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PSYCHIATRIC STIGMA
follows you everywhere you go
for the rest of your life
a warning from
Lawrence Stevens,
J.D.
www.antipsychiatry.org
http://www.antipsychiatry.org/stigma.htm
A problem you should think about before consulting a mental
health professional, or encouraging someone else to do so, is
the stigma of having received the so-called therapy. If you
seek counseling or "therapy" from a psychiatrist or
psychologist, how are you going to answer questions on job
applications, applications for occupational or professional
licenses, a driver's license, applications for health or life
insurance, and school and college applications, such as "Have
you ever had psychiatric or psychological therapy?" When you
apply for a job or occupational license or a driver's license or
apply for an insurance policy or admission to an educational
program you will often be required to answer this or a similar
question. When you answer such questions candidly and admit
having received psychiatric or psychological "help", the result
often will be loss of important opportunities: Answering yes to
such questions often results in rejection for employment or
licensure or admission to college or other educational program
or denial of insurance coverage. Sometimes you will be forced
to ask your "therapist" to breach the confidentiality of your
communications with him or her by making a report on you in
order for you to get a job, license, insurance coverage, or
admission to school. If you conceal your experience of
psychiatric or psychological "therapy" by answering "no",
thereafter you will have to be careful to watch what you say and
to whom, and you may with good reason worry about being found
out - since you run the risk of being fired from a job or
expelled from school or suffering revocation of licensure if
your deception is ever discovered. You may eventually find the
insurance policy you have been paying premiums on for many years
is valueless because of what you concealed on the application
for the policy years earlier.
In his book The Powers of Psychiatry, Jonas
Robitscher, J.D., M.D., Professor of Law and Behavioral Sciences
at Emory University's Schools of Law and Medicine, pointed out
that "Applicants for the state of Georgia bar examination, like
applicants in many other states, are required to state...whether
they have ever received diagnosis of...emotional disturbance,
nervous or mental disorder, or received regular treatment for
any of these conditions. Although there is no known instance of
this information having been used to keep an applicant from
taking the examination or being admitted to the Georgia bar,
there are instances of denying applicants in other
jurisdictions" (Houghton Mifflin Co., 1980, p. 234).
In the same book Dr. Robitscher described the case
of a medical school applicant who had graduated from college
magna cum laude, who was admitted to Phi Beta Kappa, and who
scored in the upper ninety-ninth percentile in the Medical
College Admission Test - but who was denied admission to medical
school because she had sought psychiatric treatment (pp.
238-239). He said this is typical of "prejudicial policies of
not admitting or readmitting students who have had or are
undergoing psychotherapy" (p. 239).
An airline pilot told me he was grounded for seven
months by the Federal Aviation Administration because he
revealed he had been seeing a psychiatrist (for so-called
outpatient psychotherapy) on the medical history questionnaire
he was required to fill out as part of his routine periodic
medical examinations required of airline pilots and which
involved criminal penalties (a fine of up to $10,000 and/or up
to five years imprisonment) for concealing the requested
information. He told me he enjoyed seeing the psychiatrist but
that the hassle which resulted from his doing so, because of the
questions it created about his job qualifications, out-weighed
whatever benefit came from seeing the psychiatrist. He said
that all factors considered, "It wasn't worth it." When taking
physical examinations, pilots in the United States are required
to "List all visits in the last three years to a physician,
physician assistant, nurse practitioner, psychologist,
clinical social worker, or substance abuse specialist for
treatment, evaluation, or counseling. Give date, name, address,
and type of health professional consulted, and briefly state
reason for consultation. ... Routine dental, eye, and FAA
periodic medical examinations may be excluded" (FAA Form 8500-8,
italics added). This suggests that, contrary to what some
people think, anyone consulting a psychologist or clinical
social worker is considered suspect. That is, stigma attaches
to anyone consulting not only psychiatrists, but also
psychologists or social workers. Routine dental or eye
examinations involve no stigma or suspicion of disqualification
and therefore are not required to be reported.
