The implications for policy and service design are to be worked out before the final report. It would be better, at least as far as neurodiversity is concerned, if assessment did take more of a functional rights-based approach. The person’s level of functioning and the intervention which can maximise functioning, together with an evaluation of the usefulness of that intervention, need to be properly assessed. This is required primarily in educational and workplace settings. In effect, this should shift much of the work of assessment and treatment from health services to educational and occupational psychologists.
Friday, April 03, 2026
Making neurodiversity less medical
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Changing how mental health and illness are understood
I agree this is the way we tend to think these days. It’s our cultural understanding that there has been major progress in understanding how the brain works and what can go wrong in its functioning. We tend to believe neuroscience has made considerable advances and we expect doctors who want to be psychiatrists and other mental health professionals to learn about these matters and apply this knowledge in their care and treatment of patients.
But it's not generally brains that become unhealthy; it's us! Please don't misunderstand me. Of course I'm not saying the brain has nothing to do with our state of mental health and illness. It mediates our thoughts, feelings and behaviour. But it's not us; it's only part of us. It's us that are alive and can be mentally healthy and unhealthy. Of course our brain can contribute to that state. But we need to understand ourselves as more than our brain.
So, what does it mean to say we, rather than our brains, can be mentally ill? We're not necessarily making a statement about our brains. And we're not necessarily saying anything about our body, as such. Illness is something we experience. It may be caused by bodily dysfunction, and we can too often assume that there must be something wrong with our body when we feel ill. We may have all sorts of speculations about what's gone wrong with our body when we experience symptoms. But, quite commonly, these ideas do not prove to be the case. Actually, often, what can be reassuring is if the doctor indicates that our concerns are unlikely to be correct from the presenting symptoms and signs.
Modern psychiatry developed by identifying insanity, which we now call psychosis. However logical their private understanding may seem to a psychotic person, it is the loss of common sense viewed by most people that is characteristic of madness/insanity (see eg. previous post). Psychiatric treatment of course covers wider conditions than psychosis and there may be questions about what counts as a psychologically morbid state. Psychiatry could be said to have extended even further in its diagnostic reach, with such modern concepts as neurodiversity, which are not necessarily even seen as abnormal. Psychiatric diagnosis is not an exact science.
Clearly, though, psychiatric diagnosis does not necessarily imply bodily dysfunction. It is a statement primarily about psychological functioning. It is usually a description of a personal, not a brain, state. The brain may cause that mental state but it does not in the majority of cases. To talk about brain health, as we now often do (see eg. previous post) may well be a misnomer. It’s about time we moved on from the misguided hope that we can understand mental health and the majority of mental illness in terms of our brain.
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
We are all neurodiverse
Take neuro out of neurodiversity and we are left with the only reliable statement we can make about the human condition in general: that there is diversity. We are all unique. Ultimately, we are all neurodiverse, making the concept, and its sub-categories (like ADHD and autism), painfully useless at differentiating and classifying different types of people.
Any psychiatric diagnosis is not an absolute concept. Does the concept of 'neurodiversity' have any utility if it does not point to brain differences? I have suggested before (see previous post) replacing the term with 'biopsychosocial diversity'. I don't think the review into mental health conditions, ADHD and autism set up by the government (see previous post) will find any experts prepared to say that any definite biomarkers have been found for neurodiversity. There are no more than hypotheses which have not been proven.
It would be helpful if that review could make this situation clear as people are being misled. We all need to adapt to other people's differences. There's no need to propagate a myth that the biological basis of neurodiversity has been found to substantiate the need for accommodations to people's differences.
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Institutional pressures in psychiatry
As I said in a previous post:-
The current Community Mental Health Framework for Adults and Older Adults to transform mental health services has been too non-specific in providing direction and there has been insufficient progress in its implementation. ... Community Mental Health Teams have become too large and need to be devolved so that there is one in every Primary Care Network (PCN). The PCN mental health teams also need to work alongside non-medical mental health hubs, one of which again should be in each PCN.
I’m not against increasing funding for services, but they do need to become more patient-centred. Psychiatry itself is partly responsible for the increased demand by fostering simplistic solutions to mental health problems. It misleads people about the nature of mental illness by encouraging them to see their problems in terms of brain abnormalities. There does need to be a change in the ideological position of psychiatry but Lade and the College don’t mention that in the press release.
