Trending...
- United States Congressional Candidate Peter Coe Verbica Unveils 25-Point Federal Plan to Help Make California Affordable Again
- Vice President JD Vance & Industry Leaders at Bitcoin Conference After Partnership Signing to Optimize Cybersecurity Solutions: Bullet Blockchain, Inc
- California: Governor Newsom signs executive order doubling down on state's commitment to clean cars and trucks, kickstarts next phase of leadership
Mental health industry watchdog CCHR opposes forced community-based psychiatric treatment orders. Right now, patients who refuse this may face criminal penalties, more forced drugging, or re-institutionalization, raising international human rights concerns.
LOS ANGELES - Californer -- The Citizens Commission on Human Rights International (CCHR), a mental health industry watchdog, is calling for an overhaul of psychiatric hospitalization and community treatment laws. With 54% of U.S. psychiatric patients held involuntarily, CCHR warns the system has normalized coercion. Most U.S. states authorize Assisted Outpatient Treatment (AOT) laws that compel individuals in the community to receive psychiatric treatment—typically drug-based—under threat of court orders or rehospitalization. Critics say the laws criminalize noncompliance and medicalize dissent. A Pennsylvania source reported that under AOT, "noncompliance is pathologized, autonomy is dismissed…Treatment ceases to be chosen; it becomes imposed."[1]
A 2021 NIH-funded study published in Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology found that 70% of youth aged 16–27 who were involuntarily hospitalized reported long-lasting distrust of clinicians—even when they remained in therapy. Meanwhile, a Cochrane Review concluded that AOT laws showed no consistent benefit over voluntary care.[2]
Many mental health consumers are also forced to accept involuntary treatment in the community by being made subject to community treatment orders (CTOs), under threat that non-compliance can result in them being detained against their will in inpatient facilities and institutions.[3]
A broader 2016 systematic review published in The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry analyzed more than 80 studies on CTOs, including three randomized controlled trials and multiple meta-analyses. The result: "No evidence of patient benefit." CTOs did not reduce hospitalizations or improve quality of life—but did result in patients spending significantly more time under coercive state psychiatric control.[4]
Patients are often forced onto antipsychotic drugs. Bioethicist Carl Elliott says such neuroleptics cause "tardive dyskinesia, a writhing, twitching motion of the mouth and tongue that can be permanent." Psychotropic drug side effects can include violent behavior, aggression, paranoia, psychosis, dangerously high body temperatures, irregular heartbeat, and heart conditions, disorientation, delusion, lack of coordination, suicidal tendencies, and numerous physical problems.[5]
More on The Californer
Jan Eastgate, President of CCHR International says, "Ironically, the very side effects of antipsychotic drugs—such as agitation and aggression—are the same behaviors often cited to justify forced hospitalization and involuntary treatment in the first place."
Yet, under AOT regimes, complaints about side effects or treatment refusals are used against patients as evidence of illness. The term "anosognosia"—defined as an inability to recognize one's illness—is routinely invoked to override consent, framing resistance as delusional and justifying further force.
As one media source put it: "It casts resistance as malfunction... Instead of seeing dissent as meaningful or contextual, it reframes it as a symptom of a broken brain. This framing is not just misguided—it's dangerous."[6]
Amalia Gamio, Vice Chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, helped open CCHR's Traveling Exhibit, Psychiatry: An Industry of Death in Los Angeles on May 17, denounced global psychiatric coercion: "Involuntary medication, electroshock, even sterilization—these are inhuman practices. Under international law, they constitute torture. There is an urgent need to ban all coercive and non-consensual measures in psychiatric settings."
Rev. Frederick Shaw, Jr., President of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Inglewood-South Bay Branch, condemned how psychiatry disproportionately targets African Americans. "More than 27% of Black youth—already impacted by racism—are pathologized with labels like 'Oppositional Defiant Disorder,' which has no medical test," he said.
"This mirrors how Black civil rights leaders in the 1960s were once labeled with 'protest psychosis' to justify drugging them with antipsychotics," he added. "Psychiatry didn't just participate in suppressing Black voices—it orchestrated it. And they're still doing it."