The 1988 Democratic Party Presidential nominee,
Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, in the words of
Newsweek, "was accused of having received psychiatric
treatment" ("The High Velocity Rumor Mill", Newsweek,
August 15, 1988, p. 22. See also, Andrew Rosenthal, "Dukakis
Releases Medical Details To Stop Rumors on Mental Health",
The New York Times, August 4, 1988, p. 1). The accusations
proved to be false, but the impression given by the news reports
about this story is that Dukakis' presidential campaign would
have been doomed by this one fact alone if the claim he had ever
consulted a psychiatrist or psychologist had proven to be true.
In 1972 U.S. Senator Thomas Eagleton was nominated for
Vice-President of the United States at the Democratic National
Convention but subsequently was removed from the ticket by the
Democratic National Committee when it became known he had
undergone psychiatric treatment, including hospitalization and
electric shock treatment.
Bruce Ennis, an ACLU attorney who has represented
people deprived of employment because of psychiatric stigma,
argues that "In the job market, it is better to be an ex-convict
than an ex-mental patient." He says "very few employers will
knowingly hire an ex-mental patient." He points out that
"Almost all public employers and most large companies ask job
applicants if they have ever been hospitalized for mental
illness" and that "If the answer is yes, the applicant will
almost certainly not get the job". Mr. Ennis also points out
that "if the applicant lies and says no, he runs the risk of
eventual discovery". On this basis Mr. Ennis argues that "It is
time for psychiatrists and judges to face the brutal facts.
When they commit a person to a mental hospital, they are taking
away not only his liberty, but also any chance he might have for
a decent life in the future." On the basis of his experience as
an attorney for people saddled with psychiatric stigma he
observes that "Even voluntary hospitalization creates so many
problems and closes so many doors that an old joke takes on new
truth - a person has to be crazy to sign himself into a mental
hospital" (Bruce J. Ennis, Prisoners of Psychiatry: Mental
Patients, Psychiatrists, and the Law, Harcourt Brace
Jovanovich, 1972, pp. 143-144). Mr. Ennis wrote those remarks
in 1972, but if anyone is inclined to think psychiatric stigma
substantially diminished during the 1970s and 1980s, consider
once again the reaction of the press and public in 1988 to the
apparently false allegation that presidential candidate Governor
Michael Dukakis had previously consulted a psychiatrist. That
it should be such a headline grabbing issue shows how
stigmatizing is any experience as a psychiatric "patient". This
public reaction is particularly noteworthy in light of the fact
that Governor Dukakis was accused only of consulting a
psychiatrist in his office, not psychiatric hospitalization.
The presumption of unreliability, untrustworthiness,
and emotional instability which flows from having ever sought
psychiatric or psychological "therapy" doesn't haunt only people
with responsibilities like doctors, lawyers, airline pilots, and
Presidential/Vice-Presidential candidates: In his book,
Prisoners of Psychiatry, ACLU attorney Bruce Ennis reports
many cases of people who have been denied taxi driver licenses
because of past psychiatric treatment even though "Most of them
had never been hospitalized" and had never done anything to
suggest they were dangerous (p. 160).
In a book she wrote, Eileen Walkenstein, M.D., a
psychiatrist, says "A psychiatric diagnosis is like a jail
sentence, a permanent mark on your record that follows you
wherever you go" (Don't Shrink To Fit! A Confrontation with
Dehumanization in Psychiatry and Psychology, Grove Press,
1975, p. 22). If you consult a mental health professional, you
will probably get some kind of "diagnosis". In at least
some states, professional licensing laws require mental
health professionals, including psychologists, to keep a written
record of "diagnosis" and "treatment".