Friday, February 06, 2026
Conceptual understanding of psychiatric diagnosis
Hyman reaches conclusions with strong implications for current psychiatric diagnostic systems, such as DSM. For example, he states that "The currently predominant categorical nosologies are fundamentally in error and are damaging to science". He sees psychiatric and neurological disorders as "groupings of disorders that exhibit some internal scientific and clinical coherence, but also have changing and permeable boundaries that are negotiated by interested professional groups". His argument is primarily against seeing any distinctions between disorders and non-disorders and between disorders as categorical in nature. To summarise in another quote:-
If by natural kinds we mean categories of things existing in nature that are well bounded and have stable, cohesive causal structures, as is the case for chemical elements, then the poorly bounded, etiologically and pathophysiologically complex psychiatric disorders are something else entirely.
For me, Hyman, and the Future DSM Strategic Committee in general, could go further in their conceptual understanding of psychiatric diagnosis. They still seem to be too enamoured of the possibilities for "localising the mind" in the brain. Despite the lack of evidence for biomedical markers of mental illness, psychiatry remains paradigmatically committed to the idea that mental functions must be localised in the brain in some way (see eg. previous post). Of course the brain is the vehicle for meaningful experiences, such as functional mental illness. But the brain does not create meaning; it is people as a whole that do that.
In particular, a new DSM needs to re-create the distinction between functional and organic psychosis, which was present in DSM-I, and was abolished by DSM-IV (see previous post). I am not arguing for Cartesian dualism, splitting the mind from the brain (see eg. another previous post). Mind and body are integrated in the organism. People are animate, embodied beings. But what needs to be made clear is that naturalistic explanations of primary mental illness are inadequate because of the need to take a holistic personalistic perspective of mental health problems. The evidence for the abolition of the distinction between organic and functional mental illness does not exist and the argument for doing so by DSM-IV was flawed (see yet another previous post).
Related to this, I suspect Hyman still wants to hold on to the idea that primary mental illness will be shown to have biological aspects to its causation. Of course there's a tautological sense in which this is true, because the brain is necessary to mediate mental illness. But in the same way as we can't, or at least shouldn't, talk about our 'normal' thoughts, emotions and behaviour as being caused by the brain as such, nor should functional mental illness be described in those terms. The whole organism is the condition of its parts, and is in turn realised by them. We may be able to understand some of the reasons for functional mental illness, but these cannot be proven in a natural scientific way (see eg. previous post). We can only hope to understand formative causal influences, not efficient causes (see eg. another previous post). By contrast, brain pathology is a necessary cause of organic mental illness, such as dementia or delirium.
It's unclear to me what the next stage of the DSM review process will be, but as I've always said, proper conceptual foundations for understanding psychiatric diagnosis are needed before progress can be made.
Sunday, February 01, 2026
Whither DSM?
DSM-5 failed because of its misdirected aspirations (see eg. previous post). The current DSM review committee has to accommodate a range of different views. But there are some hopeful signs in its paper on the ‘Initial strategy for the Future of DSM’. One of its four subcommittees is the Socioeconomic, Cultural, and Environmental Determinants of Mental Health Subcommittee, which the paper admits
fills a gap in DSM given that despite the influence of socioeconomic, cultural, and environmental determinants of mental health on the development, progression, and treatment of mental disorders, they are not adequately addressed in DSM or in other psychiatric nosologies.
The overall committee also wants to avoid the problem of reification of psychiatric disorders (see eg. previous post). The idea of embracing “biology and environment and their interactions as key determinants of mental disorders” is said to be under consideration. The committee wants to find a pragmatic solution to psychiatric diagnosis “without abandoning the whole effort or eschewing improving current nosology”. Let’s see how this process develops.
I may be being overoptimistic about the initial publication of the Future DSM Strategic Committee. DSM may never properly incorporate the uncertainty of psychiatry. It may find it difficult to accommodate the inevitable unreliability of psychiatric diagnosis, considering the historical motivation of DSM-III to increase reliability (see eg. previous post). Psychiatric assessment has always been about differential diagnosis and aetiology, rather than a single diagnosis, often seen as having implied biological causes. I’ve never been one for wanting to completely abandon psychiatric diagnosis but modern psychiatry does overvalue it, particularly when it takes a biomedical approach (see eg. previous post and my 2002 article).
Wednesday, January 14, 2026
Is critical psychiatry creating its own myths?
Monday, January 12, 2026
Changing the way the facts of mental health and illness are seen
Despite PA’s intentions for change, psychiatry still clings to what is really an outdated view of mental health and illness (see eg. last post). Psychiatry has always hoped that a biological understanding of mental illness as brain abnormality is just round the corner. It does now tend to accept that the pharmacological and neuroscientific emphases of the last 50 or so years has not really progressed practice, but nonetheless refuses to acknowledge that the flaw is its own conceptual foundations.
