Hi @Ali11
I thought it was great to be honest
I've been very keen for an abolition of forced psychiatry for a very long time
in fact, one of the most traumatic things about my last admission in 2018,
when I thought that psychiatry had changed after working for 2 years with someone who
didn't follow the medical model
was the way in which I was humiliated by the psychiatrist who was supposed to be helping
me for saying that as a community we needed to get rid of forced psychiatry,
because force requires violence - how else can it be enforced if a person refuses and tries to leave?
It is also something that takes the pressure off services to be helpful - if a person can freely
leave the provider needs to make themselves helpful, they can't just rely on a captive audience.
One of the problems has been, of course that a lot of people say 'but what can we replace the current services with'.
Until now most of the discourse that I heard on that front pointed out that ending an abusive practice shouldn't start with requiring a replacement. But, of course, as many of us know - when things feel really bad people often to instinctively seek the support and shelter of their fellow humans and should be able to do that safely free from violence, abuse and exploitation.
The problem of forced psychiatry is threefold
1) It's used as a back-door to bypass the legal system when people are seen as socially disruptive
2) It is seen as the only service to provide for people who are in deep crisis or distress, to the point of being suicidal or in an altered state of consciousness, other helpful services are quashed so the illusion is that there is no other way to support but drugs, and medicalisation
3) Because it is forced, it inherently requires violence to police people who do not submit
Tina Minkowitz addresses these issues very bravely and well, I felt and also very briefly which is good.
I had been confused where to go with it thinking on the one hand people should be able to 'choose services' but on the other hand remaining concerned because there are deep concerns of ethics and best practice embedded in some of the more out-dated practices of the so-called 'biomedical model' that need to be addressed regarding whether it should be even offered as-is, without serious re-consideration. But there was so much pressure being applied.
I felt Tina's points offered ways through all of the minefields without shying away from the real problems:
a) We do need to be able to address disruption with kindness in our society because sometimes people do break down to the point where they are disruptive
b) We do need to offer safe single point services that respect each person's worldview and shouldn't be forcing people in crisis to negotiate a competitive field of vested interests, but all services offered need to respect that person, not try to indoctrinate them into a view that benefits the service provider.
I thought what she said was very apt.
But i'd love to know others thoughts about it from both a service provider point of view, an experience of disability point of view and the point of view of everyday community members.