Menu
Washingtoner
  • Home
  • Health
  • Books
  • Business
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Billionaires
  • Construction
  • Financial
  • Society
Washingtoner

Mental Health Awareness Month: Watchdog Blasts Ongoing Psychiatric Racism
Washingtoner/10257412

Trending...
  • Tacoma: Applicants Sought for the Human Services Commission
  • NUSACC Supports Iraq Higher Education Roadshow to the United States
  • Connecta Satellite Solutions Ready to Support Emergency Communications Following the Venezuela Earthquake
Rev. Fred Shaw, NY Exhibit Opening
CCHR and its Task Force Against Racism, headed by NAACP chapter president, Rev. Fred Shaw, lash out against coercive psychiatric practices that African Americans are subjected to.

LOS ANGELES - Washingtoner -- The Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR) International and its Task Force Against Racism and Modern-Day Eugenics warns that psychiatric racism is still rife in mental health systems, despite an American Psychiatric Association (APA) apology in 2021 for psychiatry's "role in perpetrating structural racism" and a "history of actions…that hurt Black, Indigenous, and People of Color" (BIPOC). APA admitted that psychiatrists had subjected persons of African American descent and indigenous people to "abusive treatment, experimentation, victimization in the name of 'scientific evidence,' along with racialized theories that attempted to confirm their [mental/intellectual] deficit status."[1]

Rev. Fred Shaw, president of the Inglewood-South Bay chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and co-founder of the CCHR Task Force, criticized the APA's choice of hosting its annual meeting in New York during Mental Health Awareness Month. He highlighted the organization's failure to condemn ongoing coercive psychiatric practices against people of color. Citing compelling studies, he shed light on the distressing reality that African Americans are disproportionately forced into treatment or hospitalization compared to whites.[2]

Shaw spoke at the opening in New York of an exhibit, "Psychiatry: An Industry of Death" detailing the history of harm and human rights abuses in the mental health field. He spoke about the damage people experience from psychiatric drugs and ECT, stressing the need to be fully informed of their risks. "A trap wouldn't be a trap if you could see it coming," he said. "People need to know the truth about the risks of psychiatric drugs, electroshock, and psychiatric racism."

Marion "Tiny" Frampton, a former gang member in The Black Spades and now founder of TBS New Directions, a youth mentoring program offering alternatives to youth gang involvement, addressed the exhibit opening, stating: "I'm a former gang member in the '70s. Most of my comrades were placed in mental institutions and were given all kinds of drugs and were even given shock therapy (ECT)."

More on Washingtoner
  • 100+ Episodes In, Liftoff with Keith Newman Tells Founders to Stop Publishing More
  • Vierra Communities Adds Operations of Two Skilled Nursing Facilities in the DC Metro Area
  • Slotozilla Introduces a Centralized Resource for World Cup Bonus Offers
  • Webinar Announcement: Built for Trust: Latitude's 0 to 1 Compliance Playbook for Modern Cross-Border Payments
  • OneVizion Names AI Leader Matthew Kirk as Chief Operating Officer to Drive Governed AI Across Telecom and Electric Utilities

The Task Force, comprised of over 100 independent representatives of groups and businesses, including attorneys and educators in the African American community, has an educational website detailing psychiatry's history of stigmatizing minorities—from labeling runaway slaves and civil rights protesters as mentally ill and sterilizing people of color to segregating children in special education classes and in the foster-child-welfare system today, where they are drugged.[3]

Shaw emphasizes the need to ban electroshock and eliminate coercive psychiatric practices in alignment with the World Health Organization and United Nations recommendations to end involuntary detainment and forced treatment in psychiatric hospitals and the community. He points to the deaths of two African American boys, 16-year-old Cornelius Frederick in 2020, and 7-year-old Ja'Ceon Terry in 2022, who were restrained in psychiatric facilities in Michigan and Kentucky. In both cases, coroners ruled their deaths as homicide. Three nursing staff involved in restraining Cornelius were subsequently charged, pleading no contest, and were sentenced to probation, not jail.[4]

African Americans have been over-represented in restraint-related deaths.[5] New York's Kendra's Law enforces coercive practices through an Assertive Community Treatment program, described as "one of the most coercive and intrusive psychiatric programs coordinated by New York State," according to Lauren Tenney, Ph.D.[6] "In addition to involuntary outpatient commitment being an assault on and targeting people who are living in or near poverty, the statistics demonstrate racial disparities—gross over-representation of people who are African American—in the application of involuntary outpatient commitment." Further, "The fact that the United States of America has a long and deeply disturbing history of enacting systems of slavery begs the question of the legitimacy of court-ordered psychiatry."

