The
Citizens Commission on Human Rights of Nashville (CCHR Nashville) continues to work
to spread information to parents on their basic rights so they can help their
children.
The
Citizens Commission on Human Rights Nashville Chapter (CCHR Nashville) is
working to educate parents on their basic rights as they relate to their
children’s mental health and well-being. On its website, cchrnashville.org,
there is a tab specifically for Parents, under which comes educational
resources, helpful forms and more.
One
of the many virtual resources CCHR has to offer are 30 second public service
messages as well as full-length documentaries aimed at informing people of the
dangers of psychiatric drugs and other methods of treatment. According to
CCHR.org, “Posing as ’authorities,’ their pseudoscience now woven through our
educational systems and medical institutions, psychiatrists wreak havoc across
the entire social fabric, by prescribing a smorgasbord of mind-altering drugs
to adults and children. These drugs are so dangerous that government
authorities have issued ‘black box’ warnings of mania, hostility, suicide,
stroke and sudden death. Add to that the tens of thousands of documented cases
of psychiatric drug-induced violence. Think psychiatry has nothing to do with
you? Think again.”
CCHR
has long been an advocate for human rights, especially as relates to patients’
rights in the field of mental health.
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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