In 1992, Commenting on the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA), Peter Manheimer, chairperson of the
Commission for the Advancement of the Physically Handicapped,
said "It is most appropriate that the ADA protects recovering
drug addicts, alcoholics, persons with AIDS, and persons who
have mental and psychological disabilities, as they form the
most misunderstood and feared portion of the disability
community. They suffer the greatest discrimination"
(Peter Manheimer, "Reporting on persons with disabilities",
letter to the editor, Miami Herald, July 24, 1992, p. 16A
- italics added).
And "a study by the National Institute of Mental
Health in 1993 found that even ex-convicts rank above former
mental patients in social acceptance" (Chi Chi Sileo, "Rip-offs
Depress Mental Health Care", Insight magazine, January
24, 1994, p. 14.) This article quotes a psychiatric hospital
patient saying "The stigma is incredible...Forget telling an
employer! Sometimes they find out anyway, and all of a sudden
you're unfit to work there" (ibid). In his autobiography,
Kenneth Donaldson said after he had been committed to a
psychiatric hospital, people "accepted a psychiatric diagnosis
which forever rent the fabric of my life. Thereafter, not only
society at large but members of my family would not see Ken the
son and father and friend, but Ken the mental patient. From
this would flow unimagined misery, a fog which would envelop all
our lives. And our situation would be, of course,
representative of millions. The fog would seep into my
employment, my relations with doctors, my access to lawyers and
the courts. Every enterprise in which I would engage would be
poisoned by the label. It haunted me and frightened others"
(Insanity Inside Out, Crown Pub., 1976, p. 321).
In his book The Powers of Psychiatry, Emory
University professor Jonas Robitscher, J.D., M.D., said:
"Psychiatrists have been so criticized for the errors or
vagueness in their labeling procedures because the label
produces a new disability, which often remains as a burden long
after the symptoms that led to the label have departed. ... A
study of the attitudes in a small town indicates that fellow
townspeople reject other members of the community in a direct
relationship to the professionalization and specialization of
the source of help, with the least rejection when help is sought
from a clergyman, increasing percentages of rejection for those
seeking psychiatric help from physicians and psychiatrists, and
the most rejection for those who get mental hospital help. A
study of work supervisors shows that the knowledge that an
employee is seeing a psychiatrist would be likely to rule out a
promotion even if the employee is doing good work...The harm and
potential harm done to mental patients and former mental
patients is not only confined to those who have had serious
illnesses, those who have been hospitalized or who have had to
interrupt careers or schooling. Psychiatrists know that many
people who consult them as outpatients are much less 'sick' than
many or most of the general population. If these people had
decided not to be patients but instead to be clients or
parishioners and had taken their problems to a social worker, a
pastoral counselor, or a faith healer, they would have incurred
no stigma. ... The ubiquitous questionnaires that ask, 'Have
you ever consulted a physician for a physical or emotional or
mental condition?' do not take account of those who should have
and haven't, or those who are able to answer no because they
have taken their problems to an encounter group, a
sensitivity-training session, an est seminar, or a
consciousness- raising group, and so have escaped the
discriminatory effect of seeking help" (pp. 230, 232, 233).
The difficulty of getting a health insurance policy
after having sought psychiatric or psychological "therapy" or
even marriage counselling was mentioned in the August 1990 issue
of Consumer Reports in an article titled "The Crisis in
Health Insurance": "Virtually no commercial carriers and only a
handful of Blue Cross and Blue Shield plans will sell policies
to anyone who has had heart disease, internal cancer, diabetes,
strokes, adrenal disorders, epilepsy, or ulcerative colitis.
Treatment for alcohol and substance abuse, depression, or even
visits to a marriage counselor can also mean a rejection.
If you have less serious conditions, you may get coverage, but
on unfavorable terms" (p. 540 - italics added).