People have been so indoctrinated into believing that they are their brains that they cannot see the conceptual fallacy in doing so. People’s brains are only part of them, like their other bodily parts. Most mental illness is not caused by faulty brains; it relates more to them as a person as a whole. By thinking of ourselves as machines, we fail to recognise the purposiveness of life.
Friday, January 09, 2026
Will psychiatry ever change?
exponents of highly effective, neurobiological based, targeted treatment of brain disorders, like their peers in other biomedical specialities. The leaders of the psychiatric establishment are likely to resist … a reconfiguration of their profession [by giving up such a claim].
This is despite the fact that psychiatric disorders are not dependent on biological pathology, whereas physical diseases are. A purely biological account of primary mental disorder is not possible, but psychiatrists keep hoping one will be found.
It’s depressing to see how much psychiatry is prepared to cling to its outdated understanding of mental illness, which it actually promotes as a major advance, misleading people that there has been real progress (see eg. recent post). As I’ve commonly said (see eg. my editorial), the essential position of critical/relational psychiatry is that functional mental illness should not be reduced to brain disease. Although, of course, all mental disorders involve cerebral processes, despite what psychiatry says, neuroscience is not moving us towards having a biological and genetic understanding of primary mental disorders (see eg. previous post).
Tuesday, December 30, 2025
Will new Mental Health Act make much difference?
Tuesday, December 16, 2025
Minds are not immaterial
Saturday, December 06, 2025
Is my brain working differently?
Of course our behaviour, emotions and thoughts are mediated by the brain. But that doesn’t mean they are caused by them. People are more than their brains which are only part of them. The brain is of course socially constructed. It’s not just born ready made. But that doesn’t mean it makes sense to reduce people to their brains, which are only part of them. Descartes looked for the seat of the person in the pineal gland, an endocrine gland deep in the brain. But the brain isn’t the seat of the person. We are all damaged in some way which is what makes us human. We’ve become so obsessed by the neurosciences that we can’t see that it’s us that are alive not our brains.
Friday, December 05, 2025
Acknowledging the limits of psychiatry
Tuesday, November 25, 2025
The power of psychiatry to shape our sense of self
Tuesday, November 11, 2025
Sealing over emotional problems with medication
Saturday, November 08, 2025
The origins of the concept of autism
Sunday, October 26, 2025
The mind-body problem for psychiatry
Saturday, September 27, 2025
Psychiatric barbarism
As I wrote in my article:-
The phenomenology of subjectivity and existence has implications for the nature of consciousness. The study of a person’s lived experience in the world shows that subjective experience and consciousness cannot be naturalised as physical processes. Our primary experience actually puts us in the world as embodied beings. It is what creates the foundation for scientific knowledge. An integrated personalistic concept of human beings is fundamental to any scientific understanding of the brain.
I’m not sure whether it matters how radical the phenomenological reduction is in its implications for psychiatric epistemology. I have emphasised in this blog the anti-cognitivist phenomenology of Thomas Fuchs (see eg. previous post) and the enactive psychiatry of Sanneke de Haan (see eg. another previous post). Both critique psychiatry from anti-positivist and anti-reductionist positions, as does Stephan, using the new French phenomenology. The experiential, subjective dimension of psychopathology needs to be recognised and accepted. Psychiatry should be understood as relational medicine.
What I like about Stephan's perspective is how he exploits the idea of 'barbarism' from Michel Henry. Doing so may create a more direct challenge to biomedical psychiatry than merely saying psychiatry needs to move to a more relational practice. The tendency to disregard subjectivity/affectivity by focusing on brain pathology can lead to patients feeling their experiences are being ignored. Treating people as objects is symbolic violence, and actual psychiatric practice, both in its history and currently, has shown its barbarity by its defiance of life.
Monday, September 22, 2025
The brain mythology of psychiatry
Tuesday, September 09, 2025
Psychological factors in antidepressant withdrawal should not be ignored
A recent special report in Psychiatric News provides information for psychiatrists about antidepressant withdrawal. It emphasises that low doses of Serotonin Specific Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants still have high levels of Serotonin Transporter (SERT) occupancy, and essentially seems to relate withdrawal symptoms to SERT occupancy, without too much evidence. It also acknowledges the lack of research and knowledge about antidepressant withdrawal in general.
As I have always said, it’s common sense to believe that discontinuing a drug which is said to treat depression will be difficult. Taking antidepressants affects our experience, so that it can be difficult to know whether what I experience is because of illness, the medication or ‘just me’ (see article by Sanneke de Haan). Making sense of our experience is important but may well not be easy, including when experiencing antidepressant withdrawal.