Psychiatric diagnoses in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) are not discovered through scientific testing but are voted into existence by APA committees. CCHR says despite the absence of objective medical proof for these labels, they can create lifelong patients to be drugged and subjected to involuntary interventions.
Forced psychiatric practices have been condemned by the United Nations (UN) and World Health Organization (WHO), which have repeatedly called for an end to forced institutionalization, electroshock, drugging, and community-based coercive measures.[7]
More on The Californer
In the U.S., over 37% of children and youth in psychiatric facilities are subjected to seclusion or restraint.[8] Some—as young as 7—have died under these conditions. In multiple cases, medical examiners ruled the deaths homicides, yet prosecutions have been rare.[9] "This is not mental healthcare. This is systemic cruelty and homicide," adds Eastgate.
CCHR and its global network are demanding regulations that prohibit coercive psychiatric treatment. "These are abuses. Forced treatment is torture passed off as mental health 'care,'" CCHR says.
About CCHR: The group was co-founded in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and psychiatrist and author Prof. Thomas Szasz. CCHR has exposed and helped bring accountability for psychiatric abuses globally. Its advocacy now echoes international calls by the UN and WHO to end coercive mental health practices.
Sources:
[1] "Brave New Pittsburgh: Forced Use of Psychotropic Pharmaceuticals is Coming," Popular Rationalism, 16 May 2025, popularrationalism.substack.com/p/brave-new-pittsburgh-forced-use-of
[2] popularrationalism.substack.com/p/brave-new-pittsburgh-forced-use-of
[3] "Ensuring compulsory treatment is used as a last resort: a narrative review of the knowledge about Community Treatment Orders," Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 6 Jan 2025, www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13218719.2024.2421168#d1e194
[4] popularrationalism.substack.com/p/brave-new-pittsburgh-forced-use-of
[5] www.cchrint.org/2022/04/04/cmhc-programs-can-harm-and-increase-the-homeless/; Susan Perry, "Recruitment of homeless people for drug trials raises serious ethical issues, U bioethicist says," MinnPost, 11 Aug. 2014, www.minnpost.com/second-opinion/2014/08/recruitment-homeless-people-drug-trials-raises-serious-ethical-issues-u-bioet/; medium.com/matter/did-big-pharma-test-your-meds-on-homeless-people-a6d8d3fc7dfe
[6] "Not Broken, Not Sick: A Rebellion Against the Anosognosia Frame," Underground Transmissions, 13 May 2025, undergroundtransmissions.substack.com/p/not-broken-not-sick-a-rebellion-against
[7] World Health Organization, "Guidance on mental health policy and strategic action plans," Module 1, pp 3-4, 2025
[8] www.cchrint.org/2025/05/17/apa-faces-outrage-child-deaths-mental-health-failure/; Mohr, W, "Adverse Effects Associated With Physical Restraint," The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry—Review Paper, June 2003, journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/070674370304800509
[9] Deborah Yetter, "7-year-old died at Kentucky youth treatment center due to suffocation, autopsy finds; 2 workers fired," USA Today, 19 Sept. 2022, www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/09/19/death-child-jaceon-terry-brooklawn-kentucky-youth-center/10428004002/; Taylor Johnston, "'He didn't deserve that': Remembering young people who've died from restraint and seclusion," CT Insider, 31 Oct. 2022, www.ctinsider.com/projects/2022/child-deaths-school-restraint-seclusion/
A 2021 NIH-funded study published in Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology found that 70% of youth aged 16–27 who were involuntarily hospitalized reported long-lasting distrust of clinicians—even when they remained in therapy. Meanwhile, a Cochrane Review concluded that AOT laws showed no consistent benefit over voluntary care.[2]
Many mental health consumers are also forced to accept involuntary treatment in the community by being made subject to community treatment orders (CTOs), under threat that non-compliance can result in them being detained against their will in inpatient facilities and institutions.[3]
A broader 2016 systematic review published in The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry analyzed more than 80 studies on CTOs, including three randomized controlled trials and multiple meta-analyses. The result: "No evidence of patient benefit." CTOs did not reduce hospitalizations or improve quality of life—but did result in patients spending significantly more time under coercive state psychiatric control.[4]
Patients are often forced onto antipsychotic drugs. Bioethicist Carl Elliott says such neuroleptics cause "tardive dyskinesia, a writhing, twitching motion of the mouth and tongue that can be permanent." Psychotropic drug side effects can include violent behavior, aggression, paranoia, psychosis, dangerously high body temperatures, irregular heartbeat, and heart conditions, disorientation, delusion, lack of coordination, suicidal tendencies, and numerous physical problems.[5]
More on The Californer
- BABUSHKA To Make L.A. PREMIERE at Film Invasion L.A. Film Festival 6/21/25
- They're Baaaa-ck: SDGE Deploys 300 Goats in San Diego, Launches Instagram to Spotlight Wildfire Prevention Measures
- Indie Band Run Downhill To Release "the Rattler" From Grammy® Winner T.j. Troy June 27th
- Five Aster Awards! Fusion Marketing Group Brings Home Big Wins in 2025!