The stigma involved in obtaining psychiatric
"therapy" was discussed in an article by columnist Darrell
Sifford titled "Should You Lie About Psychiatric Care?"
appearing in The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, N.C.) on
June 10, 1990. A mother wrote to Mr. Sifford asking whether her
teenage son, who was about to apply for admission to college,
should answer truthfully the questions about psychiatric
treatment, which he had had at the age of 15. She wrote: "Many
of these [college application] forms request information
regarding any psychiatric treatment. And once he is out in the
real world, most job application forms ask for the same
information ... Have we [by insisting he get psychiatric care]
doomed him to a future of lying on application forms for fear of
losing the position or college being applied for? What should
we do?" The newspaper columnist realized the woman's question is
what he called "a serious question. Very Serious." He shared
the woman's letter with Paul Fink, immediate past president of
the American Psychiatric Association. This was Dr. Fink's
advice: "I would tell them to lie on the forms ... The stigma is
there, and to deny it and sacrifice yourself by telling the
truth makes no sense. ... With the public at large I work to
decrease stigma, but with individual patients I impress on them
how widespread and deeply rooted the stigma is. ... If two
people who are equal in credentials apply for a job and one has
had psychiatric treatment, that person will be discriminated
against, and he'll be the loser in the competition for the job.
... Even if the person with treatment had better credentials,
he most likely still would lose out to the other person. That's
how deeply rooted the stigma is. ... I will not encourage
anybody to acknowledge that they had treatment" (p. 4E).
Do you want to go through life with this kind of
secret? How do you feel about lying on applications for the rest
of your life? If it is your rebellious adolescent or troubled
spouse for whom you're considering psychiatric "treatment", ask
yourself this question: Do you really hate your rebellious
teenager or spouse enough to impose this kind of problem on him
or her? Is it really the right thing to do? The problems
motivating you to impose so-called therapy on a member of your
family are probably temporary, but psychiatric stigma is
forever.
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), is
unlikely to help much, despite its aim of eliminating
discrimination in employment against people with disabilities,
including alleged psychiatric disabilities. As Jonas Robitscher,
J.D., M.D., said in his book The Powers of Psychiatry
prior to the enactment of the ADA: "The disclosure that one is
or has been mentally ill can lead to rejection, and other
reasons for the rejection can always be found. ... Forcing
private employers to hire the disabled would raise issues of
invasion of privacy and problems of enforcement. Stigmatization
will continue to be a problem, and discrimination will continue
to exist" (p. 241-242). In areas covered by the ADA, availing
oneself of its protection will probably require large amounts of
time spent in litigation and a lot of money paid in lawyer's
fees, with uncertain results.
And there are many areas of stigmatization and
discrimination the ADA and other laws don't cover. One example
is colleges and universities that do not receive federal funds.
Another is the effect of psychiatric stigma on personal
relationships: Keeping secrets conceals parts of who you are and
prevents emotional intimacy of the sort most people want with
friends and especially with one's spouse; but sharing this
secret leaves you open to blackmail or similar kinds of
pressure. Concealing psychiatric "treatment" from an employer
(as is often necessary to get a job) but revealing it to one's
spouse or a friend gives the spouse or friend knowledge that can
be used against you if your relationship turns sour. Should you
be put in a position where you must lie to your spouse or a
friend to keep secret your history of so-called psychiatric or
psychological "therapy" (e.g., if he or she should ask), you
introduce deception into a relationship where probably you wish
you could be honest and sincere. Even if you don't tell your
spouse or someone you are thinking about marrying, divorce now
occurs in close to a majority of marriages, and in a divorce -
especially if you get into a dispute over child custody or even
visitation rights - your spouse's attorney will probably ask
you, under oath when you are subject to the penalties of
perjury, if you have ever had psychiatric or psychotherapeutic
"treatment" - perhaps confronting you with the choice of
committing perjury or jeopardizing your employment by telling
the truth. Whether you admit having had psychiatric or
psychological "therapy" or it is discovered some other way, the
resulting stigma may result in losing your children in a custody
battle, and threats to reveal it to your employer may be used to
pressure you to agree to property division or alimony (or lack
of it) or an amount of child support that is not appropriate.