Throughout this blog I’ve emphasised the fallacy of blaming our brains for our psychological difficulties despite the attractions and temptations (see eg. previous post). Because antidepressants can affect our experience, if only because of the placebo effect (see eg. another previous post), then any apparent stability acquired on antidepressants may be attributed to the medication, even though it may be more to do with factors like the passage of time or change of circumstances. In fact, the social situation which caused the depression in the first place may not have really changed at all, or have been dealt with, leaving us with a sense that we are not really back to our true self (see eg. yet another previous post). It worries me that both mainstream psychiatry and critics that argue for brain effects of antidepressants causing withdrawal do not place enough emphasis on these psychological factors.
Wednesday, August 27, 2025
Evidence about antidepressant withdrawal
Mainstream psychiatry seems motivated to rely on unsatisfactory data to undermine the significance of antidepressant withdrawal. This is because it finds it difficult to accept that antidepressants are not effective and, therefore, wants to minimise any potential problems caused by the vast amount of antidepressant prescribing that takes place. It is very difficult for psychiatry to accept that it has made so many people dependent on antidepressants.
Personally I'm not convinced the evidence of antidepressant dependence indicates physical dependence, even brain damage, in the sense that the body, rather than the person, has been made dependent on antidepressants. There is evidence that neuroleptic medication can cause brain damage, as with tardive dyskinesia, but, although the brain of course needs to readapt after antidepressant discontinuation, I know of no evidence there is permanent brain damage from antidepressants. Of course withdrawal symptoms can be prolonged but the mechanism requires further elucidation. I have always emphasised the role of psychological factors. It concerns me that people who make the case for physical dependence tend not to give enough priority to psychological factors, which cannot be denied. It’s not surprising that a drug that is thought to improve mood can be habit forming, considering especially that it may have been started when people are feeling desperate. Undoing what can be an identity altering experience of taking antidepressants may well not be easy.
Friday, July 25, 2025
ADHD is not a neurological condition
Development is neither predestined by our genes nor completely malleable to shaping by the environment. To suggest that ADHD and other neurodevelopmental conditions cannot be “cured” may underestimate the extent to which people can change. It’s all very well to encourage training and education about ADHD, but people do need to be taught facts rather than speculation.
Psychiatry commonly justifies its speculation that ADHD and other functional mental disorders have a biological cause by suggesting it takes a biopsychosocial position, properly taking into account psychosocial as well as biological factors. But it fails to allow for the extent to which the brain is socially constructed by our experiences. Genes set the boundaries of the possible but environments define the actuality of what happens. It doesn’t make sense to reduce mental conditions such as ADHD to a brain disorder. Brain connections in ADHD may be no different from our ‘normal’ experiences. Certainly they have not been proven to be different and even academic reviews of the biological basis of ADHD will caution that no biological markers for ADHD have been found.
Thursday, July 10, 2025
Doctors irresponsibly minimising antidepressant withdrawal
In a systematic review and meta-analysis, Kalfas et el (2025) conclude that the mean number of discontinuation symptoms at week 1 after stopping antidepressants was below the threshold for clinically significant discontinuation syndrome. The article is motivated to show that antidepressant withdrawal may be less common than is thought to be the case (see New Scientist article). The difficulty in obtaining estimates of incidence is made worse by the lack of methodologically rigorous, randomised placebo-controlled trials in real world settings, certainly over the longer-term rather than just after one week. In fact, initially on stopping antidepressants, people can be hopeful that they no longer need antidepressants.
The data including in the meta-analysis was from 11 trials with short duration of use of antidepressant: 6 for 8 weeks; 4 for 12 weeks; and one for 26 weeks. People can stay on antidepressants for considerable periods of time and the risk of withdrawal symptoms increases with duration of use (see eg. Horowitz et al, 2025). This data obtained after one week discontinuation may well not be generalisable to the bulk of long-term users, particularly if followed up for more than a week.
The Telegraph reports that the research team have suggested guidelines need to be re-written to reassure people that they are unlikely to experience severe side effects when coming off antidepressants, which is clearly unjustified (see eg. article by Mark Horowitz & Joanna Moncrieff on The Conversation). Such advice is contrary to current guidance that people should be informed of the risk of withdrawal symptoms on first starting antidepressants (see eg. previous post). Doctors should be encouraged to follow this guidance, rather than the proposal by Kalfas et al. At least the researchers have subsequently admitted that most studies they reviewed had only followed up patients for two weeks and that antidepressant treatments they studied were shorter than those commonly prescribed in the real world, although this isn’t as explicit in the paper as it should be.