The WHO/UN Guideline emphasizes that "The use of any coercive measure in all mental health services is prohibited. This includes medical and non-medical interventions without free and informed consent; the use of isolation rooms and chemical and physical restraints," including in the community.[7]

More on Washingtoner
  • Dentists launch independent platform to help practices choose the right technology
  • Contracting Resources Group Recognized by The Daily Record as a 2026 In the Lead: Best Women-Owned Businesses Honoree
  • Woodforest Acceptance Solutions and AlpacaBOSS Launch Partnership
  • Spokane: SPD is Investigating a Shooting that Occurred Early Monday
  • Tacoma Residents Report Improved Satisfaction in 68 of 80 City Service Areas in 2026 Community Survey

The "Report on forced psychiatry and psychiatric abuse against African Americans," jointly prepared by eight disability rights groups, condemns the violence inflicted on African Americans by public mental health systems. "Forced medication in particular is an act of disability-based violence that can amount to ill-treatment or torture, as is also the suffering inflicted by indefinite detention in the mental health system." Additionally, "The mental health system as a system of social control is intricately linked to racism…. The United States should prohibit mental health commitment and forced treatment, so as to end the social control function that has been given to the mental health system, which has a discriminatory impact on people of color."[8]

Shaw's Task Force members agree and are working towards the elimination of coercive mental health practices and a ban on ECT.

About CCHR: CCHR was founded in 1969 by the Church of Scientology and the late Dr. Thomas Szasz, Professor of Psychiatry, State University of New York Upstate Medical University. It has helped achieve over 190 laws that protect patients from abuse in the mental health system.

Sources:

[1] www.cchrint.org/2021/01/26/american-psychiatric-associations-apology-for-harming-african-americans-rejected/; www.medscape.com/viewarticle/944352?src=wnl_edit_tpal&uac=345404PY&impID=3143084&faf=1#vp_1; www.psychiatry.org/news-room/apa-apology-for-its-support-of-structural-racism

[2] theappeal.org/nyc-mayor-eric-adams-involuntary-commitment/

[3] www.cchrtaskforce.org/

[4] www.cchrtaskforce.org/post/task-force-launched-to-combat-institutional-racism-in-psychiatric-industry; www.cchrint.org/2023/10/04/racism-task-force-warns-coercive-psychiatric-practices/

[5] www.equipforequality.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/National-Review-of-Restraint-Related-Deaths-of-Adults-and-Children-with-Disabilities-The-Lethal-Consequences-of-Restraint.pdf

[6] www.madinamerica.com/2019/07/kendras-law-racist-classist-involuntary/ citing "New York State Assisted Outpatient Treatment Program Evaluation," Duke University, 30 June 2009

[7] World Health Organization, OHCHR, "Guidance on Mental Health, Human Rights and Legislation," 9 Oct. 2023, iris.who.int/bitstream/handle/10665/373126/9789240080737-eng.pdf?sequence=1, p. 73

[8] www.cchrint.org/2022/07/11/end-coercive-psychiatric-practices-against-african-americans/; psychrights.org/countries/UN/140714RMHL_MOMS_CERDreportUS.pdf

