The PennZone

  • Home
  • Business
  • Health
  • Non-profit
  • Technology
  • Education
  • Financial
  • Entertainment
  • Marketing

CCHR Backs UN & Senate Calls for DOJ Action on Coercive Psychiatric Practices
The PennZone/10285595

Trending...
  • Sober.Buzz the Sober Token : Ticker $BUZZ
  • DuoKey to Unveil Encrypted Financial Intelligence Use Case at GISEC Global 2025
  • Meditech International Inc. and Los Angeles Rams Continue Strategic Partnership to Enhance Athlete Performance and Recovery
UN & Senate Calls for DOJ Action
Amid reports of psychiatric hospital abuse, CCHR, a mental health industry watchdog, supports global and U.S. efforts to protect human rights and demand accountability.

LOS ANGELES - PennZone -- Recently, the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) adopted the resolution 52/12 on mental health and human rights, which calls on the High Commissioner for Human Rights to prepare a comprehensive report on the best ways to implement policy measures for the realization of the human rights of persons with psychosocial disabilities and current or potential users of mental health services.[1] For many years, the UN has been outspoken about the need to prohibit coercive psychiatric practices and reinforced this in August at a meeting of the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD.) The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International, a mental health industry watchdog, headquartered in Los Angeles, said that its European branch submitted comments to the committee, condemning forced detainment in psychiatric hospitals and laws that deprive people of their liberty based on arbitrary and inconsistent definitions of "unsound mind."

Following recent exposure of U.S. hospitals detaining patients to exploit their insurance and increase profits, CCHR International has called on U.S. state legislators to revoke the authority of certain hospital chains to involuntarily detain patients.

An estimated 907,000 individuals are involuntarily committed every year to psychiatric facilities across the U.S., Europe, Australia, New Zealand the United Kingdom—about two people every minute.[2] Involuntary psychiatric detentions in the U.S. have outpaced population growth by a rate of 3 to 1 on average in recent years.[3] An article in JAMA Psychiatry reported that involuntary hospitalization was associated with an increased risk of suicide both during and after hospitalization.[4]

The U.S. has been plagued by reports of abuse, especially in privately owned psychiatric and behavioral facilities, including residential treatment centers where patients have been held against their will until their insurance ran out.[5] According to an in-depth New York Times investigation into a major psychiatric hospital chain, patients are often held for financial reasons rather than medical ones. In some cases, judges have intervened to force Acadia to release patients.[6]

More on The PennZone
  • ScreenPoints Puts Film Investors in the Credits—and in the Money With New FinTech Platform
  • Viatris Announces Positive Top-Line Results from Two Pivotal Phase 3 Studies of Novel Fast-Acting Meloxicam (MR-107A-02) for the Treatment of Moderate-to-Severe Acute Pain
  • Pathways to Adulthood Conference May 17 at Melville Marriott Honoring NYS Assembly Member Jodi Giglio, Suffolk County Legislator Nick Caracappa
  • Adster Techologies awarded US Patent for breakthrough innovation in reducing latency in Ad Serving
  • Robert Fabbio Inducted into the Austin Technology Council Hall of Fame

Senator Ron Wyden, who headed a Senate Finance Committee investigation into warehousing youths in such facilities has written to the Department of Justice to investigate four of the nation's biggest operators of youth residential treatment facilities for civil rights violations and fraud. NBC News reported, "The letters are the latest escalation by congressional lawmakers of both parties to crack down on misconduct in youth treatment centers, sparked by a wave of activism by former patients and news articles detailing allegations of maltreatment within some facilities….If the DOJ investigates and finds evidence to substantiate Wyden's allegations, it has the power to negotiate policy changes and order financial penalties for the facility operators."[7]

CCHR said that stronger action is needed beyond financial penalties, which are often paid without admitting liability. Behavioral-psychiatric hospital companies that systemically abuse patients should be disqualified from receiving federal contracts, including Medicaid and Medicare. A first step would be revoking their authority to involuntarily detain patients.