- $6.5 million in stolen goods seized in 2025, California leads in nationwide organized retail crime crackdown
Jan Eastgate, President of CCHR International says, "Ironically, the very side effects of antipsychotic drugs—such as agitation and aggression—are the same behaviors often cited to justify forced hospitalization and involuntary treatment in the first place."
Yet, under AOT regimes, complaints about side effects or treatment refusals are used against patients as evidence of illness. The term "anosognosia"—defined as an inability to recognize one's illness—is routinely invoked to override consent, framing resistance as delusional and justifying further force.
As one media source put it: "It casts resistance as malfunction... Instead of seeing dissent as meaningful or contextual, it reframes it as a symptom of a broken brain. This framing is not just misguided—it's dangerous."[6]
Amalia Gamio, Vice Chair of the United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, helped open CCHR's Traveling Exhibit, Psychiatry: An Industry of Death in Los Angeles on May 17, denounced global psychiatric coercion: "Involuntary medication, electroshock, even sterilization—these are inhuman practices. Under international law, they constitute torture. There is an urgent need to ban all coercive and non-consensual measures in psychiatric settings."
Rev. Frederick Shaw, Jr., President of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) Inglewood-South Bay Branch, condemned how psychiatry disproportionately targets African Americans. "More than 27% of Black youth—already impacted by racism—are pathologized with labels like 'Oppositional Defiant Disorder,' which has no medical test," he said.
"This mirrors how Black civil rights leaders in the 1960s were once labeled with 'protest psychosis' to justify drugging them with antipsychotics," he added. "Psychiatry didn't just participate in suppressing Black voices—it orchestrated it. And they're still doing it."
Psychiatric diagnoses in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) are not discovered through scientific testing but are voted into existence by APA committees. CCHR says despite the absence of objective medical proof for these labels, they can create lifelong patients to be drugged and subjected to involuntary interventions.
Forced psychiatric practices have been condemned by the United Nations (UN) and World Health Organization (WHO), which have repeatedly called for an end to forced institutionalization, electroshock, drugging, and community-based coercive measures.[7]
More on The Californer
- Sons & Dotters Wins Double Gold at The Largest Spirits Event In The World
- California: ICYMI: Ending Trump's unlawful militarization of Los Angeles
- California: Over half of this crucial firefighting team has been diverted off wildfire work as part of Trump's illegal Guard deployment
- From Barrio to Transgender Pioneer: The Day that Changed Everything
- California: As Trump moves to decimate state AI laws, Governor Newsom taps the nation's top experts for groundbreaking AI report
In the U.S., over 37% of children and youth in psychiatric facilities are subjected to seclusion or restraint.[8] Some—as young as 7—have died under these conditions. In multiple cases, medical examiners ruled the deaths homicides, yet prosecutions have been rare.[9] "This is not mental healthcare. This is systemic cruelty and homicide," adds Eastgate.
CCHR and its global network are demanding regulations that prohibit coercive psychiatric treatment. "These are abuses. Forced treatment is torture passed off as mental health 'care,'" CCHR says.
About CCHR: The group was co-founded in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and psychiatrist and author Prof. Thomas Szasz. CCHR has exposed and helped bring accountability for psychiatric abuses globally. Its advocacy now echoes international calls by the UN and WHO to end coercive mental health practices.
