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- <text id=89TT2822>
- <title>
- Oct. 30, 1989: Here Come The Russian Shrinks!
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Oct. 30, 1989 San Francisco Earthquake
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BEHAVIOR, Page 78
- Here Come the Russian Shrinks!
- </hdr><body>
- <p>The Soviets confess and are accepted by their colleagues
- </p>
- <p>By Glenn Garelik
- </p>
- <p> After years of activists' complaints about abuses in Soviet
- psychiatric facilities, 26 American psychiatrists, lawyers and
- interpreters last March toured such institutions in the
- U.S.S.R. and interviewed more than two dozen patients whose
- hospitalization had been questioned. The watchdog group
- concluded that while improvements had been made, disturbing
- evidence remained of unjustified confinements and fundamental
- shortcomings in psychiatric practice. Most troubling were the
- continued use of drugs that appeared to have more punitive than
- therapeutic value and the domination of the Soviet psychiatric
- establishment by some of the very officials who ruled it when
- abuse was rampant.
- </p>
- <p> Thus, when the World Psychiatric Association met in Athens
- last week, one of the most controversial issues on its agenda
- was whether to readmit Soviet psychiatrists, who resigned in
- 1983 rather than face expulsion for human-rights abuses. Eager
- for acceptance, the Soviets made an eleventh-hour acknowledgment
- that "previous political conditions in the U.S.S.R. created an
- environment in which psychiatric abuse occurred for nonmedical,
- including political, reasons."
- </p>
- <p> Following a stormy final session that began after lunch and
- lasted well past midnight, the W.P.A. voted to accept the
- Soviet delegation, provided that the use of psychiatry for
- nonmedical purposes is banned. Moreover, in a symbolic addendum,
- the organization agreed unconditionally to admit a new
- independent Soviet psychiatric union whose members are
- considered genuine reformers.
- </p>
- <p> Human-rights advocates had looked to the Athens vote as a
- key test for the W.P.A. Although the Soviet delegation announced
- no specific personnel changes, it did call for "enlightened
- leadership in the psychiatric community in the U.S.S.R." That
- failed to appease the majority, which seemed unwilling to
- restore the Soviets' membership. Then vice president-elect
- Felice Lieh Mak of Hong Kong suggested a compromise: making
- readmission contingent on a satisfactory W.P.A. visit to Soviet
- psychiatric facilities in the next year. Only then did the
- majority swing to the Soviet side. The vote was 291 to 45, with
- 19 abstentions.
- </p>
- <p> Nonetheless, there remained the central question regarding
- the Soviet psychiatrists: whether admitting them or barring them
- was more likely to encourage reform. For a year, outgoing
- W.P.A. president Costas Stefanis of Greece had doggedly lobbied
- for readmission on the grounds that it would encourage
- rehabilitation. He contended that the Soviets as members of the
- W.P.A. would be subject to greater scrutiny and influence from
- abroad than they would be as outcasts. Others who favored
- readmission, including U.S. psychiatrists Alfred Freedman and
- Abraham Halpern, argued that during the past few years --
- especially in the months preceding the Americans' March visit
- -- the Soviets had satisfied the criteria established for
- readmission in 1983, which called simply for "amelioration" of
- past abuses. In the year since the last W.P.A. meeting, for
- instance, the Soviets have released more than a hundred
- "patients." In July they purportedly banned the use of
- pain-inducing sulfazine, the most notorious of the contested
- drugs.
- </p>
- <p> But that was not enough for the opponents of readmission,
- who included independent Soviet psychiatrists as well as the
- Dutch and West Germans. They charged that the Soviets had not
- even made the limited changes they claimed. The West
- German-based International Society for Human Rights listed
- scores of cases of improper confinement. Other critics noted
- that Soviet diagnostic categories still include "sluggish
- schizophrenia," a condition whose officially defined symptoms
- include "delusions of reformism."
- </p>
- <p> Earlier this month, the Soviets had made an unprecedented
- play for respectability with the Americans, who have been among
- their most outspoken critics. Speaking before Congressman Henry
- Waxman's Health and the Environment Subcommittee, a senior
- Soviet embassy official testified that his government had
- created an independent commission to ensure that its hospitals
- would be used for psychiatric purposes only. But other
- congressional witnesses, including one victim of past abuse,
- countered that the changes in the Soviet mental-health
- establishment have been little more than cosmetic.
- </p>
- <p> Not surprisingly, several members of the U.S. delegation
- came to Athens unconvinced that readmission was justified. Ellen
- Mercer, director of the American Psychiatric Association's
- international affairs office, argued that the Soviets' dubious
- psychiatric theories and their basic lack of medical
- sophistication made for at least inadvertent abuse. In many
- cases, explains Dr. Walter Reich, an expert in Soviet psychiatry
- at Washington's Woodrow Wilson International Center, the Soviets
- are not intentionally engaging in what the West considers abuse.
- Instead, because of culture and history, they "actually believe
- that the dissidents they are hospitalizing, or keeping in
- hospitals, are ill."
- </p>
- <p> It is partly for that reason, says George Washington
- University political scientist Peter Reddaway, next year's
- review by the "more sober-minded" new leadership of the W.P.A.
- will be especially crucial. In the end, though, the biggest
- improvement in Soviet psychiatric practice may come not from
- W.P.A. acceptance or ostracism but from continued changes in the
- culture, politics and legal structure of Soviet society.
- Admitted Stefanis after the vote: "It is not just a question of
- psychiatry. Deeper changes must take place." Until this happens,
- says Reich, "there are no assurances that can satisfy one fully
- and eternally that the Soviets won't return to abusive
- practices."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-