David used exercise, nutrition, counseling, wilderness trips, and employment to recover mental and emotional well being. He has been off all psychiatric drugs since 1977.
David helped form one of the first user-run psychiatric survivor activist drop-in centers with MPLF at the Stone Soup Art and Poetry Gallery, and later at an MPLF office across from the Boston Garden.
As well as his activist work in the field of human rights in the mental health system, David has also worked in the environmental, peace and social justice movements.
In 1986, David helped found what was to become MindFreedom International, which an independent activist coalition united to win human rights and alternatives in mental health. MFI is now one of the main organizations winning campaigns for the vision of a peaceful revolution in the mental health system. While a majority of the members identify as individuals who have experienced human rights violations in the mental health system, MFI also includes family members, attorneys, mental health professionals and supportive members of the general public. 
David lives with his wife Debra in Oregon and loves camping and gardening. David helped found and is a member of a men's support group which has met since 1989.
David was named by Utne Reader in 2009 as one of "50 Visionaries Who Are Changing Your World." 

How to Inquire About Workshops, Presentations and Interviews with David W. Oaks


David is available for speaking engagements and workshops. He has presented on topics such as "community organizing for independent systems change in the mental health system" and working with the cross-disability movement, to a diverse range of participants including in Chile, Norway, Ireland, Turkey, Italy, Germany, Canada, Ghana and throughout the USA.
David W. Oaks wrote this chapter in the book "Coercive Treatment in Psychiatry: Clinical, legal and ethical aspects," published in 2011. The book editors were Kallert, Mezzich, Monahan.
BOYCOTT NORMAL 

2 comments:

Unknown said...

This must not be a recent Loren Mosher quote, as he died several years ago.

Unknown said...

of course not...It is from the MindFreedom page for David...

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