Mental Health, Inc How corruption, lax oversight and failed reforms endanger our most vulnerable citizens

Art Levine

Book - 2017

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : The Overlook Press 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Art Levine (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
351 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-346).
ISBN
9781468308372
  • Introduction
  • 1. Drugging Our Kids: Corporate Greed Joins Corruption, Apathy
  • 2. Nursing Homes: Drugging Our Seniors to Death
  • 3. The Secret History of the VA's Tragedies in Tomah and Phoenix
  • 4. The Secret History of the VA Scandals, Part II: The Empire Strikes Back
  • 5. A Marine's Descent into PTSD Hell
  • 6. Stan White and the Veterans' Search for Truth and Answers
  • 7. Mr. White Comes to Washington: FDA Showdown over Seroquel
  • 8. Drug-Free PTSD Recovery
  • 9. How LA County's Mental Health Officials Neglect Inmates and Ignore Violence
  • 10. To Live and Die in LA: How DMH's Outreach Work Saves Lives, Stops Mass Shootings
  • 11. Torture in Alabama
  • 12. Profits and Losses from Residential Treatment: The Story of Bain Capital and CRC Health
  • 13. Recipe for Disaster?: Residential Treatment Programs for Addicts and Kids
  • 14. Florida: Free-Fire Zone for Killing, Abusing and Raping Kids?
  • 15. Karen's Story and the Mental Health System That Never Was: Saving Families, Young People from Lifelong Madness
  • 16. Why Can't We Just Do What Works?
  • 17. Putting People Before Big Pharma: Overcoming the Barriers to Recovery
  • Endnotes
  • Assistance, Advocacy and Information Resource Guide
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Levine, an investigative journalist, reveals how the nexus of power formed by the pharmaceutical industry, the FDA, Medicare, and Medicaid works against patients' best interests. His overall complaint is the improper use of antipsychotic medicines. For example, he writes, "over 90 percent of the estimated two million kids on Medicaid who received antipsychotics are prescribed them without the approval of the FDA"-meaning for uses other than those the FDA approved, also known as "off-label" uses. This problem is particularly pronounced at VA hospitals, he shows. Levine devotes each chapter to a different aspect of pharmaceutical abuse and corruption, which he humanizes with patients' stories. While he describes a horrifying panoply of problems, he also portrays whistleblowers and other heroes who work to protect patients. This well-researched book reveals the scope of an entrenched problem, but it also offers hope. Levine is optimistic that balanced treatment, with appropriate dosages and uses of antipsychotics in combination with other therapies, can greatly alleviate mental illness. Reading Levine's work might very well be the key to spurring concerned stakeholders into action. Agent: Jill Marsal, Marsal Lyon Literary Agency. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An alarming report on the dire state of our nation's mental health care industry.Citing the multibillion-dollar budget cuts after the 2008 recession, increasingly overloaded community clinics, the dangers of drug-based outpatient Medicaid programs, and the impending repeal of the Affordable Care Act, Washington Monthly contributing editor Levine presents a foreboding look at the status of contemporary mental health care in the United States. The author delivers the statistics in a harrowing introductory chapter that spotlights the dangers lurking in the "low quality and sometimes deadly care" that is becoming the standard for those seeking treatment. Levine reinforces his pleas for reform with profiles and true stories of everyone from young children to military vets with PTSD to nursing home communities, all left at the mercy of mental illness by a health care system rampant with weak regulatory oversight, maltreatment, and reckless off-label drug prescriptions. With scores of victims remaining oversedated and often neglected by an inferior, "out-of-control, profit-driven" network, the decades of appeals for reform Levine cites duly reflect just how "little has fundamentally changed in how we treat people with serious mental illness." The author also expertly probes the Veterans Administration's "secret history" of deadly wait times and scandalous incompetence, the dangerous marketing schemes surrounding the bipolar medication Seroquel, and the Los Angeles County women's jail, where 20 percent of inmates suffer from some form of "serious" mental illness. Counterbalancing his own dystopian view, Levine introduces us to the advocates hard at work improving and enhancing the industry and thereby restoring the lives of those affected by its shortcomings. Amid a surfeit of drug company scandals, lawsuits, and blatant wrongdoings, Levine's compelling expose brings the contemporary state of mental health care into stark focus. But it also fairly offers redemption and hope in the form of modern-day heroes armed with proactive recovery programs and alternative therapies. An urgent, balanced, eye-opening plea for mental health care reform. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.