You may have to consider these problems when contemplating the
wisdom of getting married or divorced - problems you could have
avoided by simply avoiding having received "therapy". You are
likely to face a similar dilemma if you are ever called for jury
duty, since during the jury selection phase of the trial
potential jurors are often asked, under oath, if they have ever
had psychiatric "treatment". Another time you will probably be
asked about past psychiatric "treatment" is if your job requires
you to get a security clearance or bonding.
If the so-called therapy helped enough, it might be
worth the problems created by the stigma of having had
psychiatric or psychological "help". However, the benefit
assumed to come from psychiatric and psychological "therapy"
(itself a questionable assumption) is vastly outweighed by the
stigma that comes from receiving it. The stigma that results
from seeing psychiatrists, psychologists, or psychiatric social
workers is a strong argument in favor of instead consulting
friends, family, or nonprofessional counselors whose expertise
comes from life rather than from "professional" training, or
simply working at solving your problems yourself.
THE AUTHOR, Lawrence Stevens, is a lawyer whose practice has
included representing psychiatric "patients". His pamphlets are
not copyrighted. You are invited to make copies for
distribution to those who you think will benefit.
1997 UPDATE
The following appears in a pamphlet titled "Serving on a North
Carolina Jury," published in 1997 as a public service of the
North Carolina Bar Association in a section titled "The
Questioning of Jurors": "When you report to the court for
jury service, you will be asked certain general questions by the
judge regarding your qualifications to serve as a juror. ...
Then, when you are called to the jury panel for a particular
case, the lawyers in the case have the right to ask additional
questions." The pamphlet doesn't say so, but included in these
questions may be whether you have ever had psychiatric
treatment. You will be asked these questions while under oath,
meaning you may be charged with the felony offense of perjury if
you deny having had psychiatric treatment when in fact you
have. Jury pools are taken from public records such as lists of
registered voters and holders of driver licenses. So if you
register to vote or have a driver license, you are at risk of
being called for jury service. There are legal penalties for
refusing to serve, so you may not be able to avoid the problem
by simply refusing to appear for jury service.
1999
UPDATE
A new national survey reveal by the National Opinion Research
Center at the University of Chicago found that the
Stigma of mental illness still
exists. The survey found that "The public appears to
hold an exaggerated view of the impairment faced by those with
mental illness and the level of danger they present to
themselves and others."
2000
UPDATE
"Being psychiatrically diagnosed, medicated, or hospitalized
gives a child a stigma that a lifetime will not overcome. It
should be avoided at all costs." Peter R. Breggin, M.D., in his
book
Reclaiming Our Children
(Perseus Books, Cambridge, Mass., 2000), page 56.
2002 UPDATE
"The ADA [Americans with Disabilities Act] was passed in 1990,
prohibiting employers from discriminating on the basis of
disability, including mental disability. Employers may no
longer ask applicants about their mental health and
hospitalization histories. ... The best the ADA has been able
to accomplish is to change the workplace from one where
applicants had to affirmatively lie about their psychiatric
histories and diagnoses to an environment of 'don't ask, don't
tell.' ... when it comes to psychiatric disabilities, it would
be fair to conclude that the ADA has failed to provide a remedy
against employment discrimination." Susan Stefan,
J.D.,
Hollow Promises - Employment
Discrimination Against People with Mental Disabilities
(American Psychological Association, Washington, D.C., 2002),
pp. xiv & 19-20. Susan Stefan is an attorney at the
Center for Public Representation
in Newton, Massachusetts. Until 2001, she was a professor of
law at the University of Miami School of Law, where she taught
disability law and mental health law. She graduated magna cum
laude from Princeton University in 1980, received a master's in
philosophy from Cambridge University in 1981, and received her
law degree from Stanford University.
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See also
Antipsychiatry News Clips
regarding questions about having had a mental illness on
applications for gun ownership in the USA.
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