In October 2023, the World Health Organization (WHO) and Office of the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) issued a strong condemnation of coercive practices, which included "involuntary hospitalization, involuntary medication, involuntary electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), seclusion, and physical, chemical and mechanical restraint."[8]

This was reinforced last August during the 2nd Anniversary of the UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) Guidelines on De-institutionalization. CCHR Spain and an attorney were invited to address the committee on the need for international adoption of the guidelines, opposing forced electroshock, psychopharmaceutical drugging and the biomedical model approach in psychiatry. Attorney Isabel Ayusa Peunte spoke about how a Spanish psychiatric association had unsuccessfully tried to silence CCHR from speaking out against psychiatric human rights abuses. The Supreme Court in Spain rejected such efforts, recognizing the UN and CCHR's position, which it determined is a matter for public debate.[9]

Yet U.S. psychiatry has yet to support a zero-tolerance to coercion. CCHR argues that private and state psychiatric facilities can continue to forcibly detain, treat and harm patients, sanctioned by a policy of supporting coercive mental health practices.

CCHR agrees with Senator Wyden, who states, "With the health and safety of kids involved—and pages of evidence—it's time for the DOJ to get involved."[10]

More on The PennZone
  • Cybersecurity is Protecting Your Personal Information and Your Portfolio
  • L2 Aviation Celebrates Grand Opening of New Facility at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG)
  • Managing Summer Staffing Surges with Confidence: Why Name Badges Are a Must for Seasonal Success
  • Visa Named Title Sponsor of Ascending Athletes' Business Owners Summits for NFL Entrepreneurs
  • The Paris Court of International Arbitration Elects Dr. John J. Maalouf as its New President

Jan Eastgate, president of CCHR International added: Securing a U.S. and worldwide elimination of forced detainment and treatment would truly be a victory for patients in the mental health field, fully securing much needed human rights, with serious sanctions put in place for violation of these rights."

About CCHR: The group was established in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and the late professor of psychiatry, Dr. Thomas Szasz from the State University of New York Upstate Medical Center and Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. It has been responsible for hundreds of laws that provide protections for those treated in the mental health industry. This includes legal rights and securing a ban on electroshock in children and on the use of deep sleep treatment involving ECT and coma-inducing psychotropic drugs.

Sources:

[1] www.ohchr.org/en/calls-for-input/2024/call-inputs-mental-health-and-human-rights

[2] www.cchrint.org/2023/07/10/investigation-needed-involuntary-commitment-royal-jubilee/

[3] www.cchrint.org/2024/04/26/cchr-rebukes-psychiatric-association-meeting-for-failure-to-denounce-coercion/; "Study finds involuntary psychiatric detentions on the rise," UCLA Newsroom, 3 Nov. 2020, newsroom.ucla.edu/releases/involuntary-psychiatric-detentions-on-the-rise

[4] www.cchrint.org/2023/01/23/involuntary-commitment-forced-mental-health-treatment-violate-human-rights/; www.madinamerica.com/2019/06/involuntary-hospitalization-increases-risk-suicide-study-finds/

[5] www.cchrint.org/2024/09/05/cchr-seeks-redress-harmed-in-behavioral-facilities/

[6] Jessica Silver-Greenberg and Katie Thomas, "How a Leading Chain of Psychiatric Hospitals Traps Patients: Acadia Healthcare is holding people against their will to maximize insurance payouts, a Times investigation found," The New York Times, 1 Sept. 2024, www.nytimes.com/issue/todayspaper/2024/09/02/todays-new-york-times

[7] Tyler Kingkade, "Senator urges DOJ to investigate youth treatment centers after probe uncovers 'rampant abuse," NBC News, 9 Oct. 2024, www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/senator-urges-doj-investigate-youth-treatment-centers-rcna174340

[8] World Health Organization, OHCHR, "Guidance on Mental Health, Human Rights and Legislation," 9 Oct. 2023, p. 13

[9] 744th Meeting, 31st Session on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), Second anniversary of the Guidelines on De-institutionalization, webtv.un.org/en/asset/k1i/k1i6b968s1 (start at 34:18 mins).

[10] Sara Tiano, "Senator Calls for DOJ to Investigate Private Companies Providing Residential Treatment for Youth," Imprint News, 10 Oct. 2024, imprintnews.org/top-stories/senator-calls-for-doj-to-investigate-private-companies-providing-residential-treatment-for-youth/255482