Friday, June 27, 2025
Common mental health conditions have worsened despite Improving Access to Psychological Therapies
Despite the proportion of 16 to 74 year olds with common mental health condition symptoms reporting receipt of treatment increasing from 24.4% in 2007 to 39.4% in 2014 to 47.7% in 2023/4, the proportion of 16 to 64 year olds identified with a common mental disorder has also increased from 17.6% in 2007 to 18.9% in 2014 to 22.6% in 2023/4. Services are struggling to cope with a vast increase in demand but mental health need nonetheless apparently continues to increase. The increased service activity, if effective, should be expected to reduce prevalence of mental disorder, not increase it.
Improving Access to Psychological Therapies (IAPT) was rolled out from 2008 (see eg. previous post). Despite reported rates of improvement over the short-term, longer-term outcome may not be so beneficial (see eg. another previous post). The reality is that hoping for easy answers to mental health problems means that providing increasing resources for services can never meet the perceived need of the population (see eg. previous post). Psychiatry can’t magic away the pain and suffering of being human (see eg. another previous post). It shouldn’t mislead people that a course of medication or a brief psychological therapy will necessarily solve all mental health difficulties. I’m not being nihilistic about psychiatric treatment but the limits to psychiatry do need to be acknowledged. Throwing money at the problem isn’t the whole solution at least.
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
What counts as psychopathology?
From rare diagnoses given to kids with significant learning difficulties or active and mischievous boys, autism and ADHD follow an impressive developmental trajectory out of the confines of child guidance clinics and into the belly of mass culture.
Tuesday, June 17, 2025
Transforming mental health services
As Pullman et al say
Critical Psychiatry stands as a minority movement within contemporary psychiatry, providing a critical analysis of the Medical Model. Its primary focus lies in addressing the inclination of a reductionistic Medical Model to dehumanize care …. In contrast, Critical Psychiatry advocates for a relational, recovery-oriented, and multi-cultural treatment approach, operating within the framework of a comprehensive biopsychosocial paradigm
Pullman et al conclude by advocating several practical strategies to support the transformation agenda:-
(1) Consistent advocacy for the biopsychosocial model within mental health policy and educational curricula.
(2) A renewed emphasis on teaching, training and supervising biopsychosocial approaches within professional education. The Biopsychosocial model has a long history but has struggled to gain a consistently prominent position within mental health work often in the face of bio-medical hegemony within psychiatry.
(3) To prioritize the voices and experiences of those with lived experience of mental ill health and mental distress, either directly or as part of families and social groups. Too often, mentally ill people have experienced inadequate treatment and, at times, abuse and oppression. This situation has not improved adequately, despite the inception of modern psychiatric practice.
Monday, June 16, 2025
Stuck on antidepressants
James Davies, who I have mentioned before (see eg. previous post), is quoted as saying, “[T]he evidence base [for antidepressants] suggests they’re no more effective than placebos. But unlike placebos, they have side-effects”. I pointed out to him in a tweet that placebos do have side effects, which are called nocebo effects.
Antidepressants are inadvertent placebos. They are not usually intentionally prescribed for their placebo effects. Instead doctors tend to believe in antidepressants and that their efficacy has been proven, whereas this is at least open to question (see eg. previous post). Patients have also been encouraged to take them by the myth that the serotonin imbalance theory has also been proven, which is not the case (see eg. another previous post).
Patients may therefore acquire attachments to their medication more because of what they mean to them than what they do. Many patients often stay on psychotropic medications, maybe several at once, even though their actual benefit is questionable. Any change threatens an equilibrium related to a complex set of meanings that their medications have acquired. No wonder they may have withdrawal symptoms. They have been made dependent on antidepressants and may well be frightened to try to manage without them. It’s easier to stay on antidepressants rather than upset any apparent equilibrium their medications have seemed to create.
Such nocebo effects also apply to emotional blunting. Antidepressants can tend to leave people feeling that there is a sense in which their psychosocial problems, which caused the depression, have not really been solved (see eg. previous post). However much they may feel that antidepressants may have helped stabilise their mood, they may, therefore, also feel emotionally flat and not back to their real self.
I am, of course, not saying that antidepressants do not block reuptake of catecholamines, such as serotonin, in the synaptic cleft between neurones. But how much the side effects of withdrawal symptoms and emotional blunting may well be due to nocebo effects remains to be determined.




























