Guest guest Posted September 20, 2004 Report Share Posted September 20, 2004 http://www.cchr.org/doctors/eng/page18.htm SOTERIA HOUSE: A HAVEN AND HOPE WITHOUT DRUGS by Dr. Loren Mosher Dr. Loren Mosher is the director of Soteria Associates in San Diego, California, and a Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at the School of Medicine, University of California, San Diego. He is also the former Chief of the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health's Center for Studies of Schizophrenia, where he founded and served as the first Editor-in-Chief of a prominent medical journal, the Schizophrenia Bulletin.92 He writes: Following a series of enlightening experiences during my psychiatric residency, I began to believe that psychiatric hospitals were not usually very good places in which to be insane. As a result, I opened Soteria House in 1971, whose unique social environment I also designed. There, young persons diagnosed as having " schizophrenia " lived medication-free with a nonprofessional staff trained to listen to and understand them and provide support, safety and validation of their experience. The idea was that schizophrenia can often be overcome with the help of meaningful relationships, rather than with drugs, and that such treatment would eventually lead to unquestionably healthier lives. This project's design was a random assignment, two-year follow-up study comparing the Soteria method of treatment with " usual " general hospital psychiatric ward interventions—that relied principally on drug treatment—for persons newly diagnosed as having schizophrenia and deemed in need of hospitalization. The experiment worked better than expected. At six weeks post-admission both groups had improved significantly and comparably despite Soteria clients having not usually received antipsychotic drugs! At two years post-admission, Soteria-treated subjects were working at significantly higher occupational levels, were significantly more often living independently or with peers, and had fewer readmissions. Interestingly, clients treated at Soteria who received no neuroleptic medication over the entire two years or were thought to be destined to have the worst outcomes actually did the best as compared to hospital and drug-treated control subjects. Despite many publications (40 articles plus two books in all), without an active treatment facility, Soteria disappeared from the consciousness of American psychiatry. Its message was difficult for the field to acknowledge, assimilate, and use. It did not fit into the emerging scientific, descriptive, biomedical character of American psychiatry, and, in fact, called nearly every one of its tenets into question. In particular, it demedicalized, dehospitalized, deprofessionalized, and deneurolepticized what Thomas Szasz has called " psychiatry's sacred cow. " Swiss physicians replicated the experiment and determined that Soteria care produced favorable outcomes in about two-thirds of patients. In both Sweden and Finland, researchers have since reported good outcomes with newly identified persons with " schizophrenia " that involve family oriented psychosocial treatment programs using minimal or no neuroleptics. " The idea was that schizophrenia can often be overcome with the help of meaningful relationships, rather than with drugs, and that such treatment would eventually lead to unquestionably healthier lives. " — Loren Mosher, M.D. Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, 2002 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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