Renowned Psychiatrist Issues Call for Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal

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Peter Breggin, a leading crusader against the abusive prescription of psychiatric drugs who has been called “the conscience of psychiatry,” presents a pioneering, person-centered approach to psychiatric drug withdrawal in his new book, Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal: A Guide for Prescribers, Therapists, Patients and their Families.

Nothing in the field of mental health will do more good and reduce more harm than encouraging withdrawal from psychiatric drugs.

Peter Breggin, a leading crusader against the abusive prescription of psychiatric drugs who has been called “the conscience of psychiatry,” presents a pioneering, person-centered approach to psychiatric drug withdrawal in his new book. Psychiatric Drug Withdrawal: A Guide for Prescribers, Therapists, Patients and their Families, published by Springer Publishing Company, is also the first book to establish guidelines and assist the prescriber and therapist in withdrawing their patients from psychiatric drugs.

With increasing evidence that long-term use of psychiatric drugs damages the brain and complicates withdrawal, and with the number of people on psychiatric medication higher than ever, this work comes out at a critical time. The book also anticipates controversial DSM-5 proposals which some say would medicalize normality.

Research shows long-term exposure to psychiatric drugs has proven to be far more dangerous than originally anticipated, and includes the threat of medication-induced obesity, diabetes, heart disease, irreversible abnormal movements, emotional and cognitive disability, and an overall deterioration in the patient’s clinical condition and quality of life. These dangers, among others, have compelled Dr. Breggin to argue that “Nothing in the field of mental health will do more good and reduce more harm than encouraging withdrawal from psychiatric drugs.”

Although therapists are often the first to realize that their patients are overly or unnecessarily medicated, they have been discouraged from voicing their opinions or from participating in medication decision-making, and have been urged or mandated to enforce medication compliance. When a patient is withdrawn from psychiatric medication, it is often done much too rapidly and without regard to the patient’s suffering in the process, since, as Dr. Breggin notes, the dangers of withdrawal are vastly underestimated and overlooked. This resource guides the practitioner in withdrawing patients as safely, expeditiously, and comfortably as possible from psychiatric medication, including patients with long-term exposure to antipsychotic drugs, benzodiazepines, stimulants, antidepressants, and mood stabilizers.

“This model for a patient-centered collaborative team approach not only transforms drug withdrawal, but mental health treatment in general with its greater emphasis on the patient partnership and well-being,” states Dr. Breggin. “It ushers in a new era of patient and family-centered treatment where the goal is no longer a drug-induced holding pattern, but genuine physical and psychological recovery and growth.”

For more information on this book, to request a review copy, or to schedule an interview with Dr. Breggin, please contact Dara Salem at dsalem(at)springerpub(dot)com or 212-804-6236.

About Springer Publishing Company
A pioneer in health care and social science publishing, Springer Publishing Company is known as an innovative psychology, public health, nursing, rehabilitation, social work, counseling, and gerontology publisher. The company has won numerous awards, including the American Library Association (ALA) Choice Awards, the Association of American Publishers (AAP) PROSE Awards, and the American Journal of Nursing (AJN) Book of the Year Awards, and publishes more than a hundred top quality titles annually, in addition to nineteen journals. From psychology to nursing, Springer Publishing Company is passionate about providing the best professional books, textbooks, guides, and reference works to professionals, instructors, and students. For more information, visit http://www.springerpub.com.

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Dara Salem
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