Contact
Citizens Commission on Human Rights
***@cchr.org


Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights
Filed Under: Health

Show All News | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on The PennZone
  • Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Researchers Recommend New Standard of Care for Families with Hereditary Neuroblastoma Linked to ALK Mutation
  • GormanSquared Announces Provisional Patent
  • Hubei Heavy Equipment Makes a Striking Appearance at CIMT and Competes with International Brands
  • 20 Patents Issued Worldwide, Cementing Company Leadership. First Ever Cable-Free 12-Lead ECG: HeartBeam, Inc. (Stock Symbol: BEAT)
  • NASDAQ Uplisting for Higher Market Exposure and Wide Corporate Benefits to AI Boosted Marketing Company On Track Towards $1 Billion Revenue by 2027
  • Congressional Men's Health Caucus Shows Bipartisan Consensus and Focus on Prevention, Mental Health, and Closing the Lifespan Gap
  • Chewy Chums™ Launches NeverBite™ on Kickstarter
  • DuoKey, Axiomtek and Blue Edge Network Partner to Enhance Smart Cities with Privacy-Preserving Urban Safeguarding and Fleet Management
  • Fangzhou Launches Otsuka's Third-Generation Leukemia Drug Ponatinib on its Platform
  • Viatris Announces Appointments of Frank D'Amelio and Michael Severino, M.D., to the Company's Board of Directors
  • Austin Keen Joins WakeFX RopePal as Official Brand Ambassador
  • Bonelli Systems Expands Managed IT Services Nationwide, Leveraging Microsoft Azure Expertise
  • $4.3 Million Patent Application Waiver Fee Granted by FDA on New Drug Application Fee for Treatment Addressing Suicidal Depression & PTSD: NRX Pharma
  • Whistleblower Claims Dental Patient Deaths Likely Due to Book Ban
  • xREnergy up as much as +3,094,634% on first day listed on the XRP Ledger. Ticker : $XRE
  • Psychiatry's Legacy of Racism and Coercion Highlighted in Restraint Deaths
  • New Book 'Cybersecurity Leadership' Guides SME Leaders to Make Smart, Strategic Security Decisions
  • Immorta Bio to Present SenoVax™ Cancer Senolytic Immunotherapy Preclinical Data at American Association of Immunologists Meeting
  • "Stop scrolling and start watching" - Beloved film recommendation site Criticker gets a major makeover
  • Green Energy Solar Expands with New Offices in Port St. Lucie, West Palm Beach, and Orlando

Popular on PennZone

  • Gas Wolf® Officially Becomes a Registered Trademark - 1025
  • 11th annual Florida Blueberry Festival April 26 & 27, 2025 - 164
  • Village Vapes and Cooking 4 Autism Announce Inaugural Partnership at MEGA 420 EVENT - 131
  • Jed the Fish, The Rapscallion of Los Angeles KROQ's Airwaves and Provocateur, Has Signed Off at 69 - 109
  • The Ultimate Med Spa Growth Engine: PatientNow and Aesthetix CRM Announce Strategic Integration
  • The World's No.1 Superstar Champions the NO FAKES Act – Secures Global Identity and Cultural Legacy
  • Goosechase Rolls Out Unlockable Missions, Its Most Anticipated Feature Yet
  • LIB Large-Scale Walk-In Test Chamber Full Process Delivery: MIL-STD-810H Chambers Enable Extreme Environment Testing
  • PebblePad Welcomes Justin Reilly as New CEO to Drive Innovation and Growth
  • HR Tech Awards Program Celebrates 6th Year: Showcases Top Hiring, Talent, and HR Technologies

Similar on PennZone

  • NBA Champion Lamar Odom Launches Anti-Addiction Meme Coin, Ushering in a Disruptive Innovation in Web3
  • Actuated Medical Launches Preferred Series A Round, Led by Keiretsu Forum Mid-Atlantic, South-East, & Texas
  • Pathways to Adulthood Conference May 17 at Melville Marriott Honoring NYS Assembly Member Jodi Giglio, Suffolk County Legislator Nick Caracappa
  • The Paris Court of International Arbitration Elects Dr. John J. Maalouf as its New President
  • Fray Fitness Launches Memorial Day Sale and Veteran Organization Giveaway
  • Nurse leader Julie Nyhus has been named editorial director of American Nurse Journal
  • Braces for Teenagers in Allentown Offered by Exeter Smiles
  • ImagineX, in Collaboration with Qualys, Launches New mROC Services to Transform Enterprise Cyber Risk Management
  • 20 Patents Issued Worldwide, Cementing Company Leadership. First Ever Cable-Free 12-Lead ECG: HeartBeam, Inc. (Stock Symbol: BEAT)
  • Congressional Men's Health Caucus Shows Bipartisan Consensus and Focus on Prevention, Mental Health, and Closing the Lifespan Gap
Copyright © The PennZone | Theme: OMag by LilyTurf Themes
  • Contribute
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us