Citizens Commission on Human
Rights of Nashville is urging friends and loved ones of those harmed by
psychiatric brain treatment to report their stories.
Almost exactly two years ago on
January 1, 2014, Scientific American magazine published an article on Deep
Brain Stimulation, describing an experiment on a Dutch man wherein psychiatric
researchers “…bored small holes in his skull and guided two long, thin probes
deep into his head. The ends of the probes were lined with small electrodes…
[psychiatrists] ran the connecting wires under his scalp, behind his ear and
down to a battery pack sewn under the skin of his chest. Once turned on, the
electrodes began delivering constant electrical pulses.”
In response to this alarming new
therapy, the Citizens Commission of Human Rights of Nashville (CCHR Nashville)
has called for victims to report abuse suffered during this or any other
psychiatric treatment.
On the website cchrnashville.org,
is the question: “Do you know someone who has been damaged by experimental
psychiatric treatments including transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), vagus
nerve stimulation (VNS), deep brain stimulation (DBS) or any other electric
shock or magnetic wave to the brain?” Then follows a link to report abuse from
these treatments.
CCHR has long been an advocate
for human rights, especially as relates to patients’ rights in the field of
mental health. Per the international CCHR website, cchr.org, “CCHR has long
fought to restore basic inalienable human rights to the field of mental health,
including, but not limited to, full informed consent regarding the medical
legitimacy of psychiatric diagnosis, the risks of psychiatric treatments, the
right to all available medical alternatives and the right to refuse any
treatment considered harmful.”
Abuses from treatment may be
reported online or by mail. The report form can be found at
cchrnashville.org/report-abuse.
CCHR is a non-profit, non-political,
non-religious mental health watchdog. Its mission is to eradicate abuses
committed under the guise of mental health and enact patient and consumer
protections. CCHR receives reports about abuses in the field of mental health
and is especially interested in situations where persons experienced abuse or
damage due to a false diagnosis or unwanted and harmful psychiatric treatments,
such as psychiatric drugs, electroshock (ECT) and electronic or magnetic brain
stimulation (TMS). CCHR is often able to assist with filing complaints, and can
work with a person’s attorney to further investigate the case. To contact CCHR
Nashville for more information, visit cchrnashville.org.
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