Contact
Amber Rauscher
***@cchr.org


Source: Citizens Commission on Human Rights
Filed Under: Government

Show All News | Disclaimer | Report Violation

0 Comments
1000 characters max.

Latest on Washingtoner
  • Creative Investment Research Welcomes Supreme Court Decision Protecting Federal Reserve Independence While Calling for Continued Accountability
  • Ascent Solar Technologies (N A S D A Q: ASTI): Positioned at the Intersection of the New Space Economy, Defense Innovation and Next-Generation Energy
  • Triple-Digit Growth, Stock Market Upgrade plus a Rapidly Expanding Specialty Healthcare Platform: Cardiff Lexington Corporation (Stock Symbol: CDIX)
  • Morrisville & Cary Education Centers Honored with National Award
  • AI-Powered Neuropsychiatry, FDA Regulatory Momentum, Commercial Ketamine Launch Position NRx Pharmaceuticals for Potential Breakout Growth in 2026
  • Henri-Lloyd Launches Sail Free to Break Down Barriers to Sailing
  • Genuine Hospitality, LLC Selected to Operate Hilton Garden Inn Jacksonville JTB/Deerwood Park
  • Destination Niagara Launches Game Changing Digital Magazine Redefining How Visitors Experience Niagara Falls
  • San Diego's newest marketing firm is boring on purpose — it's working
  • Arizona Christian Homeschools Launches Statewide Directory
  • Sexually Abused in a Psychiatric Hospital or Psychiatrist's or Psychologist's Office? CCHR Urges Survivors to Reach Out to It
  • Senco Home Services Expands Residential Construction Services
  • Ricci's Painting & Contracting Expands Home Transformation Services
  • Sylvester Anthony III Introduces His Artist Journey with Debut Single "Cherish"
  • Tacoma: Applicants Sought for the Human Services Commission
  • Boston Industrial Solutions Introduces High-Performance Primer for Bonding Liquid Silicone to Epoxy
  • Healthcare Leaders Publish New Integrated Behavioral Healthcare Guide, Led by Doctors of Behavioral Health
  • Verbica Challenges Panetta to a Televised Debate on the Issues
  • Salt Lake City Families Turn to Private Autopsy Services for Faster Answers After Unexpected Loss
  • SPD Seeking Assistance Regarding Motorcycle Collision in North Spokane
_catLbl0 _catLbl1

Popular on Washingtoner

  • Kevin Francis Design Introduces CHROMA, a Collection of Saturated Solid Color Wool Rugs - 313
  • Tacoma: Homicide Investigation – 800 Block of Martin Luther King JR Way
  • Spokane: Community Days At City Council Celebrating Student Civic Engagement
  • City of Tacoma Attracts More Affordable Housing to Proctor Neighborhood
  • Tacoma Dome Welcomes Class of 2026
  • Entering the $69 Billion Animal Health Market, Delivering Record Growth, AI-Driven Healthcare Innovation, and Targeting $200 Million Revenue by 2029
  • P-Wave Classics Opens Pre-Orders for Volume II of Robert Bage's Hermsprong
  • A Foundational Claim in Human Secrecy Goes Public
  • Spokane: Notice from SPD as Team Egypt Arrives & FIFA Events Begin
  • City of Tacoma to Implement Temporary Road Closures and Traffic Restrictions on June 12

Similar on Washingtoner

  • Spokane: Domestic Disturbance Call Results in Serious Injury to Dog
  • Spokane: Camp Sekani Update 7/1/26
  • Spokane: Clocktower Chimes to Ring Once Again
  • Tacoma: Regional Coalition to Unveil Draft Commencement Bay Restoration and Resilience Master Plan at Community Open House on July 15
  • Vierra Communities Adds Operations of Two Skilled Nursing Facilities in the DC Metro Area
  • Webinar Announcement: Built for Trust: Latitude's 0 to 1 Compliance Playbook for Modern Cross-Border Payments
  • Dentists launch independent platform to help practices choose the right technology
  • Contracting Resources Group Recognized by The Daily Record as a 2026 In the Lead: Best Women-Owned Businesses Honoree
  • Spokane: SPD is Investigating a Shooting that Occurred Early Monday
  • Tacoma Residents Report Improved Satisfaction in 68 of 80 City Service Areas in 2026 Community Survey
Copyright © 2026 washingtoner.com | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Contribute