Sources:
[1] "Brave New Pittsburgh: Forced Use of Psychotropic Pharmaceuticals is Coming," Popular Rationalism, 16 May 2025, popularrationalism.substack.com/p/brave-new-pittsburgh-forced-use-of
[2] popularrationalism.substack.com/p/brave-new-pittsburgh-forced-use-of
[3] "Ensuring compulsory treatment is used as a last resort: a narrative review of the knowledge about Community Treatment Orders," Psychiatry, Psychology and Law, 6 Jan 2025, www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13218719.2024.2421168#d1e194
[4] popularrationalism.substack.com/p/brave-new-pittsburgh-forced-use-of
[5] www.cchrint.org/2022/04/04/cmhc-programs-can-harm-and-increase-the-homeless/; Susan Perry, "Recruitment of homeless people for drug trials raises serious ethical issues, U bioethicist says," MinnPost, 11 Aug. 2014, www.minnpost.com/second-opinion/2014/08/recruitment-homeless-people-drug-trials-raises-serious-ethical-issues-u-bioet/; medium.com/matter/did-big-pharma-test-your-meds-on-homeless-people-a6d8d3fc7dfe
[6] "Not Broken, Not Sick: A Rebellion Against the Anosognosia Frame," Underground Transmissions, 13 May 2025, undergroundtransmissions.substack.com/p/not-broken-not-sick-a-rebellion-against
[7] World Health Organization, "Guidance on mental health policy and strategic action plans," Module 1, pp 3-4, 2025
[8] www.cchrint.org/2025/05/17/apa-faces-outrage-child-deaths-mental-health-failure/; Mohr, W, "Adverse Effects Associated With Physical Restraint," The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry—Review Paper, June 2003, journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/070674370304800509
[9] Deborah Yetter, "7-year-old died at Kentucky youth treatment center due to suffocation, autopsy finds; 2 workers fired," USA Today, 19 Sept. 2022, www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2022/09/19/death-child-jaceon-terry-brooklawn-kentucky-youth-center/10428004002/; Taylor Johnston, "'He didn't deserve that': Remembering young people who've died from restraint and seclusion," CT Insider, 31 Oct. 2022, www.ctinsider.com/projects/2022/child-deaths-school-restraint-seclusion/
Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights International
Filed Under: Consumer, Medical, Health, Government, Science, Citizens Commission On Human Rights, CCHR International
0 Comments
Latest on The Californer
- Lactation University Launches IBCLC Prep Course for Aspiring IBCLCs
- Wise Business Plans Launches Comprehensive Feasibility Study Services to Empower Business Decisions
- Anunnaki: Origin of Sumeria | Short Story Audiobook Now Available
- PUSHERMAN- – Best Feature Documentary Official Winner at NYC and London Festivals
- MicroStrategy Incorporated (MSTR) Investors Who Lost Money Have Opportunity to Lead Securities Fraud Lawsuit
- Female Motorsports Sponsorship & Expansion; Acquisition Agreement of UAE-Based Sports Incubator by Online Lottery & Sports Game Provider: Lottery.com
- The internet home telephone services and tv channels
- Mixed-Signal Devices Launches Industry's Highest Performance RF Synthesizer Up To 22 GHz
- Global Court Momentum Builds Against Forced Psychiatry; CCHR Urges U.S. Reform
- 'The Ambony' Set To Redefine Narratives Of Success For People Of Color
- Integris Composites Joins Paris Air Show at USA Pavilion
- Cheryl Hines' Trailer PROWLING to Sardinia
- Meet a member our Team of Atlas Elite Entertainment, Demetrius Guidry
- Honoring Black History, Culture, and Community in Fall River
- Token-Operated Sake Service Opens at Tobu Nikko Station
- Trailblazing Woman Football Coach Breaks Barriers with New Book, "4th and 1 Mindset"
- Screenwriter Celeste Escalera Launches Psychological Thriller and Fantasy Scripts Under XPYZ
- Global Wine Pursuit: Founder's Spanish-American Roots Inspire Luxury Wine & Gastronomic Experiences
- REVEL Builders Announces Upcoming Topanga Residence — A Modern Retreat in the Heart of Malibu
- Don Johnson's Dogs Rufus And Thunder Grace The Cover Of Dogue Magazine