
CCHR Int
4.9K posts

CCHR Int
@CCHRInt
Official CCHR International— Non-profit Mental Health Industry Watchdog that has helped enact 190 laws protecting patients from abuse.


It's inspiring to see that patients who have been harmed by psychiatric drugs are organising to prevent this happening to others. It is also an absolute indictment of the current system that patients are forced to this. Basically disgraceful.


In the long term, SSRIS will have the same reputation as lobotomies WTF were we ever thinking in giving these to people





The psychiatric system has no financial interest in your recovery.


You don't have a mental health condition; a condition has been imposed on you so that you can be drugged.

🚨 School With 50 Locations Uses Electric Shock Devices on Autistic Children — the FDA Wants to Ban the Devices “This is the worst type of demeaning and deplorable aversive therapy imaginable.” @BrianHookerPhD Electrical stimulation devices are used for a specific type of aversive shock therapy that delivers an “often-painful electric shock” to people exhibiting self-injurious or aggressive behavior. Most practitioners largely abandoned the practice decades ago. The Judge Rotenberg Educational Center (JRC), based in Canton, Massachusetts, is the only known institution in the U.S. that uses the devices to control disabled youth. JRC operates about 50 residences throughout Massachusetts. A 2007 Mother Jones investigation found that six children died at JRC in its 36-year history, prompting numerous lawsuits and government investigations into its use of the therapy.

“My brain felt like it was on fire. I was crawling out of my skin… rocking in the fetal position on the floor, screaming in excruciating pain.” That’s how Danielle Gansky described the severe withdrawal she endured after attempting to stop the SSRI antidepressant she had been prescribed since age 7. It all started when her second-grade teacher noticed she was fidgety and distracted. She was diagnosed with ADHD and put on stimulants (Adderall and Ritalin). This quickly escalated into a cascade of other psychiatric drugs — antidepressants, benzodiazepines, mood stabilizers, and antipsychotics — all before she turned 10. SSRIs became the one drug she stayed on for her entire life. At 23, she tried to come off the SSRI. Her doctor tapered her in just 6 weeks. The result was years of devastating neurological torment: bedridden, housebound, constant terror, rage, and physical agony she had never experienced before. She calls the overall effect a “chemical lobotomy” that stole her joy, creativity, and sense of self. She just turned 30 and is still trapped on the same SSRI. Even tiny reductions (less than 1%) cause debilitating symptoms. She has now been in protracted withdrawal for seven years. What’s your experience — have you or someone you know struggled with long-term psychiatric medication or severe withdrawal?




It’s been years since her last SSRI, yet she still cannot feel love for her mother or connection with her friends. She now lives with chemical asexuality the drugs “neurologically severed those bonds.” “Patients are not warned that the side effects from SSRIs can be permanent long after you stop the last drug dose.” “PSSD is not just “low libido.” It is a full nervous system injury. she has complete loss of sensation in her genitals, total loss of libido, and the inability to orgasm — a form of chemical castration.” “My clitoris is completely numb, as if it’s the back of my elbow. I have no sensation internally… I’m 23 years old.” The day she woke up with this injury, she felt her soul leave her body. SSRIs robbed Lauren of her ability to feel love for her family and friends — a chemical lobotomy that severs you from your own humanity. “Removing someone’s ability to connect with another human being is a crime against humanity.” Lauren (@lololizzle) is living with PSSD — Post-SSRI Sexual Dysfunction. #PSSD @PSSDNetwork @elonmusk

